Matter of Extradition of Atta

706 F. Supp. 1032, 1989 WL 12227
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 14, 1989
Docket88 CV 2008 (ERK)
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 706 F. Supp. 1032 (Matter of Extradition of Atta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Extradition of Atta, 706 F. Supp. 1032, 1989 WL 12227 (E.D.N.Y. 1989).

Opinion

CORRECTED MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KORMAN, District Judge.

On Saturday evening, April 12, 1986, an Egged bus was making its regularly scheduled run through various Israeli suburban communities located on the West Bank en route to its ultimate destination, Tel Aviv. The passengers using the bus on a Saturday evening would be Israeli settlers from these communities who were going to work, to visit friends and family, to the movies, or perhaps even to synagogue. As the bus passed near the Dir Abu Mishal intersection, one or more Molotov cocktails were hurled at it and the bus was strafed with automatic weapons fire by three individuals who had stationed themselves at a hillside vantage point. The driver of the bus, a civilian employee of Egged who did not live on the West Bank, was fatally wounded and another passenger was struck by shrapnel and rounds from an Uzi sub-machine gun. 1 The other two passengers, a woman and a man who resided on the West Bank, escaped injury.

Responsibility for the attack was claimed by the Abu Nidal Organization. According to the Foreign Information Broadcast Service:

The Abu Nidal Palestinian group had announced that it used machine guns and Molotov cocktails yesterday to attack a bus transporting Israeli soldiers and civilians between the villages of (Abu Mash’al) and (Abbud). In a statement released in Beirut, the group said that Kamal' Adwan group had carried out the attack, which left a number of people killed or wounded.

Gov’t Exh. 18 (quoted in In the Matter of the Extradition of Mahmoud Abed Atta, 87-M-551, at 51 (E.D.N.Y. June 17, 1988) [1988 WL 66866] [hereinafter Magistrate’s Opinion]). The aims, objectives and modus operandi of the Abu Nidal Organization were described in an affidavit of Charles E. Allen, a career staff employee of the C.I.A., as follows:

4_ The Abu Nidal Organization opposes any settlement of the Arab-Israeli dispute by diplomatic means, preferring the use of violence to reclaim what it considers to be Arab land lost to the State of Israel. It has conducted some 90 terrorist attacks since its inception in 1974 — almost half of them since the beginning of 1984. At least 300 people have died and more than 575 have been wounded in attacks conducted by the Abu Nidal Organization. A number of those killed and wounded have been American citizens.
5. Despite its Middle Eastern roots, the Abu Nidal Organization has conducted almost three-quarters of its attacks outside the Middle East; only rarely has it organized attacks inside Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza. One of the few recent instances of an operation in this area attributed to the Abu Nidal Organization was the attack on the bus carrying civilians in April 1986 in which Mr. Mahmoud Atta [the defendant here] is implicated. While the Abu Nidal Organization has claimed a number of other terrorist attacks in the West Bank and Gaza, these claims have not been corroborated. Although the organization claims that its enemies are Israel and its supporters, its targets frequently are other Palestinians, including notably the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and moderate Arab governments that have shown an interest in a negotiated solution to the issue of Palestine. The Abu Nidal Organization’s victims, however, are frequently innocent bystanders, often of nationalities other than the intended target.
6. Abu Nidal himself was sentenced to death in absentia by the Yasir Arafat Fatah Command in 1974 for planning the murder of Arafat and other senior PLO *1035 officials. The Abu Nidal Organization has attacked PLO officials or offices in London, Kuwait, Paris, Islamabad, Brussels, Rome, Lisbon, Athens, Ankara and Belgrade, killing at least 11 leading Fatah members. Despite the Abu Nidal Organization’s attention in recent months to intra-Palestinian politics and the building of a militia within the refugee camps in Lebanon, those efforts are in addition to — not a substitute for — Abu Nidal’s basic strategy of using violence and terrorism to bring down Israel and to punish any who support or negotiate with its government.
7. From the foregoing, it is evident that the Abu Nidal Organization is principally engaged in the pursuit of violence and opposes peaceful efforts to establish a Palestinian state. It has engaged in violence far from the immediate zone of conflict and against basically civilian targets that may have only a remote connection to the Palestinian conflict. The Abu Nidal Organization occasionally has attacked third country intra-Arab targets at the behest of patron governments in exchange for safehaven and financial and logistical support. In the course of its history, the Abu Nidal Organization has at various times depended heavily upon Syria and Libya for support; many of its operations served to settle scores against non-Israeli adversaries of these states.
8. In sum, attacks by the Abu Nidal Organization in recent years have been more violent and designed to cause a maximum number of casualties. The group has threatened retaliation against states that hold its members prisoner, including the United States. It has followed through on such threats against the United Kingdom.

Gov’t Exh. 17, at 2-4 (cited in Magistrate’s Opinion at 41). In proceedings before Magistrate Caden, which are more fully described below, he found that “there is probable cause to believe that [the defendant here] was a member of this organization.” Magistrate’s Opinion at 41.

Shortly after the attack on the Egged bus, two Palestinians were apprehended by Israeli authorities. They signed sworn statements concerning their participation in the attack and eventually were tried and convicted on charges relating to their participation in the attack. The two men, it turns out, were cousins and the statements they made while in custody implicated a third individual, the defendant Mahmoud El-Abed Ahmad (“Ahmad”). Ahmad, they claimed, had fled from the West Bank after the attack.

In 1987 Israel learned that Ahmad was residing in Venezuela. On April 27, 1987 Ahmad was detained by Venezuelan officials on charges relating to his involvement in the Abu Nidal Organization. On May 5, 1987 Magistrate Caden issued a warrant for the provisional arrest of Ahmad, which was executed the next day when Venezuelan authorities placed Ahmad on a flight from Caracas Airport bound for the United States. On June 26, 1987 Israel formally requested that the United States extradite Ahmad so that he could be tried in Israel on charges of murder, attempted murder, causing harm with aggravating intent, attempted arson, and conspiracy to commit a felony, all in violation of various sections of the Israel Penal Law. Each of these crimes is covered by Article II of the Convention on Extradition Between the Government of the United States and the Government of the State of Israel, December 10, 1962, 14 U.S.T. 1707, T.I.A.S. No. 5476 [hereinafter Extradition Treaty or Treaty], Accordingly, the United States filed an extradition complaint pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3181, et seq.

An extradition hearing was held before Magistrate Caden on December 16 and 17, 1987 and February 22, 1988.

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Bluebook (online)
706 F. Supp. 1032, 1989 WL 12227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-extradition-of-atta-nyed-1989.