Middling Verdict Follows Lengthy Trial
A British jury convicted three of
eight alleged conspirators involved in the
foiled August 2006 terror plot against trans-Atlantic
airliners, that caused mass confusion and delays in
the months following... and worldwide restrictions on liquids in
carry-on luggage that continue to this day.
The Los Angeles Times reports the jury returned guilty verdicts
against Abdullah Ahmed Ali, 27; Assad Sarwar, 28, and Tanvir
Hussain, 27 for conspiracy to commit murder. All three are British
citizens, of Pakistani descent. The jury failed to return verdicts,
however, against four other defendants... and acquitted the alleged
ringleader of the group.
While officials welcomed the guilty verdicts that did come down,
they expressed shock and anger the jury was not swayed by what
appeared to be overwhelming evidence against all eight members of
the clandestine terror cell suspected of planning attacks on as
many as seven airliners bound for the United States from
Britain.
That evidence included copies of "martydom" videos made by all
but one of the defendants -- which resembled the farewell messages
to family often recorded by Muslim suicide bombers -- and taped
discussions of ways to bypass airport security. The alleged
terrorists asserted they only planned to set off harmless devices,
intended as a protest against so-called mistreatment of
Muslims.
That explanation -- and the fact some jurors apparently believed
it -- disgusted one counter-terrorism official, who asked to remain
anonymous.
"Not to get a conviction on plotting to murder on airplanes is a
bit hard to swallow," the official told the Times. "There were
timetables, suicide videos, the known preference for Al Qaeda to
focus on airplanes. Apparently juries need stronger evidence that
they are getting."
Moreover, the jury failed to link the three members convicted to
a specific plot to bomb airliners... saying only that they planned
to attack unspecified targets, noting the three also scouted
refineries, and other high-profile targets. The four defendants who
weren't convicted are still in jail, having already pleaded guilty
to charges of conspiring to cause a public nuisance.
Prosecutors are now weighing whether to retry all seven -- less
the alleged mastermind of the attacks, Mohammed Gulzar -- on
specific allegations against commercial aircraft.
"[W]hen you are physically watching young Muslims known to be
extremists recording suicide videos, there comes a point in a plot
when you have to interfere, and run with what evidence you can
get," the official added.
The trial lasted five months... and in that time, prosecutors
failed to make their case in a number of respects. In one example,
government scientists called to testify had difficulty in igniting
the hydrogen mixture prosecutors asserted the terrorists planned to
use to bring the airliners down.
There were other, suspicious lapses, as well. Jurors heard
little about intelligence obtained against Rachid Rauf, accused to
arranging travel and training for the group and whose arrest in
Pakistan led to the roundup of a number of suspects. Prosecutors
were unable to grill Rauf on the stand, however, since he
mysteriously 'escaped' from Pakistani police shortly before he was
scheduled for extradition last fall.

Gulzar, 27, was acquitted of all charges... partly because he
was the only defendant who didn't make a suicide video.