News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMine9-11suspectsmoussaouigovernment-case-success-2004-2006 — Viewing Item


Moussaoui confession contradicts previous confession

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://wusa9.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=47980

http://wusa9.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=47980

Moussaoui: A Fifth Plane Was Meant For White House

Written by The Associated Press
Created:3/27/2006 1:19:25 PM
Last Updated:3/27/2006 10:28:56 PM

Al-Qaeda conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui testified Monday that he and would-be shoe bomber Richard Reid were supposed to hijack a fifth airplane on Sept. 11, 2001, and fly it into the White House.

Moussaoui's testimony on his own behalf stunned the courtroom as he disclosed details he had never revealed before. It was in stark contrast to Moussaoui's previous statements in which he said the White House attack was to come later if the United States refused to release a radical Egyptian sheik imprisoned on earlier terrorist convictions.

Moussaoui testified Monday he lied to investigators when arrested in August 2001 because he wanted to let the attacks of Sept. 11 go forward.

"Yes, you can say that," Moussaoui said when the prosecution asked if that was why he misled them. The statement was key to the government's case that the attacks might have been averted if Moussaoui had been more cooperative following his arrest.

He told the court he knew the attacks were coming some time after August 2001 and bought a radio so he could hear them unfold.

Specifically, he said he knew the World Trade Center was going to be attacked, but asserted he was not part of the plot and didn't know the details.

Taking the stand in his own defense in his death-penalty trial, Moussaoui said he declined to become a suicide pilot in some future attack when asked by a senior al-Qaeda official in 1999.

Nineteen men pulled off the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York in Washington in the worst act of terrorism ever on U.S. soil.

"I had knowledge that the Twin Towers would be hit," Moussaoui said. "I didn't know the details of this."

Asked by his lawyer why he signed his guilty plea in April as "the 20th hijacker," Moussaoui replied: "Because everybody used to refer to me as the 20th hijacker and it was a bit of fun."

Moussaoui testified calmly in his death penalty trial, but against his lawyers' wishes.

Before he took the stand, his lawyers made a last attempt to stop him from testifying, but failed. Defense attorney Gerald Zerkin argued that his client would not be a competent witness because he has contempt for the court, only recognizes Islamic law and therefore "the affirmation he undertakes would be meaningless."

Asked by Zerkin if he was supposed to be one of the men who would pilot a plane on 9/11, he said no, adding: "I'm sorry, I don't know about the number of planes but I was not the fifth (pilot) hijacker."

The 19 terrorists on Sept. 11 hijacked and crashed four airliners, killing nearly 3,000 people in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and on the planes.

About his guilty plea, he said: "I took a pen. I signed it."

He said talked with an al-Qaeda official in 1999 about why a 1993 bombing at the World Trade Center failed to bring the towers down. He said "was asked in the same period for the first time if I want to be a suicide pilot and I declined."

Yet, he said he was taking flight training for a separate attack on the White House, when he was arrested in August 2001 on immigration charges. He was vague on whether this attack was to have been after Sept. 11 or on it.

"I know it was something going on," he said in French-accented English. "We don't do single operation. We do multiple strikes."

He told the court it was "difficult to say" whether he was involved in the planning for 9/11. At some point, he said, he received training on what to do if at the controls of a hijacked plane if a fighter aircraft approached.

Just before Moussaoui took the stand, the court heard testimony that two months before the attacks that a CIA deputy chief waited in vain for permission to tell the FBI about a "very high interest" al-Qaeda operative who became one of the hijackers.

The official, a senior figure in the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit, said he sought authorization on July 13, 2001, to send information to the FBI but got no response for 10 days, then asked again.

As it turned out, the information on Khalid al-Mihdhar did not reach the FBI until late August. At the time, CIA officers needed permission from a special unit before passing certain intelligence on to the FBI.

The official was identified only as John. His written testimony was read into the record.

"John's" testimony was part of the defense's case that federal authorities missed multiple opportunities to catch hijackers and perhaps thwart the 9/11 plot.

