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A Libyan,
Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al Megrahi, was found guilty of the bombing by a
Scottish court in the Hague, his co-defendant, Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah,
being acquitted. At long last there was going to be some kind of
closure for the families.
So what's wrong with this picture?
What's
wrong is that the evidence against Megrahi was stretched thin to the
point of transparency. Indeed, the court verdict might be dubbed
Supreme Court II [a reference to the Bush v. Gore decision that put
George W. Bush in the White House], another instance of non-judicial
factors clouding judicial reasoning.
June 29, 2007 (Original article posted Feb. 5, 2001)
Editors
Note: One of the journalistic practices at Consortiumnews.com that
gives us the most pride is our readiness to buck Washingtons
conventional wisdom when we consider the group think to be misguided
even if that opens us to attacks as apologists for some unpopular
regime or some despised opinion.
We try to follow the evidence where it leads. We dont try to anticipate where the herd is running and join it.
So,
in early 2001, we published a critique of the guilty verdict against
former Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al Megrahi,
who was convicted by a special Scottish court for allegedly planting a
bomb on Pan Am 103, which blew up over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21,
1988, killing 270 people, including 179 Americans.
As the U.S.
government and the major news media hailed Megrahis conviction, we
looked instead at the thinness of the evidence. Rather than proof
beyond a reasonable doubt, we viewed the prosecutions case as an
implausible construct that established only a remote theoretical
possibility that Megrahi was guilty.
The critique, written by
author William Blum, included the prescient observation that a crucial
eyewitness might well have been tainted by seeing published photographs
of Megrahi before picking him out of a line-up.
That weakness in
the case along with other unlikely suppositions (such as Megrahi
assuming that an unaccompanied suitcase would be transferred from plane
to plane without inspection) now has led a Scottish judicial review
board to find that the conviction may have been a miscarriage of
justice that deserves reconsideration.
In view of the boards
findings and the message that it sends about the dangers of political
pressure distorting justice we are republishing Blums six-year-old
article which was entitled Pan Am 103 Verdict: Justice or Politics?:
The newspapers were filled with pictures of happy relatives of the victims of the 1988 bombing of PanAm 103. - consortium news.com
Lockerbie Ruling Revisited
by William Blum
A Libyan,
Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al Megrahi, was found guilty of the bombing by a
Scottish court in the Hague, his co-defendant, Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah,
being acquitted. At long last there was going to be some kind of
closure for the families.
So what's wrong with this picture?
What's
wrong is that the evidence against Megrahi was stretched thin to the
point of transparency. Indeed, the court verdict might be dubbed
Supreme Court II [a reference to the Bush v. Gore decision that put
George W. Bush in the White House], another instance of non-judicial
factors clouding judicial reasoning.
The three Scottish judges
cannot have relished returning to the United Kingdom after finding both
defendants innocent of the murder of 270 people, largely from the U.K.
and the United States. Not to mention having to face dozens of
hysterical victims' family members in the courtroom.
As with any
horrendous crime, there's a desire for someone to be punished. That's
an especially strong sentiment when a defendant is from an unpopular
racial or ethnic group, in this case, a Libyan. The three judges also
knew the desires of the White House and Downing Street as to the
outcome.
One has to read the entire 26,000-word Opinion of the
Court which accompanied the verdict, as well as being very familiar
with the history of the case going back to 1988, to appreciate what the
judges did.
The Case
The key charge against Megrahi --
the sine qua non -- is that he caused a suitcase with explosives to be
loaded at Malta airport and tagged it so it would pass through Malta,
Frankfurt and London airports without an accompanying passenger and
without being detected.
That by itself would have been a major
feat and so unlikely to happen that any terrorist with any common sense
would have found a better way. But aside from anything else, we have
this -- as to the first step, loading the suitcase at Malta: there is
no witness, no video, no document, no fingerprints, no forensic
evidence of any kind linking Megrahi -- or anyone else -- to such an
act.
And the court admits it: "The absence of any explanation of
the method by which the primary suitcase might have been placed on
board KM180 [Air Malta] is a major difficulty for the Crown case."
The
case for the suitcase's hypothetical travels must also deal with the
fact that, according to Air Malta, all the documented luggage on KM180
was collected by passengers in Frankfurt and did not continue in
transit to London, and that two PanAm on-duty officials in Frankfurt
testified that no unaccompanied luggage was introduced onto PanAm 103A,
the feeder flight to London.
Moreover, under security
requirements in 1988, unaccompanied baggage was subjected to special
x-ray examinations, plus -- because of a recent event -- the security
personnel were on the lookout specifically for a bomb secreted in a
radio, as was the case with the PanAm 103 bomb.
To counter this
evidence, the judges cite some sketchy and confusing notations about
the movement of luggage wagons within the Frankfurt airport. The
prosecution introduced these records to suggest that some unidentified
luggage still might have gone from KM180 to a baggage clearinghouse at
the airport and theoretically could have gone from there to PanAm 103A.
