United States v. Salameh

152 F.3d 88
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1998
DocketNos. 94-1312 to 94-1315
StatusPublished
Cited by182 cases

This text of 152 F.3d 88 (United States v. Salameh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Salameh, 152 F.3d 88 (2d Cir. 1998).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Following a lengthy jury trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Duffy, /.), defendants were convicted of various crimes related to the bombing of the World Trade Center Complex in New York City. Defendants now appeal, asserting a congeries of arguments. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court but remand for re-sentencing and decline to exercise jurisdiction over certain post-trial motions pending before the district court.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Background.■.107

I. Suppression Motions.108

A. Motions to Suppress Materials Seized From Ajaj .108

(1) Ajaj’s Motion.108

[106]*106(2) Abouhalima s Motion. r — 4 i — 4

(a) Rule 403 . i — 4 t — 4

(b) First Amendment. i — 4 i — 4

(3) Ayyad’s Motion. i — 4 i — 4

B. Motion to Suppress Contents of the Storage Shed i — l r — 4

(1) Probablese. r-4 r — t

(2) Franks Hearing. r — t i — 4

(3) Good Faith Reliance... i — 4 i — I

II. Procedural Motions.114

A. Abouhalima — Severance.114

(1) Ajaj’s Holy War Materials.115

(2) Salameh’s Summation.116

B. Abouhalima — Involuntariness of Statement .117

C. Ayyad — Failure to Grant Funds for Experts.118

D. Ajaj — Eastern District Plea Agreement .118

III. Jury Selection.120

IV. Evidentiary Rulings.122

A. Admission of Evidence Regarding Bombing Victims.122

(1) Probative Value.122

(2) Danger of Unfair Prejudice.123

B. Admission of Evidence Regarding Nosair.123

(1) Photographs of Salameh and Nosair.123

(2) Admission of Abouhalima’s Contacts with Nosair.124

C. Admission of Identification.124

(1) Use of Photo Array.125

(2) Subsequent In-Court Identifications.126

D. Examination of Storage Facility Employee.127

(1) Leading Questions.127

(2) Comments Regarding Meeting.128

E. Testimony of the Government’s Fingerprint Expert.128

F. Admission of DNA Evidence.129

G. Confrontation Clause.130

(1) Moneeb.131

(2) Butler.131

(3) Moharam.132

H. Requested Read-back of Testimony.132

V. Jury Arguments.133

A. Prosecutorial Misconduct as to Abouhalima.134

(1) Government Misrepresentations.134

(a) Witnesses.134

(b) Affiliation With Yousef.134

(c) Inexplicable Nervousness.134

(2) Jury Fear.134

(3) Government Vouching .135

(4) Burden of Proof.136

B. Prosecutorial Misconduct as to Ajaj.137

(1) Government’s Improper Arguments .137

(2) Attacks on the Defense .138

(3) Change in Summation Theory.139

VI. Jury Charge .140

A. The Bully Hypothetical.140

B. Abouhalima — Terrorist Materials.144

C. Elements of the Charged Conspiracy.145

D. Ajaj’s Objection to the Jury Charge.147

(1) Essential Nature of Plan.147

(2) Inclusion of the Pinkerton Charge.148

[107]*107(3) Failure to Charge on Withdrawal Sua Sponte o

VII. Sufficiency of the Evidence. 1 — 1 LO i — t

A. Standard of Review ... 1 — 1 LO tH

B. Ajaj. T — 1 LO r — (

C. Abouhalima. hQ LO i — 1

VIII. Unfair Trial — Due Process Cn -3

IX. Post-Trial Motions. H-L Cn OO

A. New Trial (Ajaj). I — l Cn OO

B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel I — l Oí o

X. Sentencing.

Conclusion

BACKGROUND1

On April 24,1992, Ahmad Mohammad Ajaj departed from his home in Houston, Texas, and traveled to the Middle East to attend a terrorist training camp, known as “Camp Khaldan,” on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. There he learned how to construct homemade explosive devices. During his time in Pakistan, Ajaj met Ramzi Ahmed Yousef. Together the two plotted to use their newly acquired skills to bomb targets in the United States.

In the fall of 1992, after formulating a terrorist plan, Ajaj and Yousef traveled to New York under assumed names. Ajaj carried with him a “terrorist kit” that he and Yousef had assembled in Pakistan. The Mt included, among other things, handwritten notes Ajaj had taken while attending explosives courses, manuals containing formulae and instructions for manufacturing bombs, materials describing how to carry-off a successful terrorist operation, videotapes advocating terrorist action against the United States, and fraudulent identification documents.

On September 1, 1992, Ajaj and Yousef, using false names and passports, arrived at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. At customs, INS inspectors discovered that Ajaj’s passport had been altered and, consequently, they searched his belongings. Upon discovery of the “terrorist kit,” Ajaj became belligerent. The INS seized Ajaj’s “terrorist kit” and placed him under arrest. Ajaj was later indicted in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York for passport fraud. He pled guilty and was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment.

During Ajaj’s encounter with the INS inspectors, he denied that he was traveling with Yousef, who proceeded unmolested to the secondary inspection area where he presented an Iraqi passport and claimed political asylum. Yousef was arrested for entering the United States without a visa. Eventually he was released on his own recognizance.

Once in New York, Yousef assembled a team of trusted criminal associates, including Mohammed Salameh, Nidal Ayyad, Mah-moud Abouhalima and Abdul Rahman Yasin. Together, the conspirators implemented the bombing plot that Ajaj and Yousef had hatched overseas. Ayyad and Salameh opened a joint bank account into which they deposited funds to finance the bombing plot. Some of that money was later used by Sala-meh to rent a storage shed in Jersey City, New Jersey, where the conspirators stored chemicals for making explosives. Yousef also drew on that account to pay for materials described in Ajaj’s manuals as ingredients for bomb making.

The first target of the conspirators’ plot was the World Trade Center. Ayyad used [108]

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152 F.3d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-salameh-ca2-1998.