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New attack on democratic rights in Lynne Stewart case
New York civil rights attorney convicted on frame-up terror
charges
By Peter Daniels
14 February 2005
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The conviction of New York civil rights attorney Lynne Stewart
on charges of aiding terrorism is a travesty of justice. It is
a major blow against the right of criminal defendants to defend
themselves, a right provided by the Sixth Amendment of the US
Bill of Rights.
Stewart, 65 years old, is a veteran advocate and activist who
has made no secret of her radical political views, and has effectively
defended a wide range of clients over the past three decades,
from the poor and defenseless, to more high-profile cases involving
the Weather Underground and other middle class radicals.
The guilty verdict came after a trial that lasted an unusually
long seven months. The jury deliberated for a total of 13 days
over a one-month period before pronouncing Stewart guilty on all
five counts on February 10. She faces up to 30 years in prison
on charges including conspiracy to provide and conceal terrorist
activity, providing and concealing material support to terrorist
activity, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and making
false statements by promising to uphold various administrative
rules. Under rules for those convicted of a felony, Stewart was
immediately disbarred. She was allowed to remain free on bond,
pending sentencing on July 15.
The ominous-sounding charges of which Stewart was convicted
all flowed from one thingher effort to defend her client.
Stewart never engaged in or planned terrorist activity. The only
argument used by the government was that she had promised to abide
by extraordinary restrictions barring any communication by her
client, Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, with the outside world. Abdel
Rahman is the blind Egyptian cleric currently serving a life term
after being convicted of conspiracy to blow up various New York
City landmarks.
Convicted along with Stewart in the current trial were her
co-defendantsAhmed Abdel Sattar, who had worked as a paralegal
on the 1995 case involving Abdel Rahman, and Mohammed Yousry,
the interpreter in the work with Abdel Rahman. Abdel Sattar faces
a possible life sentence, and Yousry 20 years.
Stewart and the other defendants took the stand at the trial
and denied any support for terrorism. Basing its case on illegal
spying on Stewarts meetings with her client, however, the
government made the claim that Stewart had abetted terrorism by
making Abdel Rahmans views available to his supporters in
Egypt. The prosecution presented thousands of pages of transcripts
of phone calls, as well as videotapes of Stewarts meetings
with Abdel Rahman, to tie Stewart to terrorism. Although Federal
District Judge John Koeltl repeatedly informed the jury that the
terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Osama bin Laden
were not part of the case, the court allowed the prosecution to
present constant reminders of the World Trade Center disaster
and of the governments war on terrorism.
As Stewart said after the verdict, When you put Osama
bin Laden in a courtroom and ask the jury to ignore it, thats
asking a lot. The prosecutors played a videotape of bin
Laden threatening to spill blood in the fields of jihad
if Abdel Rahman were not released.
As the New York Times acknowledged in its report on
the verdict, The government never showed that any violence
ever resulted from Mr. Sattars calls or from any action
by Ms. Stewart or Mr. Yousry; there were no victims in the case.
Nevertheless, violations of procedural rules, conduct which
would normally lead to administrative penalties, were in this
case utilized to build up the Bush administrations campaign
against basic democratic rights.
The trial itself presented numerous echoes of the McCarthyism
of more than 50 years ago. Just as Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage on the basis
of hysterical and false claims that they were responsible for
giving the secret of the atom bomb to the Soviet Union,
the prosecutors in the current trial demonized Stewart as a traitor
and cross-examined her on her political views. Statements by her
that violence was sometimes necessary to overthrow oppressive
governments were used to argue that she advocated the overthrow
of the Egyptian government of Hosni Mubarak. This was the charge
sanctimoniously leveled by a government which boasts of the regime
change it carried out through unprovoked aggression in Iraq
at the cost of tens of thousands of lives.
There were other sinister incidents during the trial. A few
days before the verdict, when the notorious fascistic group that
calls itself the Jewish Defense Organization put up flyers near
the courthouse providing Stewarts home address and calling
for her to be hounded out of the city, the prosecutors, not even
paying lip service to Stewarts rights in the face of this
physical threat, claimed that it merited no attention from the
court and was no different from the actions of Stewarts
supporters who had proclaimed her innocence.
The defense argued that Stewart was within the bounds of attorney-client
privilege when she attempted to help her client keep his name
and his views before the world. Stewart testified that she had
been an aggressive defense lawyer, and that she had not attempted
to pass messages but had tried to prevent prison guards from overhearing
what she regarded as confidential and privileged communications
with her client. I see myself as being a symbol of what
people rail against when they say our civil liberties are eroded,
Stewart declared after the verdict. I hope this will be
a wake-up call to all the citizens of this country, that you cant
lock up the lawyers; you cant tell the lawyers how to do
their jobs.
Several jurors reportedly held out against the guilty verdicts
but finally succumbed to pressure in the jury room after 13 days.
When the jurors were polled to confirm the verdict, several were
obviously distressed and one was barely audible in affirming the
guilty verdict.
In the immediate aftermath of the verdict, civil liberties
and civil rights attorneys around the country warned that it represented
a dangerous escalation of attacks on democratic rights. This was
the first case of the government prosecuting an attorney for someone
accused of terrorism. This will have a chilling effect on
lawyers who might represent an unpopular client, said David
Cole, a noted civil liberties advocate and professor at Georgetown
University. Cole accused the government of conducting its case
against Stewart in a very inflammatory fashion.
National Lawyers Guild President Michael Avery issued a statement
declaring, The US Department of Justice was resolute from
day one in making a symbol out of Lynne Stewart in support of
its campaign to deny people charged with crimes of effective legal
representation. The government is bent on intimidating attorneys
from providing zealous representation to unpopular clients. The
National Lawyers Guild strongly urges its own members and other
defense lawyers to continue to proudly represent clients who are
openly critical of government policies. We will not be intimidated
and this prosecution has only strengthened our resolve to oppose
the repressive attacks this government has made on the civil liberties
of everyone in this country. We will also continue to stand by
Lynne Stewart.
The political significance of this trial was also spelled out
in the immediate reaction of Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez
to the verdict. The motive behind the prosecution of Stewart was
clear from the fact that the indictment in 2002 was announced
by Attorney General John Ashcroft at a Washington press conference.
Today Ashcrofts successor, the man who told the White House
the Geneva Conventions were quaint and gave the green
light to Bush for the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo
and elsewhere, wasted no time in hailing the verdict as sending
a clear, unmistakable message that this department will
pursue both those who carry out acts of terrorism and those who
assist them with their murderous goals.
In the eyes of the current regime in Washington, devotion to
due process and the Bill of Rights and the application of these
rights to all constitute assistance to the enemy.
This is a government which no longer even makes a pretense of
defending the Constitution, even as it makes its lying claims
to be spreading freedom through invasion and conquest.
Lynne Stewart will be appealing her conviction to the US Court
of Appeals. She will also be handing over outstanding legal cases
to her son, who has been a part of her law practice. I will
fight on, Im not giving up, she said after the verdict.
I know I committed no crime. I know what I did was right.
See Also:
US government makes closing
arguments in frame-up of New York attorney Lynne Stewart
[5 January 2005]
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