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Open argument on FBI memo could have "dire consequences" for witness: Crown

Thu Mar 4, 6:43 PM ET

JEREMY HAINSWORTH

VANCOUVER (CP) - Arguments on using a confidential FBI (news - web sites) memo to question an Air India witness's credibility were under a publication ban Thursday as the judge assessed the threat the memo poses to the man.

Prosecutor Richard Cairns had asked Wednesday for the hearing to be held in secret. Justice Ian Bruce Josephson was told the prosecution had inadvertently disclosed a secret FBI memo to accused bomber Ajaib Singh Bagri's lawyers.

Cairns said the sensitive information about the witness who became an FBI informant contained in the Sept. 27, 1985, telex was supposed to be blacked out in the copy provided to Bagri's legal team.

Cairns reiterated that request Thursday.

"Any revelation of this material would put this witness in serious harm," he said

"It's virtually impossible to explore this issue unless it's in camera."

"Any leaks of the information in the memo could have dire consequences," Cairns said.

"The interests of the witness should be paramount," he added.

While keeping the court open, arguments on the memo were put under a temporary ban.

Josephson decided he would silently read sensitive material pointed out to him.

And, he said, if other information was even more sensitive, it would be dealt with in camera.

On Monday, the witness the memo discusses told Josephson that Bagri had confessed to involvement in two 1985 bombings that killed 331 people.

"'We did this,"' the man said Bagri told him during a meeting outside a New Jersey gas station a few weeks after the 1985 bombings.

Bagri and co-accused Ripudaman Singh Malik are charged with conspiracy and murder in two bombings on June 23, 1985.

The first blast at Tokyo's Narita Airport killed two baggage handlers. Less than an hour later, Air India Flight 182 exploded off the coast of Ireland, killing all 329 aboard.

2,611 posted on 03/04/2004 6:51:01 PM PST by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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Brunei Jails Army Officers for Treason

Thu Mar 4, 3:24 AM ET

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, Brunei - Oil-rich Brunei has jailed without trial two retired senior army and police intelligence officers and a businessman for leaking government secrets, some of them posted on the Internet.

The retired policeman, Nordin bin Haji Mohamad Noor, was also accused of treason for spying after allegedly transferring classified documents to an unidentified foreign country, the government said in a statement.

Noordin, retired army Maj. Muslim bin Awang Tengah, and businessman Awang Abdul Razak bin Awang Damit, were stripped of their military and civilian titles and were being held under internal security laws that allow for detention without trial under terms renewable every two years.

The scandal was the biggest since Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah's younger brother, Prince Jefri, nearly bankrupted this tiny country in the late 1990s through failed investments and lavish infrastructure projects that lost some $7 billion.

Muslim allegedly leaked government documents and secrets, which Awang Abdul Razak, son of a local bus company owner, posted on a Hong Kong-based Web site, www.bruclass.com.

"Their actions, which were of subversive nature, are detrimental to the country's stability and security," said the statement, released late Wednesday by the Internal Security Department.

Government officials told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity that the men were believed to have been detained sometime in January.

They were accused of inciting hatred against the government of the Sultan, absolute monarch of this remote enclave of 350,000 people on the island of Borneo and one of the richest men in the world.

The security and financial activities of the Bruneian government are closely held in the Sultan's hands and few details reach the public. The statement announcing the arrests was carried in local media without elaboration.

The country has an unofficial policy that criticizing the monarchy, Islam and the ethnic Malay origins of the majority are off-limits.

The offending Web site postings were signed with the pseudonym Maja Pahit — a former empire centered on what is now Indonesia — and appeared to have been based on tightly held information on Brunei's administration and military.

On Thursday, the postings were still up, but some had been edited or completely eliminated. What remained was a collection of detailed complaints, mostly about incompetent bureaucracy and economic mismanagement.

Brunei has been spared the Islamic extremism and terror activities that have troubled neighboring Malaysia and Indonesia.

2,612 posted on 03/04/2004 7:02:32 PM PST by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: TexKat
Justice Ian Bruce Josephson was told the prosecution had inadvertently disclosed a secret FBI memo to accused bomber Ajaib Singh Bagri's lawyers.

Doh!

2,616 posted on 03/04/2004 7:17:55 PM PST by Velveeta
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