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Potential
Terror Jurors Cite 9/11 Doubts
AP | May 3, 2007
By
CURT ANDERSON
MIAMI -- Many
potential jurors in the Jose Padilla terrorism-support case say they
aren't sure who directed the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks because they
don't trust reporters or the federal government.
"There are too many
ifs, too many things going on," one male juror said. "I don't know
the whole story."
Others say they
just don't pay close enough attention to world events to be certain.
"I'm oblivious to
that stuff," one prospective female juror said during questioning
this week. "I don't watch the news much. I try to avoid it."
The doubts were
noted by a significant portion of the more than 160 people who have
been questioned individually since jury selection in the case began
April 16.
Padilla and two
co-defendants are charged with being part of a North American
support cell for Islamic extremists. A jury is expected to be seated
next week, with testimony to begin May 14.
Padilla, a U.S.
citizen held for 3 1/2 years as an enemy combatant, is accused of
applying for an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan. He was
previously accused of an al-Qaida plot to detonate a radioactive
"dirty bomb" in a U.S. city, but that allegation is not part of the
Miami case.
Before they came to
court, each of the jurors filled out a 115-question form asking
about a wide range of legal, political and religious topics,
particularly their views of Arabs, Muslims and Islamic radicals. On
question No. 60, which asks for an opinion about responsibility for
the Sept. 11 terror attacks, many people said they don't know.
"I've been
surprised at the number of our jurors who don't have an opinion
about 9/11," U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke, who is presiding over
the case and asks most of the juror questions, said Wednesday.
The questionnaires
were used to weed out dozens of people with obvious biases or
personal hardships before the face-to-face interviews began, meaning
many potential jurors with strong views about Sept. 11 never made it
to court because their ability to be impartial was in question.
A cottage industry
of conspiracy theorists has sprung up among academics and others who
claim such things as that the U.S. was involved in the Sept. 11
attacks, or that explosives planted inside the World Trade Center
towers brought the buildings down rather than the jetliners that
crashed into them.
In the Padilla
case, what's notable is not so much conspiracy theories as the lack
of any views at all.
To be sure, most
jurors without a Sept. 11 opinion are aware that the attacks have
been blamed on terrorists of some sort. But many seem unwilling to
blame al-Qaida and its leader, Osama bin Laden -- the conclusion
reached by the national Sept. 11 Commission and the Bush
administration and widely reported by news media.
One female juror
agreed that was a "general public consensus" but still held out
skepticism.
"I don't have an
opinion. I don't tend to trust the news media," she said.
Many jurors seem to
be unwilling to state the al-Qaida connection as fact because they
don't have firsthand knowledge. An older male juror said he answered
"al-Qaida and bin Laden" on his questionnaire because "that was what
the news said."
"I really can't say
who did it," said the man, who was not being identified because
Cooke has prohibited publication of jurors' names.
Samuel Terilli, a
journalism professor at the University of Miami and former general
counsel at The Miami Herald, said that hesitancy often comes
naturally when people are asked for their opinions in an official
setting, such as federal court.
"You have a
tendency among some people when they are called to jury duty to
heighten their skepticism about what they have read or watched, and
also they have a desire to be more neutral," Terilli said. "People
are on guard too much."
Some people say
they don't necessarily believe the U.S. government's statements
about Sept. 11, with many of those people citing the faulty
intelligence and misinformation about weapons of mass destruction
that led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the toppling of President
Saddam Hussein.
"It could have been
Saddam Hussein. It could have been bin Laden. I really don't know
who," one woman said.
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