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AAFIA MOVEMENT

AP of PAK: FBI expert doubtful whether rifle allegedly used by Aafia was fired

 
 
NEW YORK, Jan 23 (APP): An FBI firearms expert has expressed doubts whether the M-4 rifle, which was allegedly grabbed by Pakistani neuroscientist Aafia Siddiqui to attack U.S. interrogators in Afghanistan, was ever fired at the crime scene.Carlo Rosati, the expert who testified in a federal court Friday, said he had thoroughly examined the weapon, the curtain from a room of Ghazni police station where the shooting incident took place and the debris of its wall where two bullets reportedly hit, but found no evidence that gunshots leave behind.
 
Ms. Siddiqui is charged with snatching a U.S. warrant officer’s rifle in mid-2008 while she was detained for questioning in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province and firing it at FBI agents and military personnel.
None of them were hit. Pointedly asked by Charles Swift, the lead defence lawyer, if he was certain the M-4 rifle was ever fired at the crime scene, he said he could not say that with absolute certainty. An FBI forensic expert has already confirmed he found no fingerprints of Ms.    Siddiqui on the M-4 rifle when the weapon was produced in the court  Thursday. In his testimony on Friday, the fourth day of Dr. Siddiqui’s trial, Rosati, the firearms expert, said there was no gunshot residue on the curtain behind which Ms.  Siddiqui was stated to be sitting, nor he found any projectiles or fragments from the part of the bullet-hit wall built with stones and hard mud.
Based on the texture and content of the debris, Rosati said a bullet fired from an M-4 rifle into that kind of wall might get shattered or fragmented. However, under cross examination by defence lawyer Swift, the FBI expert conceded that a key element of the bullet – a steel tip that penetrates hard surfaces and never fragments – should have remained intact. Rosati did confirm that the 9-mm pistol that the US Army chief warrant   officer used to shoot Ms. Siddiqui, along with its two recovered, cases recovered at the crime scene, were fired. Swift, one of three lawyers retained by the Pakistan government who previously worked for the U.S. Navy in the area of criminal defence, retained his reputation as a sharp trial attorney.
He has been quick in identifying inconsistencies in the witnesses’ testimonies. Ms. Siddiqui was again escorted out of the courtroom after saying she could help bring peace to Afghanistan, but that her lawyers’ don’t let her testify. “If you follow the mercy of mankind…they want to take away my right to testify. I’ve asked for it,” Ms. Siddiqui told spectators during a break in the case.  Please, I know you’ll take me out,” she told U.S. marshals as they motioned to move her to a holding cell outside the  courtroom. “I am not an enemy. I didn’t shoot anyone.
I can bring peace with Afghanistan and the Taliban in one day, God willing,” she said. “There is no use for revenge and forgiveness is necessary.
Before Friday’s session ended, Judge Richard Berman reminded jurors that Ms. Siddiqui’s trial was limited to attempted murder, not on charges of terrorism or involvement in any chemical or biological project. A section of the American press has consistently been portraying her as a terrorist, with headlines like: “Lady al-Qaeda”.  He also said that the trial was proceeding according to the schedule, and expects testimonies to conclude by the end of next week after which the jurors would begin consultations. At that stage, Swift, the lead lawyer, told judge Berman that the extra security measures, about which he had protested on Thursday, were still in place on Friday.
He asked him to order the withdrawal of the additional measures that included the production of personal identification by visitors to the trial. He said the tougher measures violated the right of his client to a free and open trial. Judge Berman said he would discuss the issue with the building security management, but asked the defence lawyer to submit his complaint in writing. Swift said the security people were saying that orders for the additional measures, in fact, came from the judge Berman. The judge did not respond to that comment. The trial of Ms. Siddiqui is taking place under heavier-than-usual security. On Wednesday, a metal detector was put in place outside the 21st-floor courtroom, in addition to the ones already on the ground floor. Shahid Comrade, general secrteary of the Pakistan-USA Freedom Forum, also protested the tough security measures in a statement issued on Friday.