Closing arguments on Tuesday in Mumbai terror trial
The prosecution and the defence rested on Monday in the Mumbai terror trial after jurors were shown the videotaped interrogation of Pakistan-born Canadian businessman Tahawwur Rana, who is accused of helping the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the 26/11 attack.
Roughly 10 minutes of the video was played in Chicago Federal court. Rana, who had waived his Miranda Rights to remain silent, spoke quietly and calmly to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and without his attorney present, ABC News reported.
On the tape, Rana has dark brown hair. Two years later, his hair and beard are both white.
Rana, who is accused of providing the cover of his immigration business to confessed Pakistani American terrorist David Coleman Headley for scouting targets for the Mumbai attack by the LeT, was questioned for almost six hours after his arrest Oct 18, 2009.
Some of the questioning involves Rana's ties to Headley aka Daood Gilani, who testified about Rana's role in attack and an attack plan on a Denmark newspaper that published cartoons of Prophet Muhammad in 2005.
Rana's attorneys called only two witnesses, a computer expert and an immigration attorney after federal prosecutors called the last of their eight witnesses earlier in the day. Rana himself did not take the stand.
Closing arguments are expected on Tuesday in the trial that has been closely watched around the world.
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