But
the prosecution never called the official who made the key notations
and was responsible for processing the baggage to explain what the
sketchy records might mean. Nevertheless, the judges seized on these
notations to conclude that "the documentary evidence as a whole
therefore clearly gives rise to the inference that an item which came
in on KM180 was transferred to and left on PA103A."
Heathrow Security
The
prosecution's case encountered more complexities at Heathrow Airport
outside London. Again there was no evidence that luggage originating
from Malta was loaded onto PanAm 103.
The trial evidence also
revealed that Heathrow had lax security around the "baggage build-up
area" where luggage for PanAm 103 was stored prior to the flight.
"The
build-up area was adjacent to a roadway extensively used by persons
within the airport," the judges said. "In December 1988, it was busier
than usual because construction work was in progress at the airport."
The
bin for the luggage was marked PanAm 103, according to testimony, so it
was not a mystery where suitcases in the bin were headed. "There was no
security guard outside the shed, so that the placing of items on the
conveyor belt was unsupervised," stated the court opinion.
After
loading suitcases into the bin, one of the baggage handlers testified
that he left the area to have a cup of tea. "On his return, he saw that
two cases had been added to the container," including one "brown or
maroony-brown hardshell Samsonite-type case," which matched the
description of the luggage believed to be carrying the bomb.
Testimony
from baggage handlers was conflicting as to how the two bags got there,
leaving open the possibility that the fatal bag could have been slipped
into the PanAm 103 luggage bin in the poorly supervised environment at
Heathrow.
The judges acknowledged that this could have happened,
stating: "To achieve that, the person placing the suitcase would have
had to avoid being detected, but the evidence indicates that a person
in possession of a pass for the airside area would not be likely to be
challenged, and there were a very large number of passes issued for
Heathrow, a substantial number of which were not accounted for."
The Witness
Requiring
some sort of direct and credible testimony linking Megrahi to the
bombing, the court placed great -- nay, paramount -- weight upon the
supposed identification of the Libyan by a storekeeper in Malta, as the
purchaser of the clothing found in the bomb suitcase.
But this
storekeeper had earlier identified several other people as the culprit,
including one who was a CIA agent. When he finally identified Megrahi
from a photo, it was after Megrahi's photo had been in the world news
for years.
Again, the court acknowledged the possible danger
inherent in such a verification: "These identifications were criticised
inter alia on the ground that photographs of the accused have featured
many times over the years in the media and accordingly purported
identifications more than 10 years after the event are of little if any
value."
There also were major discrepancies between the
shopkeeper's original description of the clothes-buyer and Megrahi's
actual appearance. The shopkeeper told police that the customer was
"six feet or more in height" and "was about 50 years of age." Megrahi
was 5'8" tall and was 36 in 1988.
The judges acknowledged that
the initial description "would not in a number of respects fit the
first accused [Megrahi]" and that "it has to be accepted that there was
a substantial discrepancy." Nevertheless, the judges accepted the
identification as accurate.
Suspicious Behavior
The
Opinion of the Court also placed considerable weight on the suspicious
behavior of Megrahi prior to the fatal day, making much of his comings
and goings abroad, phone calls to unknown parties for unknown reasons,
the use of a pseudonym, etc. The three judges tried to squeeze as much
mileage out of these events as they could.
But if Megrahi was
indeed a member of Libyan intelligence, we must consider that
intelligence agents have been known to act ... well, in mysterious
ways, for whatever assignment they're on. The court, however, had no
idea what assignment, if any, Megrahi was working on.
There is
much more that is known about the case that makes the court verdict and
written opinion questionable, although credit must be given the court
for its frankness about what it was doing, even while it was doing it.
"We
are aware that in relation to certain aspects of the case there are a
number of uncertainties and qualifications," the judges wrote. "We are
also aware that there is a danger that by selecting parts of the
evidence which seem to fit together and ignoring parts which might not
fit, it is possible to read into a mass of conflicting evidence a
pattern or conclusion which is not really justified."
It is
remarkable, given all that the judges concede is questionable or
uncertain, that at the end of the day they could still declare to the
world that "there is nothing in the evidence which leaves us with any
reasonable doubt as to the guilt of [Megrahi]"
Alternate Suspects
There
is, moreover, an alternative scenario, laying the blame on Iran and
Syria, which is much better documented and makes a lot more sense,
logistically, politically, and technically.
Indeed, this was the
Original Official Version, delivered with Olympian rectitude by the
U.S. government -- guaranteed, sworn to, scout's honor, case closed --
until the Gulf War came along in 1990 and the support of Iran and Syria
was needed.
Washington was anxious as well to achieve the
release of American hostages held in Lebanon by groups close to Iran.
The scurrying sound of backtracking then became audible in the
corridors of the White House.
