Friday, March 14, 2008

Mohamed Lawyers Say Charge Criminalizes Speech

ELAINE SILVESTRINI of The Tampa Tribune

TAMPA – Ahmed Mohamed's YouTube video was protected under the First Amendment, his attorneys say.

The Egyptian former University of South Florida student is charged with trying to help terrorists by making a video in which he demonstrates how to use a remote-controlled toy to detonate a bomb.
Defense attorneys are asking a judge to dismiss the charge on the grounds it criminalizes speech and because the allegations are vague. For example, they say, the charge does not specify which, if any, terrorist groups stood to benefit from the video. The attorneys say the law requires the government to prove that a suspect was trying to help a specific group that has been legally classified a terrorist group.

Mohamed and Youssef Megahed also are charged with illegally transporting explosives. The two were arrested in South Carolina after they were pulled over for speeding and deputies found what they said were pipe bombs in the trunk of the car. The actual nature of the devices has been questioned, with the prosecution saying they were explosive materials and the defense maintaining they were homemade pyrotechnic rockets to be used as fireworks.

The explosives charge is set to be the center of a trial scheduled for April 28. Mohamed's terrorism-related charge is scheduled for a separate trial, set to begin May 12.

Mohamed's attorneys have filed a motion asking a judge to order prosecutors to give specific information about the terrorism-related charge, including the identity of the terrorists he is accused of trying to help. They also filed a motion asking U.S. District Judge Steven D. Merryday to reconsider his refusal to require jurors to complete detailed questionnaires.

In the 30-page motion to dismiss the terrorism-related charge, or count one of the indictment, attorneys cite the prosecution's description of what was said on the video:

"Instead of the brethren going to, to carry out martyrdom operations, no may (God) bless him, he can use the explosion tools from distance and preserve his life, (God) willing, the blessed and exalted, for real battles."

The First Amendment, the motion states, "protects advocacy of unlawful conduct unless the advocacy calls for immediate unlawful action that it is genuinely likely to occur. In our case, there is no showing that the words on the video to some unidentifiable 'brethren' to 'preserve his life' 'for the real battles' sometime in the future, comes close to the advocacy of imminent unlawful action.

"There is no incitement here. The audience exists only in theory."

Further, the motion states, it appears the video was posted only briefly on the Internet, although there is no information about how long it was on the Web site. "There is no evidence to suggest that anyone who classifies as a 'terrorist' even saw the video," the motion states. "The government cannot produce one person who heard the Mohamed video and used the information from the video to commit a federal crime of violence, and there is no evidence Mr. Mohamed knew that any person had the intent to do so."

Also, the motion notes that the information on the video already was widely available on the Internet. Banning the dissemination of "information already in the public domain cannot pass constitutional muster" without proof that the person who spread the information conspired with someone who intended to use the information to commit a violent crime.



Find this article at:
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/mar/11/mohamed-lawyers-say-charge-criminalizes-free-speec

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