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By Michael Bowman
Washington
10 November 2009
An attorney for a U.S. Army psychiatrist1 believed to have shot 13 people dead at Fort Hood2, Texas says he does not believe his client would get a fair trial at the military installation where the rampage occurred. Meanwhile, more details have emerged about the suspect's alleged3 communication with a radical4 Muslim cleric, who is praising the suspect as a "hero."
Nidal Malik Hasan as a 2nd Lt. in 2000
Major Nidal Malik Hasan is conscious and able to talk, according to Army officials overseeing his care following last week's incident in which the suspect was shot four times by a civilian5 police officer. Hasan's attorney, retired6 Colonel John Galligan, confirmed his client's condition.
"He [Hasan] is coherent. I met with him for about 30 minutes. Obviously he is aware that he is a suspect in the incident that occurred at Fort Hood," Galligan said.
Galligan spoke7 on the CBS Early Show. The attorney declined to answer any questions about Hasan's alleged shooting spree that left 13 people dead and dozens wounded, or what may have motivated the attack. Galligan did respond, however, when asked if his client could get a fair military trial.
"I think that would be difficult to achieve at Fort Hood, given the national media attention that has been focused on the Fort Hood community," Galligan said. "Anytime you have a high-profile case, as this one is, concerns about a fair and impartial8 jury will be present in any defense9 counsel's mind."
In the wake of the attack, Hasan's actions and possible motivations have come under intense scrutiny10. After spending six years practicing psychiatry11 for the U.S. military in both Washington and Texas, he was about to be deployed12 to Afghanistan. He is believed to have had serious reservations about the upcoming tour of duty in a Muslim nation.
News reports say, in 2007, Hasan warned Army officials of "adverse13 events" if Muslim-American soldiers continue to be sent into battle against fellow Muslims.
More recently, U.S. intelligence officers intercepted14 emails between Hasan and a Muslim imam known for radical anti-American teachings. The cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, who now lives in Yemen, once taught at a mosque15 in Virginia that Hasan attended and is well-known among violent Islamists, according to terrorism expert and author Evan Kohlmann.
"He [Awlaki] is a luminary16 who is revered17 by people around the world, and his name turns up again and again in homegrown terrorism cases," Kohlmann said.
Kohlmann spoke on NBC's Today program.
Awlaki's English-language Website praises Hasan as a "hero" and a "man of conscience".
But no such praise is coming from the current leadership of the Virginia mosque where Hasan once worshipped. Imam Johari Abdul-Malik publicly condemned18 the Fort Hood attack.
"While accepting the fact that Major Nidal Malik Hasan practiced the Islamic faith, we offer no justification19 for his ungodly and heinous20, cowardly act of violence," Abdul-Malik said.
Some U.S. legislators are demanding answers about why Hasan's intercepted communications with the radical cleric did not prompt wider scrutiny of the psychiatrist's actions or intervention21 that could have prevented the attack. The White House has promised a thorough investigation22 of the matter, and steps to guard against a repeat of the tragedy.
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