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February 2005, Week 4

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Subject:
From:
Brian Donaldson <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Brian Donaldson <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 22 Feb 2005 14:36:17 -0500
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Updated: 02:22 PM EST
Man Charged in Alleged Plot to Kill Bush
By MATTHEW BARAKAT, AP



AP
Abu Ali is charged with six counts and would face a maximum of 80 years in
prison if convicted.

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (Feb. 22) - A Virginian who had been detained in Saudi
Arabia as a suspected terrorist was charged Tuesday with conspiring to
assassinate President Bush and with supporting the al-Qaida terrorist
network.

Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, 23, a U.S. citizen, made an initial appearance Tuesday
in U.S. District Court but did not enter a plea. He contended he was
tortured while detained in Saudi Arabia since June 2003 and offered through
his lawyer to show the judge his scars.

The federal indictment said that in 2002 and 2003 Abu Ali and an
unidentified co-conspirator discussed plans for Abu Ali to assassinate
Bush. They discussed two scenarios, the indictment said, one in which Abu
Ali ''would get close enough to the president to shoot him on the street''
and, alternatively, ''an operation in which Abu Ali would detonate a car
bomb.''

The White House had no comment on the indictment.


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Abu Ali was born in Houston and moved to Falls Church, Va., a Washington
suburb. He was valedictorian of the Islamic Saudi Academy in Alexandria, Va.

Federal prosecutors say Abu Ali joined an al-Qaida cell in Saudi Arabia in
2001. The alleged Bush plot occurred while he was studying in that country.

His family contends that U.S. officials were behind his detention by Saudi
authorities and wanted him held in that country so he could be tortured for
information. A lawsuit brought on their behalf in U.S. District Court in
Washington seeks to compel the government to disclose what it knows about
Abu Ali and his detention.

Abu Ali's appearance in federal court here was a surprise because the
government never publicly disclosed that he had left Saudi Arabia.

According to the indictment, Abu Ali obtained a religious blessing from
another unidentified co-conspirator to assassinate the president. One of
the unidentified co-conspirators in the plot is among 19 people the Saudi
government said in 2003 was seeking to launch terror attacks in that
country, according to the indictment.

More than 100 supporters of Abu Ali crowded the courtroom Tuesday and
laughed when the charge was read aloud alleging that he conspired to
assassinate Bush.

When Abu Ali asked to speak, U.S. Magistrate Liam O'Grady suggested he
consult with his attorney, Ashraf Nubani.

''He was tortured,'' Nubani told the court. ''He has the evidence on his
back. He was whipped. He was handcuffed for days at a time.''

When Nubani offered to show the judge his back, O'Grady said that Abu Ali
might be able to enter that as evidence on Thursday at a detention hearing.

''I can assure you you will not suffer any torture or humiliation while in
the (U.S.) marshals' custody,'' O'Grady said.

Abu Ali is charged with six counts and would face a maximum of 80 years in
prison if convicted. The charges include conspiracy to provide material
support to al-Qaida, providing material support to al-Qaida, conspiracy to
provide support to terrorists, providing material support to terrorists and
contributing service to al-Qaida.


02-22-05 13:52 EST

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