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Lindh moves to suppress statements

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Posted 8:11AM on Friday 25th January 2002 ( 23 years ago )
WASHINGTON - Lawyers for John Walker Lindh say he didn&#39;t get legal help when he wanted it. But a piece of paper he signed undercuts those claims, according to some legal experts.<br> <br> Part of Lindh&#39;s defense strategy turns on a judge agreeing that he was denied an attorney before talking to the FBI in December - and that a jury should not be told about any damaging comments he might have made at that time.<br> <br> &#34;His chances of succeeding are very small&#34; in making the case that the FBI interview should not be used, said Ronald Rotunda, a law professor at the University of Illinois. &#34;If he can show that&#39;s not his signature or that he was beaten over the head and tortured until he signed it, that&#39;s obviously a different case.&#34;<br> <br> Lindh&#39;s lawyers plan to argue that he asked for a lawyer after he was captured near the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif following an uprising by Taliban and al-Qaida prisoners.<br> <br> After Lindh&#39;s first court appearance Thursday, lawyer James Brosnahan said, &#34;From Dec. 2, John Lindh asked for a lawyer, repeatedly asked for a lawyer.&#34;<br> <br> Attorney General John Ashcroft said Lindh, 20, signed a statement waiving his right to an attorney before he spoke to the FBI on Dec. 9 and 10.<br> <br> &#34;The district court judge will have to decide who to believe,&#34; said Anne Bowen Poulin, a professor at Villanova University School of Law. &#34;It&#39;s a swearing contest between him (Lindh) and whoever the government brings in. The judge would have to conclude that they are lying, and judges don&#39;t like to do that.&#34;<br> <br> Similar defense strategies are often used in criminal cases, but not usually with success.<br> <br> Lindh is facing various charges, including conspiring to kill Americans outside the United States. He is accused of supporting Osama bin Laden&#39;s al-Qaida terrorist organization.<br> <br> Lindh had no attorney and was recovering from a battle wound when he talked to the FBI.<br> <br> Justice Department officials refused to release a copy of paperwork Thursday that they say he signed. The FBI contends he was informed of his constitutional rights to have a lawyer and avoid self-incrimination, and that he signed a form acknowledging that.<br> <br> &#34;That piece of paper that he signed is very strong testimony against any self-serving claims that he makes now,&#34; said Richard Uviller, a law professor at Columbia. <br> <br>

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