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Lynne Stewart sentenced to 28 months in prison in New York
City terror case
By Peter Daniels
18 October 2006
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Lynne Stewart, the New York City civil rights attorney convicted
20 months ago on charges of aiding terrorism, was sentenced on
October 16 to a prison term of 28 months. The Justice Department
had demanded a sentence of 30 years for the 67-year-old defendant,
who was diagnosed with breast cancer last year.
The clear aim of the prosecution of Stewart was to intimidate
all civil rights and civil liberties attorneys, at a time of relentless
attacks on democratic rights, including the right of habeas corpus.
The government has made little effort to hide its contempt for
the pro bono attorneys who are representing hundreds of prisoners
held without charges at Guantanamo Bay, for example.
The Justice Department took advantage of what Stewart herself
has recently acknowledged was naivete on her part
in order to victimize her and send a message to any other legal
defenders of democratic rights. She was charged with aiding terrorism
because in 2000 she violated administrative rules in order to
help her client, the blind Egyptian cleric Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman,
to communicate with his supporters in Egypt via a press statement
that Stewart openly passed on to the media. Rahman is serving
a life term after a 1995 conviction on charges of conspiracy to
blow up several New York City landmarks.
The defendant, who had never been a supporter of terrorism
but who had also made no secret of her left-wing sympathies, was
portrayed as a dangerous enemy, in an orchestrated campaign that
was reminiscent, although on a smaller scale, of the prosecution
of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in the early 1950s on charges of
conspiracy to commit espionage for the Soviet Union.
John Ashcroft, attorney general in the first Bush Administration,
held a press conference to announce the indictment of Stewart
in 2002. His successor, Alberto Gonzalez, held a press conference
to hail the conviction in February 2005, after a trial that lasted
seven months. During the trial, the government repeatedly invoked
the events of September 11 in a crude attempt to pin the terrorist
label on the defendants.
In this context, the sentence handed down by Federal District
Judge John G. Koeltl, along with his accompanying comments, can
only be seen as a partial rebuke to the prosecution. In explaining
why he was rejecting the call for a long term, Koeltl pointed
out that there was no evidence that any victim was in fact
harmed by Stewarts actions. He went on to laud her
30 years as a lawyer to the poor, the disadvantaged and
the unpopular. It is no exaggeration to say that Ms.
Stewart performed a public service not only to her clients but
to the nation, he added.
Nonetheless, Koeltl granted that the case contained an
irreducible core of very severe criminal conduct. Stewart
is permanently barred from practicing law, a penalty that she
has said is the worst punishment. He also sentenced
one of Stewarts co-defendants, Ahmed Sattar, a New York
City postal worker who had faced more serious charges of communicating
with terrorists, to 24 years in prison. Another defendant, Mohammed
Yousry, was given a 20-month term. The prosecution had demanded
a life sentence for Sattar and 20 years for Yousry, whose only
crime was to act as a translator.
Sattar told the judge, I am not a terrorist, your honor.
I am not a violent person. I am a human being. I am an American.
I am a Muslim who practices and believes strongly in his religion.
Stewart called her sentence a great victory against an
over-reaching government. She remains free pending appeal.
The government announced its disappointment with the sentences
and said it may also appeal.
The sentencing came after more than a years delay, primarily
because of Stewarts illness, which was diagnosed in 2005
and required months of treatment, including radiation. Her doctors
say she is now cancer-free, but Stewart fears substandard medical
care in prison, and her lawyer told the court, possibly anticipating
a longer sentence, If you send her to prison, shes
going to die.
In a letter to the judge in September, Stewart wrote that my
only motive was to serve my client as his lawyer. What might have
been legitimately tolerated in 2000-2001 was after September 11
interpreted differently and considered criminal. I didnt
see this. I see and understand it now.
Stewart acknowledged mistakes and carelessness, but she maintained,
in a radio interview on the day of her sentencing, that everything
I did, I did as a lawyer, that I never intended to aid my clients
cause. She admitted that she had underestimated the extent
to which the government would seize on an opportunity to punish
her.
On the day of the sentencing, hundreds of supporters of Stewart
rallied outside the courtroom. The day before, a large crowd had
come to Riverside Church in Manhattan to express their solidarity
with the defendant and her fight to defend the Bill of Rights,
including the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.
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