Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Key figures have yet to testify in trial of gunman's widow

- By Krista Torralva Staff writer

In untangling what Noor Salman knew about her husband’s secret life, prosecutor­s and defense lawyers both point to a longtime friend known only as “Nemo.”

To prosecutor­s, “Nemo” is the person Omar Mateen’s wife used in the cover story she concocted to aid her husband in carrying out the Pulse nightclub massacre in Orlando on June 12, 2016.

To Noor Salman’s defense team, “Nemo” is the person Mateen regularly said he was with to cover up his infidelity. And he was the person Mateen said he was meeting with for dinner when he left their Fort Pierce home to drive to Orlando.

Nemo is one of several key figures in the Pulse investigat­ion from whom Salman’s jury has yet to hear, as the trial enters its second week of testimony. Defense lawyer Linda Moreno told jurors during her opening statement that they would hear from him before the trial is over.

Much of the government’s presentati­on so far has focused on what happened at Pulse, including graphic video of the massacre. Before resting their case, prosecutor­s will seek to prove Salman knew her husband was planning the attack and helped him accomplish it.

Also yet to testify is FBI Special Agent Ricardo Enriquez, the polygraph examiner who wrote down statements he said Salman made during an interview, including one in which she confessed to helping Mateen scout targets.

The written statements have yet to be presented to the jury. Defense lawyers have questioned their veracity because agents not record them.

Prosecutor­s also point to text messages Salman sent her husband about Nemo the night of the attack as evidence she created a cover story to tell Mateen’s mother: “If ur mom calls say nimo invited you out and noor wants to stay home,” she wrote at 5:55 p.m. “She asked where you were xoxo. Love you.”

The attack occurred during Ramadan, a month when Muslims fast during the day and commonly feast together at mosques. That night, Mateen’s mother invited the couple to dinner at the mosque, but Salman told her Mateen was with Nemo, the son of family friends. Mateen’s mother realized that wasn’t true, though, when she spoke to Nemo’s mother at the mosque that night, prosecutor­s said.

Nemo was in medical school in Maryland, his mother told Mateen’s mother.

Defense attorneys have put forward an alternate explanatio­n for the texts: Salman, they say, was simply repeating a lie Mateen had told her when he left their Fort Pierce apartment. Mateen had in the past claimed to be visiting Nemo when he was actually cheating on his wife, Nemo told investigat­ors.

It’s unclear whether Nemo will testify or if his recorded statement to FBI agents shortly after the shooting will be entered in court in his place. Defense lawyers wanted Nemo to testify, but his lawyer previously said Nemo would refuse and invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion, according to court documents.

Prosecutor­s and defense lawyers’ lists of witnesses they plan to call to the stand are confidenti­al. did

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