Rana had sought another hearing citing omissions
Tahawwur Rana, who was found guilty of providing support to Pakistan-based terror group LeT, had cited omission of crucial exculpatory evidence in his case to seek a fresh hearing, recently unsealed court documents have revealed.
Rana was accused with LeT operative David Headley of plotting attacks in Denmark and Mumbai, and was held guilty by a court here last month for providing material support to Lashkare-Taiba. But, fresh documents show that the search warrant affidavit in which evidence incriminated him, omitted Headley's statements to FBI in which he repeatedly told the agency that Rana was unaware of his terrorist activities.
The Canadian-American, through his attorney Patrick W. Blegen, had requested Judge Harry D. Leinenweber to conduct a 'Franks hearing' in which the statements made by police officers in the affidavit that was used to obtain a search warrant for his properties are false and constitute perjury or reckless disregard for truth.
Rana's house, according to the argument, was not searched based on truthful evidence. Because of the omissions, the magistrate judge reviewing the affidavit was left entirely unaware of evidence exculpating Rana. Moreover, the government's own qualms about Headley's credibility were also hidden, the documents say.
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