MIAMI, Jan. 30, 2007

Court Reinstates Key Padilla Terror Charge

Federal Appeals Court Reverses District Court's Ruling On Charge Carrying Life Sentence

  • A federal appeals court reinstated a terrorism charge against Jose Padilla, center, which carries a sentence of life in prison.

    A federal appeals court reinstated a terrorism charge against Jose Padilla, center, which carries a sentence of life in prison.  (AP Photo)

  • Timeline Enemy Combatant

    A summary of Jose Padilla's alleged activities and his court proceedings.

  • Special Report War On Terror

    Complete coverage of the military's battle against terrorism.

(CBS)  By CBS News producer Phil Hirschkorn.



A federal appeals court has reversed a trial judge's order that stripped the key terrorist conspiracy charge against accused al Qaeda operative Jose Padilla.

The ruling from the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta on Tuesday means Padilla could again face a life sentence if he is convicted on all counts by a jury at a trial due to start later this year in Miami.

The decision rejected the analysis by U.S. District Court Judge Marcia Cooke that the charge of conspiracy to murder, kidnap and maim persons in a foreign country was "multiplicitous" with two other charges levied against Padilla and his codefendants.

"While these three charges are interrelated, they are not interdependent," the appeals court wrote. Padilla is also under indictment for conspiracy to provide material support for terrorists and for providing material support for terrorists.

"A defendant could commit one act that satisfies the elements of two distinct offenses," the appeals court said.

The appeals court's ruling came quickly — less than three weeks after attorneys conducted oral arguments. The Padilla trial had been scheduled to begin with jury selection this month, but Judge Cooke has since delayed the trial until at least April 16.

The top terror conspiracy charge carries a potential life sentence. The other two charges carry a maximum of 15 years, according to the office of U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Alex Acosta.

"We are gratified by the 11th Circuit's swift decision and look forward to presenting the evidence at trial," Acosta said in a written statement Tuesday.

The most pressing legal issue now is whether Padilla is mentally competent to stand trial. Two mental health experts for the defense who have examined Padilla have told the court he is unstable, incommunicative and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of his 3 1/2 years locked up in isolation in a U.S. naval brig in South Carolina as an "enemy combatant."

The Bush administration gave Padilla that label — removing him from the criminal justice system to military custody — alleging in 2002 that the Brooklyn-born former gang member and Muslim convert had become an al Qaeda operative intent on either detonating a radioactive "dirty bomb" or blowing up apartment buildings with natural gas lines in the United States.

Those accusations do not exist in the pending case. Padilla was the fifth defendant added in November 2005 to an 11-count indictment depicting a North American "jihad" support cell in South Florida.

The most serious remaining allegation against Padilla is that after he moved to Egypt in 1998, he allegedly attended al Qaeda terror training camps in Afghanistan in 1999-2000. The government has offered a camp application form, recovered in Afghanistan, as evidence.

The indictment makes only a passing mention of al Qaeda, listing it as one of several groups pursuing "jihad" as part of a global "radical fundamentalist movement." There is only one reference to al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden — a wiretapped phone conversation between two alleged conspirators saying in 2000 that Padilla had "entered the area of Osama."

Padilla and two co-defendants are in custody or in the United States, and one of them is free on bail. Two other defendants are at large. One of them allegedly fought with Muslim separatists in Kosovo.

The indictment alleges Padilla received money and camping gear from lead defendant Adham Amin Hassoun, who is charged in the eight other counts, one for gun possession and seven for perjury or making false statements.

Padilla, 36, was detained in May 2002 at Chicago's O'Hare Airport upon returning from Pakistan. He was first held as a material witness in the grand jury investigation of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks before his open-ended transfer to military custody in June 2002.

Padilla's court-appointed federal defenders contend his tortuous treatment in the hands of the U.S. military amounted to "outrageous government conduct" warranting a dismissal of the criminal case. Judge Cooke has yet to rule on that motion. The Bureau of Prisons is expected to report its mental health assessment of Padilla next month.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by feelfree1 January 31, 2007 3:10 AM EST
Bush regime officials should face a capital crimes trials for what they have done to this man, alone, let alone their other heinous crimes.
Reply to this comment
by gunnerv1 January 30, 2007 11:21 PM EST
CBS_Oliver; Do you really think in your deepest soul that I would actually do something? I'm to tied down to an 8 to 5 and it's to *** cold to leave the house anyway, to old too (besides his carcass ain't worth it anyway). Anybody who actually carries out a threat is a nut job and deserves to be on a 24/7 lockdown (Just like him).
Reply to this comment
by gunnerv1 January 30, 2007 11:12 PM EST
I just wanted to get a rise. My mission here is complete.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_777 January 30, 2007 9:14 PM EST
Padilla is a patsy. The real terrorists are still at large. I'm a conservative republican who voted for Bush and got most of my news from FOX News. That is, until I started thinking for myself and put the pieces of 9/11 together. There is a brand new video out on Google Video called "9/11 Mysteries". Check it out and get the truth. All of a sudden things like the "war on terror" and what's happening in the middle east makes complete sense. We need to take back our government before it's too late.
Reply to this comment
by cbs_oliver January 30, 2007 8:41 PM EST
Why are right wing terror threats tolerated on these CBS comment threads?

Examples are:

"Judge, jury and executioner. Take'em out back boys, you know what to do. Oh, I forgot myself, your Liberal Bleeding Hearts will let him go! Give me the *** gun, I'll shoot him myself.
Posted by gunnerv1 at 03:33 PM : Jan 30, 2007"

"don't waste your bullet. Take a knife and behead em.
Posted by michaure at 04:42 PM : Jan 30, 2007"

Reply to this comment
by legendary240 January 30, 2007 8:32 PM EST
Give him his glory and marytr him - he'd do it for you? Are we to think Al-Quaeda or however in the He77 you spell it is just a Dale Carnegie course for the aspiring Islamic young man to become a better citizen or something? Anyone who ever went there should be thrown into a pit and covered over.
Reply to this comment
by michaure January 30, 2007 7:42 PM EST
don't waste your bullet. Take a knife and behead em.
Reply to this comment
by gunnerv1 January 30, 2007 6:33 PM EST
Judge, jury and executioner. Take'em out back boys, you know what to do. Oh, I forgot myself, your Liberal Bleeding Hearts will let him go! Give me the *** gun, I'll shoot him myself.
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. House Passes Landmark Health Care Bill

    (480 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: