Moussaoui Wants 9/11 'Every Day'
Al Qaeda Conspirator Said It Made His Day To Hear Of Americans Suffering
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Play CBS Video Video Moussaoui 'Glad They Suffered' For the second time, Zacarias Moussaoui took the stand at his sentencing trial. This time, he explained why he hates Americans and why he believes the U.S. must be subdued. Jim Stewart reports.
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Video Moussaoui Testimony's Impact Bob Schieffer sat down with CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen, who has been following the Moussaoui case from the beginning.
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Video Moussaoui Takes The Stand Zacarias Moussaoui, a confessed al Qaeda conspirator, takes the witness stand and attacks his own defense team. CBS News' Aleen Sirgany reports.
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This artist's rendering shows U.S. Assistant Attorney Robert Spencer, right, questioning Zacarias Moussaoui in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., Thursday, April 13, 2006. (AP)
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Zacarias Moussaoui (AP Photo/U.S. District Court)
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The United Airlines Flight 93 data recorder was found at the crash scene in Shanksville, Pa. (AP)
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Dana Verkouteren's rendering shows Zacarias Moussaoui, left, and two unidentified security guards listening to a 911 tape recorded by Melissa Doi, pictured on the courtroom monitor, during Moussaoui's sentencing trial at the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., Monday, April 10, 2006. Doi was at the World Trade Towers on Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Dana Verkouteren)
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Interactive Zacarias Moussaoui Strange twists and turns have punctuated the admitted al Qaeda conspirator's case.
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Special Report War On Terror Complete coverage of the military's battle against terrorism.
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Timeline In Terror's Wake A look at the major developments following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Taking the witness stand for the second time in his death-penalty trial Thursday, Moussaoui mocked a Navy sailor who wept on the stand as she described the death of two of her subordinates.
"I think it was disgusting for a military person" to cry, Moussaoui said of the testimony of Navy Lt. Nancy McKeown. "She is military, she should expect people at war with her to want to kill her."
Asked if he was happy to hear her sobbing, he said, "Make my day."
Moussaoui said he had "no regret, no remorse" about the 9/11 attacks. Asked by prosecutor Rob Spencer if he would like to see it happen again, Moussaoui responded: "Every day until we get you."
It was the final insult to family members like Abraham Scott, whose wife died on Sept. 11, reports CBS News correspondent James Stewart.
"There's no other verdict but to come back with the death penalty," Scott said. "I know a lot of people ask me about him becoming a martyr ... let him become a martyr."
Moussaoui also said on cross-examination that he is convinced President Bush will free him before the end of his term and that he will return to London. He also made clear he doesn't believe his ultimate fate is up to the jury, reports CBS' Beverley Lumpkin.
Spencer tried several times to get Moussaoui to say he didn't really believe that, but Moussaoui was insistent.
"I haven't doubted it for one single second," said Moussaoui, adding that the vision came to him in a dream, just like his dream of flying a plane into the White House.
He also argued that he could not get a fair trial so close to the Pentagon and he criticized U.S. support for Israel.
Moussaoui testified that he believes his court-appointed lawyers are working against him and that if he'd had control over his defense, he would have argued that he should escape the death penalty and be available for a prisoner swap if American troops are captured overseas.
Moussaoui, as defiant on the witness stand as he has been at the defendant's table throughout the trial, testified against the advice of his court-appointed lawyers and attacked them before the jury that must decide whether to sentence him to death or to spend life in prison.
Offering a lengthy explanation of why he hates Americans, Moussaoui criticized the United States' support for Israel. He said Muslims have been at war with Christians and Jews for centuries. Israel, he said, is "just a missing star in the American flag."
©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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