United States v. Al Fawwaz

116 F. Supp. 3d 194, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20014, 2015 WL 711737
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 19, 2015
DocketNo. S7 98-cr-1023 (LAK)
StatusPublished

This text of 116 F. Supp. 3d 194 (United States v. Al Fawwaz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Al Fawwaz, 116 F. Supp. 3d 194, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20014, 2015 WL 711737 (S.D.N.Y. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION REGARDING DENIAL OF MOTION TO ADJOURN TRIAL

•LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge.

Table of Contents

Facts......•.....................................................................199

The Extradition, of Al Fawwaz...................,............................199

Initial U.K. Litigation — Al Fawwaz Decided Not to Pursue Alleged MI5 Evidence ............................................................199

U.K. Events After the House of Lords Decision — 2001 through 2009 ..........201

The European Court of Human Rights — 2010-2012 .........................201

The Second U.K. Judicial Review Action — 2012 .............................202

Relevant Prior Proceedings in this Court.....................................: .202

The Indictment..................................,.................:.... 202

[197]*197The Schedule and the Present Motion .....................................204

The Alleged MI5 Material and Witnesses...............................205

The Computer Discs Seized From Al Fawwaz’s Apartment...................207

Discussion.......................... 208

I.The Legal Standard Governing Adjournments and Continuances...........208

A. Adjournments and Continuances Are Committed to Trial Court Discretion ........................ 208

B. Trial Courts Evaluate Such Requests in Light of All the Circumstances .............................-..........................209

1. Supreme Court Precedent............................ 209

2. Second Circuit Precedent ........ 210

II.The U.K. Lawsuit Is Not Sufficiently Likely to Result in Evidence . ' , - Helpful to Al Fawwaz, Let Alone to Do So in Any Reasonable Period of Time.............................. .......-........1....... —-... .211

III.Any Difficulties Accessing Files on Computer Discs Seized From Al Fawwaz’s Apartment Did- Not Warrant a Further Postponemént.....216

. IV. Al.Fawwaz’s Other Assertions Were Unpersuasive..........--.............216

A. Client Review of Documents .......................-........:.....216

B. The Death of AlLiby.............................................217

C. The Surveillance Reports............................,.......,______ .218

V. The Public Interest in Adhering to the Previously Adjourned Trial Date____,...... 220

Conclusion............................. 221

In August 1998, the United States embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, were bombed. .Two hundred twenty-four people were killed and thousands injured.

Khalid al Fawwaz, .then a resident of London, England, was charged here in 1998 with conspiring with Usama bin Laden and others to murder American-citizens and to bomb the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam as well as other U.S. facilities. The United States promptly sought his extradition, and al Fawwaz was arrested in England.-._

Al Fawwaz, as was his -right, fiercely resisted extradition to this country.. After a fourteenryear battle, .much of it consumed with extensive litigation and other efforts initiated by al Fawwaz, he finally was extradited and presented in this Court on October 6, 2012,1 The case initially was set for trial on October 7,. 2013. After several postponements, most at al Faw-waz’s request, the.trial was scheduled to commence on January 12, 2015. Nevertheless, al Fawwaz sought yet another ad[198]*198journment.2 The Court delayed the start until January 20, 20153 but denied any further postponement. This opinion gives its reasons.

In summary, al Fawwaz requested a delay in his trial on two principal grounds: (1) to await developments in his already-dismissed action against the British Home Secretary with respect to certain letters rogatory of which the United Kingdom had denied enforcement on the grounds of national security, and (2) to examine a small number of initially unreadable electronic files in the hope that they might be helpful to his defense.

In relevant part, the letters rogatory sought documents from the United Kingdom Security Service, formerly known as MI5, and testimony from two alleged MI5 agents, one identified by defense counsel as Paul Banner and the other unnamed. They were issued — without opposition by the government — in response to al Faw-waz’s contention that he was approached by Banner shortly after al Fawwaz arrived in the United Kingdom, that he met frequently with Banner, and that he made clear to Banner that • his objective was merely to secure peace with the Saudi government without recourse to violence or other unlawful activity.4 But two justices of the High Court of England and Wales on December 19, 2014 unanimously dismissed al Fawwaz’s case on the merits. Written judgments (in our parlance, opinions) — one public and the other sealed on British national security' grounds and hence unavailable to this Court or the parties here — will follow at some point. Al Fawwaz asked that the trial be delayed pending his receipt of the public judgment and his evaluation of whether to seek permission to appeal to the U.K. Court of Appeal.5

The question before the Court was whether and to what extent the trial of this sixteen-year-old criminal case should be postponed still further based on al Faw-waz’s hope that judicial review of the British government’s denial of enforcement of the letters rogatory, on national security grounds — a lawsuit that he already had lost at the court of first and, absent permission to appeal, last instance — ultimately might result in his obtaining useful evidence. The Court concluded that the possibility of anything helpful to al Fawwaz being secured through the United Kingdom litigation was exceptionally speculative.

The second of al Fawwaz’s principal arguments was that he had difficulty in opening, at least in .readable form, some computer files containing images of the contents of a number of computer discs that were seized from his home by British police in 1998 — images that had been in his possession since July 2013 and to which the defense team gave almost no attention until July 2014. The details with respect to the alleged technical problems concern[199]*199ing these floppy discs and other electronically stored information were many. In the last analysis, however, the facts were clear and the outcome did not depend upon complex technology. Al Fawwaz offered no persuasive reason to believe that there was anything in any unreadable portions of these files, if indeed any were unreadable in the end, that would be helpful to his defense or, for that matter, even relevant to the case.

In sum, then, the Court was asked to grant a further delay, essentially on the ground that it might have resulted in al Fawwaz finding exculpatory or helpful evidence. But there was no reason to believe that any such evidence existed or, if it existed, that it would be obtained, no matter how long a postponement were granted.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. Supp. 3d 194, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20014, 2015 WL 711737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-al-fawwaz-nysd-2015.