TERRORISM TRIAL Prosecutors win concession in case



The trial is scheduled to resume Monday.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- Prosecutors seeking to execute Al-Qaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui partially revived their case Friday after a judge reversed course and agreed to admit some evidence about aviation security.
U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema relented from her earlier order barring all such testimony. She had issued that ruling Tuesday as punishment for the misconduct of Transportation Security Administration lawyer Carla J. Martin, who coached witnesses and lied to the defense.
"It would be unfortunate if this case could not go forward to some final resolution," Brinkema told trial attorneys in a telephone conference Friday.
Moussaoui is the only person charged in this country in connection with Al-Qaida's Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Late Friday, Moussaoui's lawyers asked Brinkema to further investigate Martin on Monday, before allowing any aviation testimony. Prosecutors agreed, if Martin is willing to testify. Brinkema did not immediately respond.
Lawsuits
Meanwhile, two lawyers coordinating private lawsuits for property damages from Sept. 11 alleged that Martin's actions were prompted by airlines fearful the government's arguments in Moussaoui's case might undercut their defense against paying civil damages.
Martin's attorney, Roscoe Howard, acknowledged Friday she spoke with a United Airlines attorney about the terrorist-sentencing case and the civil case. "But I don't think there is any collaboration between them," Howard said.
The trialis to resume Monday.
Brinkema accepted a compromise proposal by the government. It allows prosecutors to present limited testimony about what the government could have done to enhance aviation security before the Sept. 11 attacks if Moussaoui had not lied to FBI agents Aug. 16-17, 2001, about his Al-Qaida membership and plans to crash a jetliner into the White House.
Prosecutors had told Brinkema their case would be gutted without at least some testimony on aviation security. Though they disputed her ruling that the aviation security evidence was contaminated beyond repair by Martin, prosecutors suggested using a new, substitute witness and documents that Martin had no contact with.
Substitute witness
Prosecutors said a substitute witness could be found who worked at the Federal Aviation Administration at the time of Sept. 11 and could discuss how government used "no-fly" lists to bar specific terrorist suspects from airplanes.
Brinkema acknowledged substitute government witnesses would present problems for the defense, including finding rebuttal witnesses.
The testimony is crucial because prosecutors must prove that Moussaoui's actions led directly to at least one death on Sept. 11 to obtain the death penalty. They argue that Moussaoui's lies about his true intentions prevented the FBI from identifying some Sept. 11 hijackers in advance and prevented the FAA from taking airport security steps to keep them off airplanes.
Moussaoui pleaded guilty in April to conspiring with Al-Qaida to crash airplanes into U.S. buildings. But Moussaoui denies any role in Sept. 11 and says he was training for a possible later attack on the White House. The current trial is to determine whether he is executed or spends life in prison.