2A -The Michigan Daily -Thursday, January 17, 2002 NATION/WORLD 0I Reid charged as al-Qaida operative WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal grand jury yesterday charged alleged shoe bomber Richard Reid with being an al-Qaida trained terrorist in an indict- ment Attorney General John Ashcroft hailed as fresh proof of the government's ability to prosecute terror- ists. Ashcroft said the charges "alert us to a clear, unmistakable threat that al-Qaida could attack the United States again." The attorney general discussed the charges shortly after a federal grand jury in Boston handed up a nine-count indictment, saying, "We must be pre- pared. We must be ready. We must be vigilant." The indictment alleges that Reid attempted to kill the passengers on American Airlines Flight 63 from Paris to Miami on Dec. 22. "Richard Reid did attempt to use a weapon of mass destruction, consisting of an explosive bomb placed in each of his shoes," against Americans, said the 12-page indictment. Ashcroft credited passengers and crew on that flight with stopping Reid from detonating the shoe bomb and bringing down the plane. "Our trust in the common sense of people who act in the face of ter- rorism was vindicated," he said. He said yesterday's indictment showed the wisdom of national alerts the government issued on three occasions prior to the Flight 13 incident. Yesterday's indictment said Reid "received train- ing from al-Qaida in Afghanistan." In addition to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted murder and attempted homicide, Reid was charged with placing an explo- sive device on an aircraft, interfering with a flight crew, using a destructive device during a crime of violence and attempted wrecking of a mass trans- portation vehicle. He also was charged with attempted wrecking of a mass transportation vehicle, a new charge created by Congress in an anti-terrorism bill enacted in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Wash- ington. "Our ability to prosecute terrorists has been greatly enhapced by the U.S.A. Patriot Act," Ashcroft said. Reid "did place on that aircraft explosive devices contained in the footwear he was then wearing," the indictment said, referring to the American flight. Ashcroft said if convicted on the charges brought against him, Reid could be sentenced to five life terms. There were 183 passengers and 14 crew members on the flight, which was escorted into Boston's Logan Airport. On the charge of interfering with the flight crew, the indictment said Reid assaulted and intimidated flight attendants Hermis Moutardier and Christina Jones. White House was consulted on Enron AD NEWS IN BRIEF HEDLN S O RU DTEkOL Y NEW YORK Mille terrorist jailed for 24 Years An Algerian was sentenced to 24 years in prison yesterday - the maximum - for his role in a plot to detonate a suitcase bomb at the Los Angeles airport amid the millennium celebrations. Mokhtar Haouari, who lives in Canada, was convicted last summer of federal charges he supplied fake IDs and cash to two others in the plot. The plot was foiled when its mastermind, Ahmed Ressam, was arrested in Washington state in December 1999 while trying to enter from Canada in a car with a trunkful of explosives. Ressam had been trained in terrorist camps financed by Osama bin Laden, according to investigators. At the time, prosecutors said that the attack on the crowded airport in the days before Jan. 1, 2000, could have been the bloodiest act of terrorism against the United States since the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. .& Haouari turned down the opportunity to speak at his sentencing and sat impas- sively. "The defendant's conduct posed a great risk to the well-being of the American people," U.S. District Judge-John Keenan said. The jury found finding Haouari guilty of conspiracy to supply material sup- port to a terrorist act. He was also convicted of conspiracy to commit fraud. NEW YORK Charges against Egyptian student dropped Charges were dropped yesterday against an Egyptian student accused of lying to federal investigators about an aviation radio found in his hotel room near the World Trade Center. Another guest at the hotel came forward Monday, three days after Abdallah Higazy was charged, and told hotel officials the radio belonged to him, said Mar- vin Smilon, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office said. Prosecutors had accused Higazy, the 30-year-old son of an Egyptian diplomat, of interfering with the investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks. Higazy had insisted in two rounds of FBI interviews that he knew nothing of the hand-held radio. Prosecutors had said the radio was found in Higazy's room along with his Egyptian passport, a copy of the Quran and a gold medallion. After the other guest at the Millennium Hilton Hotel came forward, federal prosecutors asked that the charges against Higazy be dismissed, Smilon said. A judge approved the dismissal of the charges yesterday, and it was unclear whether Higazy had been freed, Smilon said. He was arrested Dec. 17 as a mater- ial witness in the investigation of the terrorist attacks. WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House disclosed yesterday it was con- cerned about how a potential Enron collapse would affect the U.S. econo- my and had economic adviser Larry Lindsey, a former Enron board mem- ber, study the issue. The disclosure came as congressional investigators questioned the fired Arthur. Andersen auditor who the