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Moussaoui Jury Hears From Grieving Families, and From
Victims Themselves
April 11, 2006
By
NEIL A. LEWIS
ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 10 —
The jurors who will soon decide whether
Zacarias Moussaoui is to be executed or spend the remainder of his life
in prison were confronted on Monday with a steady stream of anguished
testimony from surviving family members of those killed on Sept. 11, 2001.
The prosecutors, who are
seeking the death penalty, presented 15 witnesses, nearly all of whom
testified at some point through sobs and tears. By the time the Justice
Department ends its case Wednesday, some three dozen such witnesses will
have testified as part of an effort to impress on the jurors the enduring
pain and grief the terror attacks produced.
Among them was C. Lee
Hanson of Connecticut, who spoke about the loss of his son, Peter; his
daughter-in-law, Sue Kim; and his granddaughter, Cristine Lee, 2, the
youngest casualty of Sept. 11.
Mr. Hanson described
talking with his son, who was using his cellphone on one of the hijacked
planes, and simultaneously watching events unfold on television. Mr. Hanson
said his son told him that he believed the hijackers were "trying to crash
the plane into a building," and that he added, "Don't worry, Dad. If it
happens, it will be quick."
Mr. Hanson testified that
he then heard his son say "Oh my God" three times, and that a moment later,
he saw the plane, United Airlines Flight 175, crash into the World Trade
Center on his television. He described his anguish when investigators were
able to return to him only a small bone fragment of his son.
While the testimony
throughout the day produced sadness among the spectators and some jurors,
prosecutors presented additional evidence that produced a more chilling
effect: the audiotapes of two doomed people trapped in the towers as they
pleaded with 911 operators to send help.
Unlike the tape recordings
recently released by the New York City authorities, the two samples played
Monday included the voices of the callers, not just those of the operators.
In one tape, Kevin
Cosgrove, 46 and the father of three, who called 911 from the 105th floor of
the south tower, said, "We're not ready to die, but it's getting bad." A
moment later, he said, "Oh, please hurry; I've got young kids."
The tape was played for the
jury as a photograph of Mr. Cosgrove was displayed on screens in the
courtroom, along with scenes of the burning towers synchronized to the time
of his call. In the final snippet of conversation, Mr. Cosgrove said, "Oh my
God, ohhh," as the tower started to collapse at 9:58 a.m.
The other audiotape was of
Melissa C. Doi, 32, a financial manager who worked on the 83rd floor of the
south tower. Ms. Doi told the operator that she was with five others and
repeatedly said, "It's so hot; it's very, very hot."
At one point, she told the
operator, "All I see is smoke; I'm going to die." The operator replied: "No,
no, no. Say your prayers."
Unlike what happened in the
earlier stages of the tragedy, when 911 operators were rushed and tried to
take other calls, in this instance, the operator remained on the phone with
Ms. Doi for four minutes.
Prosecutors later this week
will play the cockpit tapes from United Flight 93, which crashed in a
Pennsylvania field after passengers overwhelmed the hijackers. Judge
Leonie M. Brinkema ruled Monday that the transcript of the recordings
would be made public, but that the audiotapes would not be, as some family
members had filed objections with her.
Mr. Moussaoui has pleaded
guilty to conspiracy in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks. Although he
was in jail when they occurred, this jury has already found that he was
responsible for at least some of the deaths that day because he concealed
his knowledge about
Al Qaeda's plans to fly planes into buildings.
In the current phase of Mr.
Moussaoui's sentencing trial, the prosecution is presenting evidence and
testimony meant to show that the heinous nature of the crimes of Sept. 11
makes him deserving of execution.
During Monday's testimony,
Mr. Moussaoui sat silently and appeared to shed his usual posture of
indifference. He paid close attention to many of the witnesses, particularly
to Sharif Chowdhury, who could barely be heard as he testified that his
faith in Islam had helped him deal with the deaths of his son and
daughter-in-law in the World Trade Center. Mr. Chowdhury was the only
witness who seemed to make a point of glaring at Mr. Moussaoui when he
walked by him.
Defense lawyers had
objected in a sealed motion to the prosecution's presentation last week,
arguing that some of it was overdramatized, both in the questions to the
witnesses and in the parade of photographs of the victims, including
children.
Judge Brinkema, referring
to the sealed pleading, said that the defense had raised "significant
issues" about the appropriateness of the presentation, especially as Mr.
Moussaoui was facing a death sentence. She said that prosecutors had not yet
behaved improperly, but she asked that they limit themselves to five
photographs for each witness.
She also said that last
Thursday, a prosecutor should not have asked the brother of a woman who
hanged herself after her husband died in the attacks about the fate of their
uncle. The uncle died of a heart attack on his way back to India, and Judge
Brinkema said there was no way to know why his heart had failed.
Court-appointed defense
lawyers, with whom Mr. Moussaoui does not speak, are likely to begin their
case on Thursday. They are expected to say he should not be sentenced to
death because he is mentally unbalanced and is seeking the martyrdom that
execution would provide.
The jury is supposed to
weigh the aggravating factors like those presented by the prosecution's
witnesses against the defense's mitigating factors, and to choose between
death or life in prison. Judge Brinkema is obliged to impose a death
sentence if that is the unanimous decision of the jury.
Jim Dwyer and Kevin
Flynn contributed reporting from New York for this article.
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