213 F.3d 74; 2000 U.S. App.
LEXIS 11661 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee, v. WADIH EL-HAGE, also known as
Abdus Sabbur, Defendant-Appellant, FAZUL ABDULLAH MOHAMMED, also known as Harun
Fazhl, also known as Fazhl Abdullah, also known as Fazhl Khan, MOHAMED SADEEK
ODEH, also known as Abu Moath, also known as Noureldine, also known as Marwan,
also known as Hydar, MOHAMED RASHED DAOUD AL-OWHALI, also known as Khalid Salim
Saleh Bin Rashed, also known as Abdul Jabbar Ali Abel-Latif, USAMA BIN-LADEN,
also known as Usamah Bin-Muhammad Bin-Ladin, also known as Shaykh Usamah
Bin-Ladin, also known as Mujahid Shaykh, also known as Hajj, also known as Al
Qaqa, also known as Director, MUHAMMAD ATEF, also known as Abu Hafs, also known
as Abu Hafs El Masry, also known as Taysir, also known as Aheikh Taysir
Abdullah, MUSTAFA MOHAMED FADHIL, also known as Mustafa Ali Elbishy, also known
as Hussein, also known as Hassan Ali, KHALFAN KHAMIS MOHAMED, also known as
Khalfan Khamis, AHMED KHALFAN GHAILANI, also known as Fupi, also known as
Abubakary Khalfan Ghailiani, FAHID MOHAMMED MSALAM, also known as Fahad M.
Ally, SHEIKH AHMED SALIM SWEDAN, also known as Sheikh Bahamadi, also known as
Ahmed Ally, MAMDOUH MAHMUD SALIM, also known as Abu Hajer al Iraqi, also known
as Abu Hajer, ALI MOHAMED, also known as Ali Abdelseoud Mohamed, also known as
Abu Omar, also known as Haydara, also known as Taymour Ali Nasser, also known
as Ahmed Bahaa Adam, AYMAN AL ZAWAHIRI, also known as Abdel Muaz, also known as
Ayman Al Zawahiri, also known as Doctor and KHALED AL FAWWAZ, also known as Abu
Omar, also known as Hamad, Defendants. Docket No. 00-1025 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE SECOND CIRCUIT March 13, 2000, Argued May 25, 2000, Decided PRIOR
HISTORY: [*1]
Defendant Wadih El-Hage appeals from an order of the United States
District Court for the Southern District of New York (Sand, J.) that denied his
motion to be released on bail, denied his application for modification of the
condition of his confinement, and denied his application for an evidentiary
hearing. DISPOSITION: Affirmed. COUNSEL: KENNETH M. KARAS, Assistant
United States Attorney, New York, New York (Mary Jo White, United States
Attorney, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, Michael J. Garcia, Paul W. Butler, Ira M.
Feinberg, Baruch Weiss, Assistant United States Attorneys, Southern District of
New York, New York, New York, of counsel), for Appellee United States of
America. JOSHUA
L. DRATEL, Joshua L. Dratel, P.C., New York, New York (Sam A. Schmidt, Deborah
I. Meyer, Law Offices of Sam A. Schmidt, New York, New York, of counsel), for
Defendant-Appellant Wadih El-Hage. JUDGES: Before: CARDAMONE, and CABRANES,
Circuit Judges, and TRAGER *, District Judge. * Hon. David G. Trager, United States District Court Judge
for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation. OPINION: PER CURIAM: Defendant
Wadih El-Hage appeals from an order entered orally on January 10, 2000 and [*2] by written endorsement January 13, 2000
in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Sand, J.). The order denied defendants motion to be released on
bail, his application for rescission or for substantial modification of the
Special Administrative Measures (S.A.M.) of his confinement, and his
application for an evidentiary hearing regarding the substance of the motion.
On March 13, 2000 this panel heard oral argument on this appeal, and on March
17, 2000 entered an order denying each of the three applications, in effect
affirming the order of the district court. We noted in our order that this
opinion was to follow in due course. Pretrial
detention is authorized by statute. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3142(e)
a person may be detained before trial if it is found that no condition or
combination of conditions of an indicted defendant will reasonably
assure the appearance of the [defendant]
and the safety of any other
person and the community. Due process limits how long an accused may
be detained in prison without a trial. But exactly how long such detention may
extend before violating due process limits the issue we face on [*3] this appeal has not been
fixed in the law. The 30-33 months of pretrial detention served or contemplated
to be served before the conclusion of a trial in this case is extraordinary,
and justified only by the unprecedented scope of violence that the conspiracy
of which defendant was allegedly a part inflicted on innocent victims, by the
extraordinarily complex and difficult preparation needed to present this case,
and, more particularly, because the lengthy delay in bringing defendant to
trial may not be laid at the governments doorstep. BACKGROUND A.
