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Last update - 00:00 05/10/2006
Israeli agents want disguises to testify at Miami drug trialBy The Associated Press MIAMI - Israeli undercover agents want to wear wigs, fake facial hair and makeup so that they can testify without revealing their true identities at the upcoming trial of an Israeli man charged with running a worldwide Ecstasy distribution ring. As many as six surveillance officers of the Israel Police also want to appear in the U.S. federal trial of Zeev Rosenstein using only an "officer identification number" rather than their names. In addition, they want to limit defense cross-examination that might reveal confidential tactics and spy technology. "The underlying principle behind these procedures is that in order to operate effectively in a country like Israel, an undercover surveillance officer must preserve his or her complete anonymity," U.S. prosecutors Michael Sullivan and Ben Greenberg said in a motion filed in federal court this week. Rosenstein, 51, is scheduled to go to trial in November on charges of conspiracy to distribute more than one million pills of the synthetic drug MDMA, more commonly known as Ecstasy, in the United States. Rosenstein is on the U.S. list of 44 top worldwide drug traffickers. He has pleaded not guilty and has been held without bail since his extradition from Israel in March. The prosecutors' motion says that the Israeli agents' testimony "goes to the heart" of the U.S. case, because they witnessed numerous meetings that Rosenstein allegedly had with other conspirators in the Ecstasy ring. There was no audio surveillance, making these eyewitness accounts even more critical, the motion said. In the U.S. justice system, a defendant has a right to confront and cross-examine accusers, and courts have ruled both ways on whether witnesses may testify in disguises, because of concerns about that right and about the impact on jurors. The Israeli government, however, said that the agents' cover would be forever blown if they are not disguised. "In stressing the importance of these protections, we wish to note that Israel is a very small country, with a relatively small and close-knit organized criminal community," the Justice Ministry said in a letter to U.S. prosecutors. "The exposure of the identity of any surveillance officer thus inevitably means the end of his or her effectiveness." The motion asked U.S. District Judge William Dimitrouleas to approve a "light disguise" for the Israeli agents, "including makeup, wigs and/or other facial hair for men," as well as restrictions on questioning about methods and the use of numbers instead of names. Dimitrouleas had not ruled on the motion as of Thursday. Rosenstein's attorney, Howard Srebnick, did not immediately return telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment about the request. |
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