A third-grade teacher at a Muslim school in
Maryland traveled to Pakistan shortly after the 9/11 attacks, trained with a
terrorist organization there and later served as chauffeur for one of that
group's leaders during his U.S. travels, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors and defense lawyers made their closing arguments Monday in the
trial of Ali Asad Chandia, 29, who is charged with providing material support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba, an organization that supports Muslim control of the disputed
Kashmir territory on the India-Pakistan border. The U.S. government declared
Lashkar a terrorist organization in December 2001.
Prosecutors have said that Lashkar served as a potential gateway for
Americans and others who wanted to join the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan
in its fight against U.S. troops in late 2001.
The charges against Chandia stem from a government investigation of what
prosecutors called a "Virginia jihad network," a group of young Muslim men who
used paintball games in 2000 and 2001 as paramilitary training for holy war
around the globe. Ten people have been convicted in that investigation,
including the group's spiritual leader, Ali al-Timimi, who was sentenced to life
in prison for soliciting treason and urging group members to fight U.S. troops
in Afghanistan.
Prosecutors do not allege that Chandia intended to take up arms against U.S.
troops, but they do say he received jihad training at a Lashkar camp in late
2001. Then, after returning to the U.S. in 2002, they say he helped Lashkar by
assisting one of its officers, Mohammed Ajmal Khan, in his U.S. travels.
Specifically, Chandia served as a driver for Khan and picked him up at
various airports. He also helped Khan obtain and ship equipment from the United
States to Pakistan, including a remote-controlled aircraft and 50,000
paintballs, according to the government.
Prosecutor John Gibbs said the defense sought to portray Khan as an
eccentric, largely innocuous character.
"He is not cute. He is a terrorist," Gibbs said of Khan, who was convicted in
Great Britain of supporting Lashkar and sentenced earlier this year to nine
years in prison.
Defense attorney Marvin Miller said prosecutors had no evidence that Chandia
attended a Lashkar camp, only testimony from a witness who reported seeing
Chandia at a Lashkar office in Lahore. Miller said Chandia traveled to Pakistan
to help arrange his brother's wedding there in January 2002.
Miller argued that Chandia didn't know of Khan's connections to Lashkar.
Chandia only agreed to help Khan because he was asked to by a friend, Masoud
Khan of Gaithersburg, Md. Masoud Khan is currently serving a life sentence for
his role in the Virginia jihad group.
Prosecutor David Laufman responded by putting a sinister-looking picture of
Khan in front of the jury, and ridiculing the idea that Chandia had been an
unwitting dupe.
The jury began its deliberations Monday afternoon.