Blunder Jeopardizes Moussaoui Trial
Federal E-Mails Seem To Show Witness-Coaching
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Play CBS Video Video Moussaoui Sentencing On Hold Due to a blatant violation by prosecutors, the judge in the case of Zacarias Moussaoui could throw out the death penalty option or start the whole sentencing process over. Jim Stewart reports.
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Video Moussaoui Trial Bombshell A judge has put the sentencing trial of Zacarias Moussaoui on hold and may take away the death penalty option after the government admitted to coaching potential witnesses. Aleen Sirgany reports.
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Video 9/11 Kin Member On Moussaoui CBS News RAW: Eddie Bracken, who lost his sister Lucy Fishman in the 9/11 attack, described Zacarias Moussaoui's demeanor in the courtroom and his feelings if the trial were called off.
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Artist rendering of Zacarias Moussaoui at his trial in Alexandria, Va. (AP)
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(AP / CBS)
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Who's Who Moussaoui Jury Thumbnails of the members of the panel that will decide the al Qaeda conspirator's fate.
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Timeline In Terror's Wake A look at the major developments following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
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Special Report War On Terror Complete coverage of the military's battle against terrorism.
More than a dozen pages of e-mails shown to the court contain a set of messages that "smacks of coaching," which the judge had prohibited.
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema said it was "very difficult for this case to go forward" after prosecutors revealed that a lawyer for the Transportation Security Administration had violated her order barring witnesses from any exposure to trial testimony.
The prosecutors admitted Monday to Brinkema that the TSA lawyer had e-mailed seven future witnesses coaching notes on how to testify. One reads: "Today the FBI got tripped up on the stand. ... (don't) allow the defense to cut your credibility. ..." CBS News correspondent Jim Stewart reports.
Brinkema also pointed out (watch video) that this is the second time the government has made an error that infringed on Moussaoui's constitutional rights, CBS' Aleen Sirgany reports.
Brinkema sent the jury home until Wednesday while she considers her options. She will hold a hearing Tuesday to determine the scope of the problem. The TSA lawyer, Carla Martin, and most of the seven witnesses — past or present employees of the Federal Aviation Administration who received e-mails from Martin — are expected to testify.
"You just cannot make up what has happened in the Moussaoui sentencing trial," which now teeters on the brink of a mistrial after prosecutors told Judge Brinkema that some of their witnesses have broken her sequestration rules by sharing information with each other about testimony, Cohen said. "This sort of mistake, this 'egregious violation,' as the judge put it, isn’t supposed to happen in a county court never mind in federal court in the government’s most important single trial over the century."
Brinkema said she had "never seen such an egregious violation of a rule on witnesses," and prosecutor David Novak agreed that Martin's actions were "horrendously wrong."
Defense lawyer Edward MacMahon asked Brinkema to dismiss the government's death-penalty case, saying, "This is not going to be a fair trial." Cohen says that it is the government's own slip up that could keep him from the punishment they desired.
"The feds will have no one to blame but themselves if the judge as threatened sanctions prosecutors by removing the death penalty as a sentencing option for Moussaoui," Cohen said.
Brinkema said Martin had sent e-mails to the upcoming witnesses in which she discussed the government's opening statement and trial strategy and included transcripts of the first day's proceedings, including the testimony of an FBI witness. MacMahon suggested that the upcoming witnesses were warned to "be careful" if they were cross-examined about certain topics.
Brinkema said the violation was compounded by the fact that Martin e-mailed the witnesses jointly, violating standard practice against joint interviews of witnesses.
Read the e-mails that sparked Brinkema's anger(.pdf).
"What that leads to is the very real potential that witnesses are rehearsed, coached or otherwise that the truth-seeking concept of a proceeding is significantly eroded," Brinkema said.
The tainted witnesses all come from the aviation field, and presumably would help the government make its case that cockpit doors would have been hardened and security at airports tightened — if Moussaoui had told the truth about 9/11, Stewart reports.
At the very least, McMahon said the government's FAA witnesses should be excluded. But prosecutor Novak protested they represented "half the government's case."
Brinkema said she also would reconsider the defense's request of last week for a mistrial — made after a question from Novak suggested to the jury that Moussaoui might have had an obligation to confess his terrorist connections to the FBI even after he had invoked his right to an attorney.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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