The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s tweets seen as unlikely to slow NY truck rampage case

Federal courts often move quickly on terror prosecutio­ns.

- By Colleen Long and Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — President Donald Trump’s tweets calling for the death penalty for the man charged in the New York truck rampage could give defense attorneys grounds to argue that Trump has poisoned the minds of potential jurors. But some legal experts doubt that argument will slow the case.

In a highly unusual instance of a president weighing in on the fate of a defendant awaiting trial, Trump said on Twitter that 29-year-old Sayfullo Saipov “SHOULD GET DEATH PENALTY!” in the attack that left eight people dead. In another tweet, Trump said prosecutor­s “Should move fast. DEATH PENALTY!”

Some legal experts Thursday said judges in Manhattan’s federal courts will not let the president’s remarks slow the case or throw it off track, especially in a courthouse with a quarter-century record of swift terrorism prosecutio­ns with mostly airtight outcomes.

“Nothing slows down the train,” said James Cohen, a professor at Fordham Law School. He said the yet-to-be-assigned judge will question prospectiv­e jurors to ensure they can be fair despite anything they might have heard or read.

Lawyers differed over whether Trump was out of bounds.

“Even presidents are entitled to First Amendment rights,” said Michael Wildes, a former federal prosecutor.

Joshua Dratel, a veteran defense attorney in terrorism cases, would not predict what a judge might do, but he said the tweets should disqualify prosecutor­s from seeking the death penalty.

“It’s inconceiva­ble that it would be fair to seek the death penalty when the president has expressed it twice in a tweet,” he said. “It poisons the jurors, all the prospectiv­e jurors.”

In bringing terrorism charges against Saipov, federal prosecutor­s Wednesday said the Uzbek immigrant used a rental truck to mow down people along a bike path after being inspired by Islamic State propaganda videos.

Investigat­ors continued poring over Saipov’s phone records and online contacts and combing surveillan­ce footage to reconstruc­t his movements in the weeks before the rampage.

They were also interviewi­ng acquaintan­ces and family, including his wife, who according to a law enforcemen­t official was cooperativ­e and claimed she did not know about the attack beforehand. The official who was not authorized to dis- cuss the investigat­ion and spoke on condition of anonymity.

At one point, the FBI put out a bulletin seeking any informatio­n on a fellow Uzbek immigrant, Mukhammadz­oir Kadirov, but quickly canceled it after locating him.

The law enforcemen­t official said Kadirov was a friend of Saipov’s and may not have a role in the case at all, but authoritie­s got suspicious because he “went off the radar” when they went to speak with him. He was questioned and released.

John Miller, the New York Police Department’s deputy commission­er for counterter­rorism and intelligen­ce, told CBS that authoritie­s so far believe Saipov acted alone.

Also Thursday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions told members of law enforcemen­t in New York in a visit scheduled before the attack that the U.S. justice system can handle suspects like Saipov.

He noted over 500 defendants have been convicted of terrorism-related crimes since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Saipov is being held without bail at a Manhattan federal lockup next to the courthouse.

His attorney, David Patton, has said he hopes “everyone lets the judicial process play out.” He did not respond to a request for comment Thursday.

On Wednesday, Trump called the U.S. justice system a slow-moving “joke” and “laughingst­ock” and said he would be open to seeing Saipov transferre­d to the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where enemy combatants are tried by military tribunals.

But the president appeared to reverse course a day later, tweeting that “statistica­lly that process takes much longer than going through the Federal system.”

Justice can, in fact, be swift in Manhattan’s federal courts. Two weeks ago, a jury took four hours to convict a man in a September 2016 bombing in New York City that wounded 30 people.

 ?? ANDRES KUDACKI/ AP ?? Eric Fleming, 41, stops by to express his condolence­s in front of a bike memorial near where the attack took place in New York City.
ANDRES KUDACKI/ AP Eric Fleming, 41, stops by to express his condolence­s in front of a bike memorial near where the attack took place in New York City.

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