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NewsOctober 3, 2007

MIAMI -- Seven men intended to destroy Chicago's Sears Tower and bomb FBI buildings to ignite a guerrilla war that would overthrow the U.S. government and pave the way for an Islamic regime, federal prosecutors said Tuesday in opening statements. FBI audio and video recordings show that the so-called "Liberty City Seven" hoped to use street gangs as soldiers who would stage attacks, ranging from large-scale bombings of major buildings to poisoning salt shakers in restaurants, Assistant U.S. ...

By CURT ANDERSON ~ The Associated Press

MIAMI -- Seven men intended to destroy Chicago's Sears Tower and bomb FBI buildings to ignite a guerrilla war that would overthrow the U.S. government and pave the way for an Islamic regime, federal prosecutors said Tuesday in opening statements.

FBI audio and video recordings show that the so-called "Liberty City Seven" hoped to use street gangs as soldiers who would stage attacks, ranging from large-scale bombings of major buildings to poisoning salt shakers in restaurants, Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Gregorie said.

On one of the 15,000 FBI recordings, Narseal Batiste is overheard saying he would make sure no one survived destruction of the 110-story Sears Tower because his soldiers would be ready to shoot down anyone who escaped.

"These defendants wanted to wage jihad against the United States, and they tell us so in unequivocal detail," Gregorie told jurors. "They say 'the war has to be fought here. And it can't be just a bombing. It's got to be chaos.'"

Defense argument

Batiste attorney Ana M. Jhones countered that the purported plot was driven mainly by two paid FBI informants, including one known as Mohammed who posed as a representative of al-Qaida. She said Batiste's group was coerced into going along with the violent plan by "this great con man," who was paid about $80,000 by the FBI.

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Each of the seven defendants from Miami's impoverished Liberty City neighborhood faces up to 70 years in prison if convicted of all charges, including conspiracy to levy war against the United States and conspiracy to provide material support to al-Qaida. All seven have been in custody since their June 2006 arrests.

The other informant, known as Abbas, contacted the FBI in October 2005 after Batiste allegedly asked him if he had any contacts in his home country of Yemen to help with the supposed terrorism plot.

'Talking the talk'

Batiste, a 33-year-old construction worker, was leading the Miami chapter of a sect called the Moorish Science Temple, which does not recognize the authority of the U.S. government.

After their arrests, Batiste and some other group members told the FBI they only went along with Mohammed in hopes of extorting money from him. Mohammed had offered the group $50,000 along with supplies and other goods, and Jhones said they hoped to con Mohammed out of it.

"He never had any intent to do any of these things the government is accusing him of. He never had the ability," Jhones said. "Narseal Batiste was talking the talk and walking the walk."

The trial, unfolding in the same courthouse where al-Qaida operative Jose Padilla was convicted in August, is expected to last the rest of the year.

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