Suddenly -- or so it seemed -- in
October 1990, there was a New Official Version: It was Libya -- the
Arab state least supportive of the U.S. build-up to the Gulf War and
the sanctions imposed against Iraq -- that was behind the bombing after
all, declared Washington.
The two Libyans were formally indicted in the U.S. and Scotland on Nov. 14, 1991.
"This was a Libyan government operation from start to finish," declared the State Department spokesman. [NYT, Nov. 15, 1991]
"The Syrians took a bum rap on this," said President George H.W. Bush. [Los Angeles Times, Nov. 15, 1991]
Within
the next 20 days, the remaining four American hostages were released
along with the most prominent British hostage, Terry Waite.
The First Version
The
Original Official Version accused the PFLP-GC, a 1968 breakaway from a
component of the Palestine Liberation Organization, of making the bomb
and somehow placing it aboard the flight in Frankfurt. The PFLP-GC was
led by Ahmed Jabril, one of the world's leading terrorists, and was
headquartered in, financed by, and closely supported by, Syria.
According
to the Original Official Version, the bombing was done at the behest of
Iran as revenge for the U.S. shooting down of an Iranian passenger
plane over the Persian Gulf on July 3, 1988, which claimed 290 lives.
The support for this scenario was, and remains, impressive, as the following sample indicates:
In
April 1989, the FBI -- in response to criticism that it was bungling
the investigation -- leaked to CBS the news that it had tentatively
identified the person who unwittingly carried the bomb aboard. His name
was Khalid Jaafar, a 21-year-old Lebanese-American. The report said the
bomb had been planted in Jaafar's suitcase by a member of the PFLP-GC,
whose name was not revealed. [NYT, April 13, 1989]
In May 1989,
the State Department stated that the CIA was "confident" of the
Iran-Syria-PFLP-GC account of events. [Washington Post, May 11, 1989]
On
Sept. 20, 1989, The Times of London reported that "security officials
from Britain, the United States and West Germany are 'totally
satisfied' that it was the PFLP-GC" behind the crime.
In
December 1989, Scottish investigators announced that they had "hard
evidence" of the involvement of the PFLP-GC in the bombing. [NYT, Dec.
16, 1989]
A National Security Agency electronic intercept
disclosed that Ali Akbar Mohtashemi, Iranian interior minister, had
paid Palestinian terrorists $10 million dollars to gain revenge for the
downed Iranian airplane. The intercept appears to have occurred in July
1988, shortly after the downing of the Iranian plane.
Israeli
intelligence also intercepted a communication between Mohtashemi and
the Iranian embassy in Beirut "indicating that Iran paid for the
Lockerbie bombing." [The Times, Sept. 20, 1989]
Lingering Doubts
Though the Libyan indictment was handed down in 1991, some official experts on the case continued to have their doubts.
In
February 1995, former Scottish Office minister, Alan Stewart, wrote to
the British Foreign Secretary and the Lord Advocate, questioning the
reliability of evidence which had led to the accusations against the
two Libyans.
This move, wrote The Guardian, reflected the
concern of the Scottish legal profession, reaching into the Crown
Office (Scotland's equivalent of the Attorney General's Office), that
the bombing may not have been the work of Libya, but of Syrians,
Palestinians and Iranians. [The Guardian, Feb. 24, 1995]
Similar doubts have lingered even after the verdict.
"The
judges nearly agreed with the defense," according to a news analysis by
Donald G. McNeil Jr. in The New York Times. "In their verdict, they
tossed out much of the prosecution witnesses' evidence as false or
questionable and said the prosecution had failed to prove crucial
elements, including the route that the bomb suitcase took."
"It
sure does look like they bent over backwards to find a way to convict,
and you have to assume the political context of the case influenced
them," said Michael P. Scharf, a professor at the New England School of
Law. [NYT, Feb. 3, 2001]
We also have the Scottish law professor
who masterminded the Lockerbie trial in the Netherlands launching his
own scathing attack on the judges for finding the defendant guilty on
"very, very weak" evidence.
Professor Robert Black described the
decision as "astonishing" and warned that the bomber stands a
better-than-average chance of being acquitted on appeal. Professor
Black, a former judge with 13 years' experience and Scotland's leading
expert on criminal procedure and evidence, said that in his view the
Crown case had failed to comply with strict Scottish legal rules --
tougher than English law -- that evidence be corroborated.
Black
declared: "I am absolutely astounded, astonished. I was extremely
reluctant to believe that any Scottish judge would convict anyone, even
a Libyan, on the basis of such evidence." [Electronic Telegraph UK
News, Feb. 4, 2001]
So, let's hope that Megrahi is really
guilty. It would be a terrible shame if he spends the rest of his life
in prison because back in 1990 Washington's geopolitical plans for the
Middle East needed a convenient enemy, which just happened to be his
country.
William Blum is the author of Rogue State: A Guide to
the World's Only Superpower and Killing Hope: US Military and CIA
Interventions Since World War II.
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