Page 2 of 2   <      

For Victims' Families, Verdict Elicits Mix of Shock, Relief

Defense attorney Edward B. MacMahon Jr., above left, greets Rosemary Dillard after the sentencing. Dillard's husband was on the plane that crashed into the Pentagon on Sept. 11.
Defense attorney Edward B. MacMahon Jr., above left, greets Rosemary Dillard after the sentencing. Dillard's husband was on the plane that crashed into the Pentagon on Sept. 11. (Jahi Chikwendiu - Twp)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

One by one, family members stepped up to address the media. With the waning sun on her face and holding up a photograph of her mother, who died on American Airlines Flight 11, Carie Lemack said Moussaoui was a "wannabe" terrorist and deserves no credit for Sept. 11.

"I'm proud of the jury today and know my mother would be, too," she said. "Moussaoui was not capable of pulling off these horrible attacks. He deserves to rot in jail. . . . What this trial was really about was the people who died that day."

She said she had expected the jury to sentence him to death. "I was shocked. I always assumed they would give him the death penalty because they had found him eligible for it."

Scott, too, was shocked. He had stepped into a restroom to compose himself before he left the courthouse, but once he began talking outside, tears filled his eyes again.

"We don't know what transpired that day on September 11. Only Moussaoui knows and the Lord knows," he said, his voice choked with emotion. "I'm moving on now."

Asked what he would tell his wife, Janice, who died in the attack on the Pentagon, about the jury's decision, he said, " 'Baby, at least one perpetrator has been brought to justice. . . . I hope you're looking down upon us and are pleased.' "

Family members who did not attend the trial were able to watch it on a closed-circuit television broadcast set up by an act of Congress at courthouses in Boston, Manhattan, Long Island, Newark and Philadelphia.

U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema said in an April 12 bench conference unsealed yesterday that attendance at the remote viewing sites had rarely exceeded 25 people each day. "Frankly, the number of people at the sites, amazingly, is low," she told lawyers.

Sheila Langone, who lost two sons -- one a New York firefighter and one a New York police officer -- was not able to go to one of the sites from her Long Island home. She learned of the verdict on television.

"I'm disappointed that it wasn't the death penalty, but the jury had a tough job to do," she said in a telephone interview. "I think the jury didn't think he had that active a role in September 11. I think they had a lot of trouble coming to the decision."

She said she is happy that the trial is over and saw at least one positive factor in the sentence -- she won't have to endure years of appeals that likely would have followed had Moussaoui been sentenced to death.

"I will be glad not to have to see his face in the newspaper anymore," she said. "They can just tuck him away somewhere, and we never have to hear from him again."

Moussaoui's mother, Aicha el-Wafi, who had spent several days in the courtroom being ignored by her son during the first phase of the trial, was in Paris when the verdict was announced. She is scheduled to hold a news conference there today.

"I was relieved," said Blake Allison, who testified on behalf of the defense during the trial. "I think it is fair to say that it has been a long haul for all the family members, regardless of where they fall in terms of what the appropriate punishment should be."

Allison, of Lyme, N.H., whose wife, Anna Allison, was killed on American Airlines Flight 11, said he testified for the defense because he is against the death penalty.

"I didn't feel that capital punishment was the appropriate response. I don't think the government's case was terribly convincing."

Staff writers Jamie Stockwell, Leef Smith and Lisa Rein and staff researchers Julie Tate and Meg Smith contributed to this report.


<       2


More in the Metro Section

Local Blog Directory

Find a Local Blog

Plug into the region's blogs, by location or area of interest.

Virginia Politics

Blog: Va. Politics

Here's a place to help you keep up with Virginia's overcaffeinated political culture.

D.C. Taxi Fares

D.C. Taxi Fares

Compare estimated zoned and metered D.C. taxi fares with this interactive calculator.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2006 The Washington Post Company