Jury starts deliberating in JFK bomb plot trial

The jury will begin deliberations today in the trial of Guyana-born US citizen Russell Defreitas and former parliamentarian Abdul Kadir in an alleged plot to blow up pipelines at the JFK airport in New York.

Defreitas and Kadir are two of four men charged with the plot. Kareem Ibrahim, a citizen of Trinidad, was granted a separate trial at a later date due to a medical condition while Abdel Nur, also Guyanese, pleaded guilty on June 29 to one count of providing support to terrorists. The US government alleges that the plan was hatched in January 2006 and circulated to an international network of Muslim extremists.

According to the Bloomberg news site, Assistant US Attorney Zainab Ahmad in closing arguments yesterday described De Freitas as a “homegrown extremist”.

“The years Russell Defreitas spent in this country have been years of quiet, seething rage,” the prosecutor told jurors in federal court in Brooklyn, New York. “Russell Defreitas gave voice to that anger by devising a plot to blow up JFK.”

The attacks were designed to destroy “the whole of Kennedy,” the largest airport in the New York City area, Defreitas said in a taped conversation played for the jury. The plot was foiled in the planning stages with the aid of an informant, according to prosecutors.

The trial of De Freitas, 67, and Kadir began on June 30 with opening statements.

One of Defreitas’ lawyers Mildred Whalen told jurors yesterday: “Russell Defreitas is a man with a small mind, a big mouth and an ugly imagination. Those are character flaws, not crimes.”

Whalen is reported as saying the government informant, Steven Francis, pushed Defreitas to pursue the plot, and without him Defreitas would not have been able to conduct surveillance of the airport.

Defreitas was “a man who takes what’s on offer,” including an apartment the government paid for and rides from Francis “all over New York City,” Whalen said.

The moment Defreitas and Kadir agreed to destroy the airport, they became guilty of conspiracy, and their actions after the fact show they were serious and determined, Ahmad reportedly argued.

Bloomberg reports that she played tapes in which Kadir instructed De Freitas to get images of the airport from Google Inc’s Earth mapping service and said he would try to connect him with Abu Bakr for funding and support. Abu Bakr is the head of Jamaat Al Muslimeen, which staged a coup attempt in Trinidad in 1990.

Ahmad said the plotters wanted to get to Abu Bakr to meet “a seasoned terrorist,” Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, who is wanted in connection with possible terrorist threats against the US and who is a member of al-Qaeda, the Muslim terrorist group led by Osama bin Laden.

“Lucky for us, the plotters never found Shukrijumah,” Ahmad is reported as saying.

But according to Whalen, the mention of Shukrijumah underscores the absurdity of the charges.

“At this point it’s clear that these guys have seen too many Bruce Willis movies and don’t have enough to do with their time,” she told the jurors. “When does stupid, ugly talk become a conspiracy to commit a crime?”

Defreitas could be heard on tape boasting that he worked 20 years at Kennedy, when he worked there only three years, and complaining that he loaded US weapons bound for Israel, when there was testimony that no such weapons are shipped from Kennedy, Whalen said.

Ahmad told the jurors that Kadir’s testimony that he never agreed to be part of the plot and was hoping to “rehabilitate” the others was not credible.

According to the prosecutor, Kadir agreed to let the plotters keep money for the plan in one of his bank accounts and advised Francis to be careful with a Google Earth printout of the airport on a trip to Trinidad with Defreitas to try to meet Bakr.

“Kadir gives Steven Francis good advice because he wants the plot to succeed,” she said.

No evidence was introduced to show that Kadir ever contacted anyone on behalf of the alleged plotters, including Bakr or Shukrijumah, and the money would go into his account for his mosque, not a terror plot, Kafahni Nkrumah, a lawyer for Kadir, told the jurors yesterday.

When Kadir mentioned Google Earth to the others, he had not yet been told of the JFK plot, Nkrumah said.

“Abdul Kadir at no time ever had the intent to join this conspiracy,” Nkrumah said. “Abdul Kadir at no time ever assisted Steven Francis or Russell Defreitas in advancing the objectives of this conspiracy.”