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Home Front: WoT
Al-Moayad and aide are hidden in plain sight
2005-02-06
In a Brooklyn courtroom, the Yemeni sheik and his assistant sit in seats at a defense table occupied in thousands of past cases by mobsters, drug dealers and con artists. But if the lives of those defendants may have been exotic to the judges and jurors who decided their fates, these two men, charged with financing terrorism, sometimes seem to be from a different world entirely. The sheik, in his silk hat and flowing robes, has been heard in hours of secretly recorded videotapes talking in a convoluted style seldom heard in America. His meanings are elusive. His style is indirect.

Out of the blue, sometimes, will come tales from the Koran or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, the applicability of which can be obscure. In a conversation about a man who seemed to be offering a big donation to Muslim causes, the sheik, Mohammed Ali Hassan al-Moayad, started a discourse on a battle from the time of the prophet. "The reason for the conquest of Badr is this," he said to a visitor in a bugged hotel suite in Frankfurt, "because the prophet, may the peace and the blessing of God be upon him, took the camel herd of Quraysh." In the courtroom, no one has yet offered to explain the relevance of the taking of the camel herd.

The unfamiliar, combined with a staccato presentation by prosecutors, has meant that the sheik and his lover assistant, Mohammed Mohsen Yahya Zayed, remain enigmas.
Hard to get inside the mind of a lunatic, isn't it?
As the third week of their trial begins tomorrow, they are mysterious figures, much as they were nearly two years ago when Attorney General John Ashcroft made worldwide headlines by announcing that the two Yemeni men had been charged with funneling money to Al Qaeda and Hamas, much of it raised in Brooklyn. In the courtroom, they are solitary, hooked to the trial by earphones feeding them Arabic translations of the proceedings. Other than their lawyers and a single Yemeni diplomat, there is never anyone in the public rows for them.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#3  "The reason for the conquest of Badr is this," he said to a visitor in a bugged hotel suite in Frankfurt, "because the prophet, may the peace and the blessing of God be upon him, took the camel herd of Quraysh." In the courtroom, no one has yet offered to explain the relevance of the taking of the camel herd.

In another era, it was said the capitalists would sell the rope the communists would use to hang them.
Posted by: ed   2005-02-06 3:50:03 PM  

#2  I expect it could. But there's a chance it won't. If it doesn't I'll know who to blame.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-02-06 1:18:53 PM  

#1  
I expect that this trial will end as a huge embarrassment for the US Justice Department.

Why were these two guys ever allowed to come into the USA and allowed to remain here? Why weren't they simply deported a long, long time ago?
.
Posted by: Mike Sylwester   2005-02-06 8:37:29 AM  

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