Moussaoui Jury Hits The Mark
Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen: A Fitting End To Trial That Never Should Have Taken Place
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Play CBS Video Video Moussaoui Jury Hits The Mark CBS News Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen examines why the jury didn't give in to strong emotions and prejudices and gave Moussaoui what he deserves.
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Video Moussaoui Verdict Surprising? Only On The Web: CBS News Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen says the fact that there wasn't much evidence linking Zacarias Moussaoui to the 9/11 hijackers may have led jurors to spare his life.
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Video Moussaoui Gets Life, Not Death Jurors in the Zacarias Moussaoui sentencing trial rejected the death penalty for the al Qaeda conspirator. James Stewart reports.
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(CBS/AP)
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Zacarias Moussaoui, foreground, listens as defense attorney Edward MacMahon addresses the jury. (AP/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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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.
Judge Brinkema gave our country's self-described "worst enemy" a fair trial and his day in court and in doing so showed the world that we at least strive for equal justice under the law.
And, of course, in the larger sense, the life-over-death result here is a diplomatic and political and moral victory for the country, which now can turn to the world and declare that it can tell the difference between real terrorists, like the ones who actually terrorize, and chumps like Moussaoui, whom the real terrorists apparently wanted nothing to do with.
Meanwhile, everyone who deserved to lose in this story did lose. Moussaoui, the "liar" with false "bravado," to use the words of his own attorney, didn't deserve to have his death wish come true. He didn't deserve to join the ranks of the real hijackers in the pantheon of evil.
What he deserved is what he got -- a slow, silent, long, frustrating, unheralded end to his already miserable life. What an insult it must be to him that his hated America in the end saw him for the C-List bad-guy he truly is; what a blow to his already leaky ego. And what a fine way to torment an insecure, hateful man-- by telling him that he is unworthy of our country's most solemn punishment.
Prosecutors, too, deserved to lose because they fought so shamelessly and recklessly to win. It wasn't just that they got caught cheating with their aviation witnesses. It wasn't just the paucity of independent evidence linking Moussaoui to the crime. It was the hypocrisy of trying to substitute Moussaoui for Osama bin Laden, Ramzi Binalshibh, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, and the 19 lunatics who actually flew into the buildings and the ground. This sham reached its nadir during closing arguments, when prosecutor David Novak told jurors that Moussaoui "murdered 2,972 innocent people on 9/11 and he will kill again in prison."
And high-ranking government officials, who crassly tried to make political points by blaming Moussaoui for the crimes of the dead hijackers, deserved to lose so they cannot continue to spin this case, this trial, as a huge victory in the war on terror.
This battle in the war on terror was lost years ago, when it became clear even to U.S. officials that Moussaoui was not the 20th hijacker slated to doom Flight 93 and when the defendant himself began to take advantage of his constitutional rights to manipulate the judicial system. It is a stain on the record of this administration that it attempted to make a show trial out of the Moussaoui case when it could have simply put him on ice in Guantanamo Bay or charged him with lesser crimes.
Assuming that at least some on the panel wished the worst for a guy who scorned and mocked them at trial, this result tells Moussaoui that jurors believed in the end that that he is most appropriately dispatched to a prison cell at the Supermax facility in Florence, Colo., where he will remain in solitary confinement 23 hours a day. It tells him that some jurors didn't want to raise his stature in the creepy world of terrorism to a level it never came closing to reaching before the 9/11 attacks.
It reminds us all that he never pulled a trigger, never got onto a plane on 9/11, never talked to a single one of the real hijackers once they all came to America, never learned how to fly, and never did anything to effectuate his own plan to fly into anything, much less the White House.
The verdict tells the government that it must bear, and does bear, no small degree of culpability for failing to stop the terror attacks. It tells the government that it ought to come back to court with a capital case if and only if it gets bin Laden, or is ready to finally turn over for trial the real 9/11 plotters, Mohammed and Binalshibh, from whatever hellhole they now reside. It tells our leader that we, the people, could see through the hype and the spin that our government sought to sell us; that we are smarter than all that.
So now, finally, this mess of a case ends. It ends in Alexandria, Va., instead of in the federal death chamber in Terre Haute, Ind. It ends with few being able to proclaim "closure," the word that means so many different things to so many different people that it really means nothing at all.
It ends with prosecutors losing the trial of their lifetimes, defense attorneys losing a client they probably wish they never had, the government losing a case it desperately wanted to win, and the judge losing from her courtroom and her docket a cast of characters and issues that caused her one headache after another for nearly four-and-a-half years.
And now, Moussaoui heads off to spend the rest of his miserable days in prison with rogues like the Unabomber, Theodore Kaczynski, and Terry Nichols, the Oklahoma City bombing conspirator, and Ramzi Yousef, who masterminded the first attack on the World Trade Center, and Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind cleric also involved in that 1993 attack on the Twin Towers.
In fact, Moussaoui for a while during one of his more pungent lies claimed that he was training to hijack a plane so he could rescue Rahman. Perhaps they can briefly chat about that now that they both have been dispatched, once, finally, and forever, to the landfill of history.
By Andrew Cohen
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




