Monday, December 28, 2009

Chicago Terror Suspects Go Before Judge

CHICAGO -- Prosecutors urged a federal judge Wednesday to deny bond to one of two Chicago men charged with plotting a terrorist attack against a Danish newspaper, while the man's lawyer argued that his client could have been the innocent dupe of an alleged coconspirator.

Tahawwur Hussain Rana, 48, was a danger to the community and a flight risk and therefore shouldn't be released on bond, Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Collins told federal Magistrate Judge Nan Nolan.

Judge Nolan said she needed more information and set another hearing in the case for Tuesday, although she said she wouldn't decide the matter then, either.

The husky, full-bearded Mr. Rana appeared at the hearing wearing the bright orange jumpsuit of a federal prisoner but didn't say anything to the judge.

Hours before the hearing, prosecutors amended the complaint against Mr. Rana, adding a charge of providing material support to terrorism. He already had been charged with conspiring to provide material support to terrorism.

The new charge didn't add major factual allegations against Mr. Rana.

The complaint says Mr. Rana -- a Canadian national who was born in Pakistan and owns a grocery store and immigration service in Chicago -- provided travel services and other help to another man charged in the case, David Coleman Headley, as Mr. Headley scouted out the offices of Denmark's Jyllands-Posten newspaper for a possible terrorist attack.

The newspaper published 12 cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad in 2005 that triggered outrage throughout the Muslim world. One cartoon showed Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban. Any depiction of the prophet, even a favorable one, is forbidden by Islamic law as likely to lead to idolatry.

The cartoonist, 74-year-old Kurt Westergaard, said in an interview Tuesday with Jyllands-Posten that threats from the Islamic world drove him underground, living under the protection of the Danish intelligence service.

"For my wife and I, it's like a kind of dark depression has descended on us," he said. But he said that he doesn't regret drawing the cartoons.

"I am an old man, so I am not afraid anymore," he said.

Mr. Rana's attorney, Patrick Blegen, told Judge Nolan the evidence in an FBI affidavit outlining allegations against his client could easily support the notion that he was merely an innocent dupe of Mr. Headley's and knew nothing about any plan to attack the Danish newspaper.

"The weight of the evidence here is not as much as the government has told you," Mr. Blegen said in urging Judge Nolan to free his client on bond.

Prosecutors say Mr. Headley, whose former name was Daood Gilani, envisioned a plan to murder the cartoonist and the newspaper's former cultural editor.

Mr. Headley's attorney, John Theis, has said he would have comment. Mr. Headley's bond hearing is set for Dec. 4 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Arlander Keys.

Mr. Blegen told the judge that prosecutors had added a charge against his client just hours before the hearing to bolster their argument that he should not be released. He said the new charge upped the possible sentence from 15 years to 30 years in prison, adding weight to prosecutors' argument that Mr. Rana might try to flee to avoid going to prison.

Mr. Blegen scoffed at that notion, saying Mr. Rana lacks the money "to play an international game of cat and mouse with the government."

Mr. Rana will remain at the Metropolitan Correctional Center. Mr. Blegen said Mr. Rana suffers from an old shoulder injury that makes it hard for him to press a button that works the water faucet in his cell, and that Mr. Rana needs to see a doctor.

Mr. Blegen said two of Mr. Rana's brothers in New Jersey were willing to post their homes as bond and relatives in Canada would post "what amounts to their life savings" to get him out of federal custody pending resolution of the case.

Judge Nolan said requiring numerous relatives to post their homes and savings would be helpful because it "puts more eyes on the street" to watch Mr. Rana and make certain he would not flee and leave them without their assets.


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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Second Chicago law school receives biggest gift ever

Chicago personal injury lawyers are loading up the city's lesser known law schools with donations, hoping their contributions will prime the pump for more gifts.

Philip Corboy, a founding partner of Corboy & Demetrio, and his wife Mary Dempsey, a lawyer who chairs the board of trustees for DePaul University, this week gave an unspecified seven-figure endowment to her alma mater, DePaul University College of Law. In September the couple gave more than $5 million to his alma mater, Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Both gifts were the largest the law schools had ever received. Also in September, Joseph Power and Todd Smith of Power Rogers & Smith gave $2 million to Loyola's law school.

"There's more need, and not as many people are stepping up because of the bad economy," Power said. "We're hoping to encourage people to give money."

DePaul is kicking off a fund-raising campaign next year, and Loyola is about half way through a seven-year bid to raise $40 million, of which $30 million has already come in. The two Catholic-founded schools can sometimes be overshadowed in the public eye by their city neighbors, the University of Chicago Law School and Northwestern University School of Law.

Dempsey said that the Corboy-Dempsey contributions will be used for scholarships at both schools and also for faculty hiring at Loyola. The donation from Power and Smith will go to endowed chairs, program support and scholarships, said David Yellen, dean of Loyola's law school.

While Loyola has received fewer gifts amid the financial stress, overall fund-raising is "way up," Yellen said. "It really is true that big gifts attract more big gifts."

Despite the wave of associate cutbacks at law firms, neither Dempsey nor Power had any qualms about encouraging students to enroll in law school. The economy will improve and a law degree is useful in any profession, they said.

"I use my legal training and law degree every day even though one would not call me a practicing lawyer," said Dempsey, who serves as commissioner of the Chicago Public Library and keeps her law license current.



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