company says led a rush effort to destroy Enron documents. The accounting firm says the destruction began after Enron announced the Securities and Exchange Commission had launched an inquiry of the energy company. Staffers from the House Energy and Commerce Committee interviewed fired auditor David Duncan for several. hours yesterday afternoon. "It went very well," said Edith Holleman, a Democratic staff member. At the White House, spokesman Ari Fleischer said Lindsey and his econom- ic team concluded that Enron's collapse Inside: More on Enron. Page 5A -------------------------------------------- would not hurt the U.S. and global mar- kets - the same finding reached by Peter Fisher, the Treasury undersecre- tary in charge of financial markets. Fish- er's review stemmed from two phone calls from Enron Chairman Ken Lay to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill on Oct. 28 and Nov. 8. The Lindsey review began in mid-October. Lindsey, who was paid $50,000 by Enron as a member of the company's advisory board, has said he had no con- tact with Enron about its financial woes. In a separate development, the for- mer chief of staff for Sen. Joseph Lieberman, who is leading one of the investigations of Enron, tried unsuc- cessfully last summer to arrange a meeting between the senator and Lay, the Enron chairman. Lieberman's spokesman, Dan Gerstein, said he does not know what Lay wanted to meet about. " U.S. questions linked to Tali KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) - the man showedq U.S. investigators yesterday questioned a har airport, where1 man who describes himself as a financial are based and a de supporter of the Taliban and showed up dreds of al-Qaidaa voluntarily at the biggest U.S. base in The man rema Afghanistan offering information. day but was not b Pentagon officials said the man had A Pentagon offic given money to the Taliban but had not anonymity that h been a member of the Islamic regime that of wanted men, b ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. It tors were "jumpin was not known what information he has At the Pentagc about the complex web of support of chairman of the J Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist net- the man was bein work, which was sheltered by the Taliban. would not give de Marine spokesman Lt James Jarvis said or say how he cam man )anl up Tuesday at the Kanda- thousands of U.S. troops etention center holds hun- and Taliban fighters. aned on the base yester- eing detained, Jarvis said. cial said on condition of e was not on the U.S. list but Jarvis said investiga- g with joy." on, Gen. Richard Myers, oint Chiefs of Staff, said g questioned. But Myers tails on the man's identity ne to the base. PARIS Debris blamed for Concorde crash A much-awaited government report on the fiery crash of an Air France Concorde confirmed a long-held theo- ry that a piece of debris from a Conti- nental Airlines plane was a factor in the deadly accident. The 400-page report by France's. Accident Investigation Bureau, or BEA, released yesterday says the crash of the luxury supersonic on July 25, 2000 could not have been foreseen. But it also takes aim at what it says are some sloppy operations by Air France and Houston-based Continental. Continental yesterday sharply denied any suggestion that it was responsible for the crash, which killed 113 people. The report said a Continental Air- lines DC-10 shed a piece of metal known as a wear strip onto a runway that the ill-fated Concorde later used for takeoff. WASHINGTON IRS to audit 50,000 randomly this year Aiming to target its audits better, the IRS intends a special random check this year of about 50,000 individual tax returns but will subject fewer people to the intense, face-to-face questioning that drew heavy criticism in the past. IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti said yesterday the goal is to collect an up-to-date snapshot of the taxpaying public so that audits get better results. Almost a quarter of Internal Revenue Service audits now done turn out to have been unnecessary; the new infor- mation could reduce the number of no- change audits by 15,000 a year. "We don't want to audit somebody who doesn't need to be audited," Rossotti told reporters. "We have an opportunity to reduce the burden on the honest taxpayer." The project, officially called the National Research Program, was last done in 1988: WASHINGTON Senate office set to reopen tomorrow Officials pronounced the Hart Senate Office Building free of anthrax yester- day, and maintenance crews began preparing it for reopening tomorrow, three months after a letter laden withthe deadly bacteria was opened there. In a pair of memos e-mailed to sen- ators, health and environmental offi, cials said repeated effdots'tode1bahse the building had "achieved the goal of eliminating viable anthrax spores." " It is clean and safe ... for rehabilita- tion and reoccupancy" said the memo, citing the findings of the Environmen- tal Protection Agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other agencies. Even so, there were mixed reactions among workers about returning to the building where a letter believed to con- tain billions of anthrax spores was opened Oct. 15 in the office of Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.). - Compiled from Daily wire reports, ad II The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Micligan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. 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