His testimony included an e-mail sent by FBI supervisor Michael Maltbie discussing Moussaoui but playing down his terrorist connections. Maltbie's e-mail said "there's no indication that (Moussaoui) had plans for any nefarious activity."

He sent that e-mail to the CIA even after receiving a lengthy memo from the FBI agent who arrested Moussaoui and suspected him of being a terrorist with plans to hijack aircraft.

Former FBI agent Erik Rigler, the first defense witness, was questioned about a Justice Department report that he said criticized the CIA for keeping intelligence about two known al-Qaeda terrorist operatives in the United States from the FBI for more than a year.

Under cross-examination from the prosecution, he acknowledged the report did not link the pair specifically to a civil aviation plot. But he said the report's thrust was about their preparations for what turned out to be the 9/11 attacks, and their ability to elude federal agents.

"That's why they came here," he said. "They didn't come for Disney."

The two were among the 19 suicide hijackers on 9/11. The report said they had been placed on a watch list in Thailand in January 2000, but not on a U.S. list until August 2001.

Prosecutors argue that Moussaoui, a French citizen, thwarted a prime opportunity to track down the 9/11 hijackers and possibly unravel the plot when he was arrested in August 2001 on immigration violations and lied to the FBI about his al-Qaeda membership and plans to hijack a plane.

Had Moussaoui confessed, the FBI could have pursued leads that would have led them to most of the hijackers, government witnesses have testified.

To win the death penalty, prosecutors must first prove that Moussaoui's actions — specifically, his lies — were directly responsible for at least one death on Sept. 11.

If they fail, Moussaoui would get life in prison.

Moussaoui pleaded guilty in April to conspiring with al-Qaeda to hijack planes and other crimes, but he has denied any role in 9/11. He says he was training for a possible future attack on the White House.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Airlines coached moussaoui witnesses to remove culpibility
Alqaeda figures deny Moussaoui role { June 17 2004 }
Angry judge questions death case against moussaoui { March 13 2006 }
Bush says moussaoui case over war goes on
Court lets moussaoui prosecution go forward { April 23 2004 }
Documents cast doubts over moussaoui 911 claim { April 21 2006 }
Electronic shocks on Moussaoui back during trial { April 17 2006 }
Families subject to horror recordings during Moussaoui trial { April 12 2006 }
Fbi agent says superiors ignored moussaoui warnings { March 20 2006 }
Fbi says no moussaoui reid evidence
Fbi supervisor admits never read moussaoui memo { March 22 2006 }
Judge raises possibility of mistrial in moussaoui sentence { March 13 2006 }
Lawyer emailed court transcripts to seven witnesses { March 15 2006 }
Lone juror jkept moussaoui alive { May 13 2006 }
Moussaoui 2005 planning to admit 911 role { April 19 2005 }
Moussaoui changes with testimony { March 30 2006 }
Moussaoui confession contradicts previous confession
Moussaoui disrupts sentencing declaring himself alqaeda
Moussaoui link to 911 in doubt
Moussaoui loses right to represent himself { November 15 2003 }
Moussaoui may get inmate access { September 14 2004 }
Moussaoui motions
Moussaoui now says binladen gave him approval { March 2005 }
Moussaoui roommate warned fbi { March 21 2006 }
Moussaoui says 911 confession was complete fabrication { May 8 2006 }
Moussaoui wants to recant guilty plea { May 9 2006 }
Moussaoui yelled god curse you all to jury { March 30 2006 }
Moussaui says rather die than spend life in jail { April 13 2006 }
New court blow to moussaoui { November 14 2003 }
No evidence of moussaoui reid hijack plot jury told
Prosecutor rivets courtroom with 911 transcript { February 2006 }
Terror suspects contradict moussaoui confession
Too many pretrial motions deemed insulting { November 15 2003 }
Trial of moussaoui to focus on 911 foreknowledge { November 14 2005 }
Us appeals ban on death penalty moussaoui case { December 3 2003 }
Why moussaoui confession doesnt add up { March 28 2006 }
Witness coached by prosecution in moussaoui trial { March 13 2006 }

Files Listed: 37



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple