TERROR TRIAL
Pole-vault questions for father of suspect
Defense tries to show he said what FBI wanted to hear
Demian Bulwa, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, March 10, 2006
Source
- Sacramento -- Do terrorists pole vault?
It's an unusual question, but testimony Thursday in U.S. District Court suggested it might be relevant in the trial of a Lodi ice cream truck driver.
Umer Hayat, 48, is accused of lying to the FBI by denying firsthand knowledge of Pakistani terrorist camps and by denying that his 23-year-old son attended one in late 2003.
He made the denial June 4 at the FBI's Sacramento office, but changed his story when pressed. During six hours of videotaped interviews, he said that he visited a below-ground paramilitary camp in late 2004.
Hayat confessed, according to the government. But defense attorneys said he fabricated the admissions after he was psychologically bullied, and told agents whatever they wanted to hear.
At the camp, said Hayat, whose primary language is Pashto, more than 1,000 men from around the world -- including white Americans -- fired high-powered rifles, swung curved swords and learned to pole vault across bodies of water.
"They got those stick, the long stick," Hayat said on the videotape, which was played this week for jurors, who followed along in a transcript. "You know ... when you want to jump something, they was trying to stick like here and jump maybe 16 feet over there."
"They used it like a vaulting pole," responded FBI Agent Timothy Harrison.
"Yes sir," Hayat said.
"They must have been very tall ceilings," Harrison said. "This is a very deep basement?"
"Very deep basement, yes," Hayat said. "Very, very deep basement, yes."
Hayat's attorney, Johnny Griffin, took aim at the details of the confession Thursday while cross-examining Harrison. He suggested that his client wasn't making sense when he recalled that all of the trainees at the camp wore ninja-style masks.
Griffin then asked about the pole vaulting.
"You didn't take that as a literal description of what was happening, did you?" Griffin asked.
Harrison responded: "I believe at times that Umer Hayat was a poor judge of the distances involved in jumping with a pole."
According to an online version of the Encyclopedia Britannica, the pole vault was "originally a practical means of clearing objects, such as ditches, brooks, and fences," and became a competitive sport in the middle of the 19th century. Today it is an event judged on how high a bar the vaulter can clear using a long, flexible pole.
Hayat's son, Hamid Hayat, is accused of supporting terrorism by attending the training camp and faces three counts related to initially lying about it. His federal trial in front of a separate jury started last month.
Starting Tuesday, the juries will begin hearing some testimony simultaneously. But they will issue separate verdicts.
The younger Hayat's trial also revolves around his alleged videotaped confession at the FBI office. In his five-hour statement, Hayat described attending a camp in a mountaintop field in a different province of Pakistan with 35 to 200 Pakistani men.
On the videotapes, father and son seemed to have difficulty understanding the agents in English, and they gave many answers that had been previously suggested by the agents -- who did most of the talking.
However, as the prosecution has stressed, the suspects volunteered new information to the agents on videotape, disagreed at times with questions, and never denied an involvement with the training camp.
Umer Hayat is a naturalized U.S. citizen who moved from Pakistan 30 years ago. His son was born in Stockton but has spent half his life in Pakistan.
E-mail Demian Bulwa at dbulwa@sfchronicle.com.
Page B - 6