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Europe |
Germany Acquits Suspect of Terror Charges |
2005-04-06 |
![]() Garnaoui was arrested in Berlin on March 20, 2003, the day the invasion began. Prosecutors had claimed he started training at one of Osama bin Laden's camps in Afghanistan in 2001 and later received orders from an unknown al-Qaida member to plan attacks in Germany and recruit others. The court said there was evidence that he went abroad to train for terrorist attacks and endorsed violence in discussions with others, but that prosecutors failed to prove he was recruiting for a terror group. "General discussions about the question of whether one may take violent action against 'nonbelievers' does not constitute (attempted) creation of a terrorist group," the court said in a statement. He allegedly returned to Germany in January 2003 with the help of a forged passport after a journey through South Africa and Belgium. Garnaoui's lawyers maintained there was no proof he was ever in Afghanistan. In other cases, German prosecutors are retrying Mounir el Motassadeq, a Moroccan student, for allegedly helping the Hamburg-based Sept. 11 hijackers. An appeals court threw out his 2003 conviction and ordered the retrial, ruling he had been unfairly denied the testimony of al-Qaida suspects in U.S. custody. Abdelghani Mzoudi, a fellow Moroccan who was tried on the same charges, was acquitted in February 2004 by a Hamburg court. |
Posted by:Steve |
#1 Another reason for jury trials and not "judical pannels" as are common in Europe and else where. Many judges lack any common sense, they are after all lawyers, a class of humans just above pond scum. |
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom 2005-04-06 5:28:57 PM |