Facts Wadih
El-Hage is a 39-year old United States citizen who, until his arrest, resided
in Arlington, Texas with his wife and seven children. El-Hage, a native of
Lebanon, has lived in the United States for much of the past 22 years, and also
has lived in Pakistan, the Sudan, and Kenya with his family during that period.
He was arrested on September 16, 1998 and charged with six conspiracies to kill
United States citizens and destroy United States property abroad, 20 counts of
perjury based on his grand jury testimony, and three counts of false
statements. The charges against El-Hage arise from his alleged participation
in [*4] conspiracies led by co-defendant Usama
Bin Laden, who is still at large, to attack United States citizens and
interests world-wide. The
indictment charges defendant with being a key participant in the terrorist
organization founded by Bin Laden, called al Qaeda (the
Base). The indictment states that Bin Laden and al Qaeda issued a public
declaration of war against the American military in August 1996 and, on
February 23, 1998, endorsed a statement that Muslims should kill Americans,
anywhere they could be found. Count One of the indictment asserts that to
achieve these aims, al Qaeda provided its members with military and
intelligence training, training in guerilla warfare, urban fighting,
explosives, assassination and kidnaping, and that it purchased, stored and
transported weapons and explosives, and made efforts to obtain the components
of nuclear and chemical weapons. Count One also declares that al Qaeda trained
the persons responsible for the killing of 18 members of the United States
armed forces in Mogadishu, Somalia, on October 3-4, 1993. The indictment
further charges that on August 7, 1998 members of al Qaeda carried out the
bombing of the United States embassy in Nairobi, [*5] Kenya causing more than 212 deaths and
injuring 4,500 people, and the bombing of the United States embassy in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania that caused 11 deaths and injuries to 85 people. On
September 24, 1997, prior to the embassy bombings, El-Hage was called to
testify before a grand jury in the Southern District of New York investigating
the activities of Bin Laden and al Qaeda. Based on his testimony that day
El-Hage was indicted and charged with seven counts of perjury (Counts 245
through 251) concerning his contacts with Bin Laden and al Qaeda and his
knowledge of their activities. After the embassy bombings, El-Hage was again
subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury on September 16, 1998. Thirteen
counts of perjury (Counts 252 through 264) were added to his indictment based
on his testimony that day regarding his knowledge concerning documents found in
his files in Kenya. B.
Bail Applications El-Hage
first sought bail on September 23, 1998 when he was charged with eight counts
of perjury and three counts of false statements. United States Magistrate Judge
Leonard Bernikow denied bail on the ground of risk of flight, without reaching
the issue of dangerousness, relying on
[*6] El-Hages foreign ties and extensive foreign
travel, that he had previously failed to appear on a minor bad check charge in
Texas, the dishonesty element of the perjury charges, and the gravity of the
then-unindicted accusations against him. On November 17, 1998 the district
court judge toured the wing of the Manhattan Metropolitan Correctional Facility
where El-Hage is held. After
he was indicted on the subsequent conspiracy charges, defendant again sought
bail on February 8, 1999 before United States District Court Judge Leonard B.
Sand. Judge Sand denied bail, citing the governments
overwhelming case for detention based on danger to the community and
risk of flight. El-Hage filed the instant bail application, from the
denial of which this appeal has been taken, on December 6, 1999. In
opposition to the most recent bail motion, the government submitted a detailed
affirmation by an Assistant United States Attorney which alleged El-Hage played
a significant role in al Qaedas operations from at least 1992 until
his arrest in 1998. Defendant was one of Bin-Ladens trusted
associates, privy to al Qaedas secrets and plans, served as Bin Ladens
personal secretary, traveled on his
[*7] American passport on Bin Ladens behalf, moved Bin
Ladens money, and worked in Bin Ladens factories in the
Sudan factories which served as a cover for the procurement of
chemicals and weapons. Documents
found on El-Hages computer seized at his home in Nairobi, Kenya in
1997, the affirmation continues, details El-Hages role and his
overall dangerousness. Other evidence, apart from this computer record,
confirms El-Hages role in conveying military orders from Bin Laden
including the direction that the East African cell (which later carried out the
embassy bombings) militarize, and that defendant had a role
in providing false passports and in seeking weapons including Stinger missiles
for al Qaeda members. Passport photographs of al Qaeda members who participated
in al Qaedas efforts against American troops in Somalia were also
recovered in the Kenya files. The
accused clearly has the ability to flee. El-Hage has been a frequent traveler
who lived in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the United States in the 1980s,
eventually moving to the Sudan in 1992 and Kenya in 1994, before returning to
the United States in 1997. By his own admission, while living in the Sudan and
Kenya, he [*8] traveled to Tanzania, Somalia, Italy,
Slovakia, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, England and other countries. He has
demonstrated access to false travel documents. C.
Conditions of Confinement Defendants
trial is expected to start on September 5, 2000 and to continue for six to nine
months, at which point he will have been confined 30-33 months without a
conviction. He was subject to solitary confinement for the first 15 months of
his detention, but before the January 10, 2000 hearing, he was permitted to
have a cellmate. In addition, the government has revised El-Hages
S.A.M. conditions to give him seven extra minutes of time in each phone call to
his family and to provide him with a plastic chair so that he can review
documents more comfortably. He is also permitted three calls per month to his
family, rather than the one call per month usual for inmates in administrative
detention. At
that same hearing, Judge Sand suggested, and the government agreed, that an
earlier trial date could be set for the perjury charges and that the detention
question could be revisited thereafter, but El-Hage declined that offer and
insisted on a single trial on all charges against him. The district [*9] court then denied El-Hages
motion for bail, finding no reason to conclude that the risk of
flight as of January 10, 2000, is any less than it was at a prior hearing on
the matter, and that nothing has happened since the earlier
hearings which causes the Court to believe that dangerousness is in any way
reduced. The district court also found, without discussion or
analysis, no due process violation arising from El-Hages continued
confinement or the conditions of such confinement. DISCUSSION Defendant
declares that despite reams of exhibits in his case there is not a single
witness who can state directly that defendant was a member of al Qaeda, knew of
any plans to commit violent acts against United States citizens and property,
or that he knowingly committed any act in furtherance of any illegal objective.
He believes his right to due process has been denied because his confinement
denies him the right to participate in the preparation of his defense. The
government justifies its very lengthy pretrial detention of defendant and its
opposition to his bail motion on the trial courts findings of risk of
flight and dangerousness. Further, the government urges that the prison
restrictions [*10] on El-Hage also do not violate due
process and that defendant is not entitled to an evidentiary hearing. Under
our system for the fair administration of criminal justice the government in
all its actions is bound by fixed rules of law so that a citizen can ascertain
with some degree of certainty how the government will use its power in a given
circumstance and can use that knowledge to conduct his or her affairs. The
fixed rules implicated on this appeal are those derived from the concept of due
process of the law, the subject to which we now turn. I
Due Process and the Length of Confinement In
determining whether El-Hages pretrial detention violated his due
process rights, we review the district courts factual determinations
for clear error. See United States v. Ferranti, 66 F.3d 540, 542 (2d Cir.
1995). The constitutional significance of those findings, including the
ultimate determination of whether due process has been violated, is reviewed de
novo. United States v. Millan, 4 F.3d 1038, 1043 (2d Cir. 1993). It is
well-settled that so long as pretrial detention is administrative rather than
punitive, it is constitutional. See United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 746-51, 95
L. Ed. 2d 697, 107 S. Ct. 2095 (1987);
[*11] Bell v. Wolfish, 441
U.S. 520, 535-40, 60 L. Ed. 2d 447, 99 S. Ct. 1861 (1979); Millan, 4 F.3d at 1042. Whether
detention is punitive rather than regulatory generally turns on
whether an alternative purpose to which [the detention] may rationally
be connected is assignable for it, and whether it appears excessive in relation
to the alternative purpose. Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 538. To determine
whether the length of pretrial detention has become unconstitutionally
excessive, a court must weigh: (1) its length, (2) the extent of the
prosecutions responsibility for delay of the trial, (3) the gravity
of the charges, and (4) the strength of the evidence upon which detention was
based, i.e., the evidence of risk of flight and dangerousness. See United
States v. El-Gabrowny,
35 F.3d 63, 65 (2d Cir. 1994). (1)
Length. While the length of pretrial detention is a factor in determining
whether due process has been violated, the length of detention alone is not
dispositive and will rarely by itself offend due process.
