Citing the need to be better prepared for trial, Pakistani-Canadian terror suspect Tahawwur Rana has asked the US government to provide him "specific" details of the kind of "material support" he provided to terror acts, saying so far the prosecution's allegations in the superseding indictment have been "vague".
In a 10-page motion filed in a Chicago court, Rana's lawyer Patrick Blegen said given the "complexity of the case", his client should be entitled to know "with specificity what material support he is alleged to have provided" to terrorism. "The superseding indictment is not a clear apprisal of the allegations against the defendant. Rather, by simply reciting the language of the statute, the superseding indictment keeps the allegations vague and prevents the defendant from properly preparing a defence," Blegen said in the motion. He said the government need not identify all of the evidence it will produce, but should point out what the allegations are, rather than hide behind the "vague and amorphous language of the statute". Each count in the indictment against Rana lists that he provided material support to terrorism in the form of "personnel", "tangible property", "money", "currency" and "false documentation, and identification". Neither the superseding indictment, nor the discovery provided by the government so far reveal what these things are, Blegen said. "There
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