Millan, 4 F.3d at 1044 (quoting United States v. Orena, 986 F.2d 628, 631 (2d Cir.
1993); [*12] see El-Gabrowny, 35 F.3d at 65. El-Hages
pretrial detention has already been long, and is realistically projected to
continue for a very long time. Nevertheless, the duration of the detention is
not wholly unprecedented, especially for a complex case involving an extensive
conspiracy. For example, in El-Gabrowny, a case arising out of the World Trade Center
bombing, the prisoner had been detained 18 months at the time of the hearing
and no verdict was expected for another nine months. In Millan, a heroin
trafficking case, we permitted a detention that had lasted 24 months at the
time of hearing and was expected to last a total of 30 to 31 months before a
verdict could be obtained. At the
same time, due process concerns in cases involving similar periods of detention
have, on occasion, compelled the defendants release on bail. See United
States v. Ojeda Rios,
846 F.2d 167 (2d Cir. 1988) (holding unconstitutional the continued detention
of a defendant who had been in custody for 32 months and whose trial was not
expected to start for another four months); United States v. Gonzales
Claudio, 806 F.2d
334 (2d Cir. 1986) (finding [*13] unconstitutional
the continued detention of a prisoner who had been in custody for 14 months and
was expected to be held for another 12 months during the course of trial).
Hence, the length of El-Hages detention weighs heavily in his favor
in his argument that his due process rights have been violated. (2)
Responsibility for Delay. In this case, the prosecution appears to bear very
little responsibility for the delay of trial. Everyone involved agrees that the
underlying case is of exceptional complexity and that discovery and trial
preparation are of necessity extremely time-consuming for both sides. The
district court did not find any delay attributable to the government. Indeed,
it was defense counsel who, when Judge Sand suggested it, declined an early trial
solely on the perjury and false statement counts. This finding on
responsibility for delay was not clearly erroneous and weighs against El-Hages
argument that his due process rights have been violated. (3)
Gravity of the Charges. As discussed above, El-Hage is charged with playing a
vital role in a worldwide terrorist organization believed to have orchestrated
several violent attacks and to pose a substantial threat [*14] to national security interests. Thus
this factor also weighs heavily in the governments favor. (4)
Strength of the Proof. Last, we come to the strength of the evidence underlying
the detention. The evidence in this case is similar to, albeit somewhat weaker
than, that in El-Gabrowny. The district court correctly found that El-Hage is
quite capable of flight, given his apparent access to false documents, his
extensive history of travel and residence in other countries, and his alleged
ties to an extensive and well-organized terrorist group whose leader and seven
other of whose indicted members are still at large. His indictment and upcoming
trial on well-publicized, very serious charges for which, if he is convicted,
life imprisonment is a likely sentence, give him a strong motive to flee.
Although El-Hage is an American citizen with a wife and seven small children in
Texas, who presented himself for both of his grand jury hearings, he
nevertheless represents a serious flight risk. With
respect to dangerousness, the district court explicitly found that El-Hage
would not be able to resume his active role in al Qaeda if he were released,
but found that his knowledge of the
[*15] extent of the government investigation, if communicated to
other al Qaeda members, would be dangerous to the United States. While El-Hage
himself has not been accused of performing violent acts, he is accused of
playing a central role in a conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals. In an ordinary
case, the risk of the defendants flight alone might not justify a
detention of this length. A longer pretrial detention is more justifiable for a
defendant found to be dangerous than for a defendant who presents only a risk
of flight. This is because release of the former risks injury to other persons
and the community, while release of the latter ordinarily risks only the loss
of his conviction and imprisonment. See Orena, 986 F.2d at 631. Here,
the defendants capacity for flight exacerbates his dangerousness.
El-Hage may be incapable of resuming his alleged former role in al Qaeda.
Nevertheless, the evidence amply demonstrates the organizations
strong interest in evading the United States government. Even though he was not
given access to classified information, pretrial discovery has provided El-Hage
with a significant quantity of information that the government has collected [*16] about al Qaeda as part of its case. If
al Qaeda had access to this information, it might be better able to avoid U.S.
or other investigators both in planning possible future terrorist actions and
in hiding the evidence of its past crimes, as the district court found. In this
case, where the killings underlying the charges were extraordinary in scale and
were also allegedly deliberate acts of terrorism, not only were the district
courts findings as to risk of flight and dangerousness not clearly
erroneous, but the evidence supporting them is strong. Legal
Conclusion. Consequently, after weighing the length of the delay, the
governments lack of fault in causing the delay, and the strength of
the evidence, we conclude that El-Hages continued detention is
regulatory and that a rational purpose may be assigned it. Hence, the detention
does not violate defendants rights to due process. II
Due Process and the Conditions of Confinement El-Hage
asserts that the conditions of his confinement violate his due process rights
because they restrict his ability to prepare his own defense. In Turner v.
Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 87, 96 L. Ed.
2d 64, 107 S. Ct. 2254 (1987), the
[*17] Supreme Court clarified what standard of review governs
inmates constitutional claims. To determine whether a prison
regulation burdens fundamental rights, the reviewing court
asks whether the regulation is reasonably related
to legitimate penological objectives, or whether it represents an exaggerated
response to those concerns. Id. Turner outlined a four-factor
test for evaluating whether a prison regulation that allegedly violates a
constitutional right is reasonably related to a valid correctional objective.
The court must consider first whether there is a valid, rational
connection between the regulation and the legitimate governmental
interest used to justify it; second, whether there are alternative means for
the prisoner to exercise the right at issue; third, the impact that the desired
accommodation will have on guards, other inmates, and prison resources; and
fourth, the absence of ready alternatives. Id. at 89-91; accord
United States v. Felipe, 148 F.3d 101, 110 (2d Cir. 1998). Where
the regulation at issue imposes pretrial, rather than post-conviction,
restrictions on liberty, the legitimate penological
interests [*18]
served must go beyond the traditional objectives of rehabilitation or
punishment. See McGinnis v. Royster, 410
U.S. 263, 273, 35 L. Ed. 2d 282, 93 S. Ct. 1055 (1973) (It would
hardly be appropriate for the State to undertake in the pretrial detention
period programs to rehabilitate a man still clothed with a presumption of
innocence.); cf. Schall v. Martin, 467 U.S. 253, 263-64, 81
L. Ed. 2d 207, 104 S. Ct. 2403 (1984) (upholding pretrial detention of juvenile
delinquents only after a finding of serious risk on the
ground that it served a legitimate, nonpunitive regulatory purpose). The
government contends the restrictions imposed on El-Hage are reasonably related
to the nonpunitive objective of protecting national security interests. It
maintains that the challenged conditions serve the regulatory purpose of
preventing El-Hage from communicating with his unconfined co-conspirators, and
thereby from facilitating additional terrorist acts by those co-conspirators.
See Wolfish,
441 U.S. at 535. The government has supported these assertions with ample
evidence of the defendants extensive terrorist connections. In Felipe, [*19] we upheld even more onerous
restrictions, including a virtual ban on communications with others, aside from
prison employees, Felipes attorney, and five approved individuals.
Though Felipe involved restrictions imposed on a convicted felon sentenced to
imprisonment, the governmental interest behind those restrictions related to
security concerns, just as they do in the case at hand, and they were not
intended as part of Felipes punishment or rehabilitation. The
security concerns in Felipe might have been more acute because Felipe had
ordered murders and beatings from prison, unlike El-Hage who is not alleged to
have made any illegal communications from prison. However, the restrictions at
issue in Felipe were correspondingly more severe than those we are reviewing
(e.g., defendant Felipe had no cellmate and was not allowed visits with his
attorney or family members). In this light, we conclude that the conditions of
El-Hages confinement are reasonably related to the governments
asserted security concerns. The
alternative to El-Hages current confinement conditions appears to be
his confinement as part of the general prison population. Because his
dangerousness [*20]
arises out of the information he might communicate to others, it was
reasonable for the government to find that alternative unacceptable. III
Denial of an Evidentiary Hearing El-Hage
argues, citing only United States v. Lee, 79 F. Supp. 2d 1280 (D.N.M. 1999), that he was
entitled to an evidentiary hearing below because the government has not identified
any documents that, if revealed, would pose a threat to the security of the
United States. A detention hearing need not be an evidentiary hearing. While
the defendant may present his own witnesses and cross-examine any witnesses
that the government calls, either party may proceed by proffer and the rules of
evidence do not apply. See 18 U.S.C. § 3142(f) (1994 &
Supp. III 1997); Ferranti, 66 F.3d at 542. Nothing in Lee contradicts this
proposition. The district court proceedings here, which have included three
detention hearings to date and left open the possibility of more hearings if
circumstances warrant, were adequate. CONCLUSION The
order of the district court is accordingly [*21] affirmed. |