Closing Arguments On Tuesday In Mumbai Terror Suspect's Trial
UPDATED 06/06/11 10:39 a.m.
CHICAGO (CBS) -- Closing arguments are scheduled for Tuesday in the trial of a Chicago businessman accused of aiding terrorists in deadly attacks in Mumbia, India in 2008.
The defense rested its case on Monday after calling only two witnesses--a computer expert and immigration attorney--on behalf of Tahawwur Rana.
The prosecution rested its case earlier today.
As WBBM Newsradio 780's Mary Frances Bragiel reports, federal prosecutors called one more witness Monday to try and bolster their case against Tahawwur Rana. He is charged with covering up for David Coleman Headley, who has pleaded guilty to his role in the Mumbai attacks which killed more than 160 people including several Americans.
Headley was the prosecution's star witness in the trial, on the stand for nearly a week telling jurors how he worked with Pakistani intelligence and a militant group ahead of the bombing.
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Headley has pleaded guilty to laying the groundwork in the three-day massacre that left more than 160 dead in India's largest city.
Kashmiri, one of six others charged in the Mumbai case in absentia, was reportedly killed Friday in a U.S. missile strike. Rana is the only one on trial.
Headley said Kashmiri was angry over the U.S. drone attacks inside Pakistan and wanted to target the defense contractor.
Kashmiri led the militant group Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, which has launched attacks in India and Pakistan, including a 2006 suicide bombing against the U.S. consulate in Karachi that killed four people, according to the State Department.
Headley also has pleaded guilty to plotting an attack against a Danish newspaper that in 2005 printed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, which angered many Muslims. Rana is also charged in that plot, which was never carried out.
Rana and Headley were high school chums, and defense attorneys have described Headley as liar who cut a deal with the government to avoid the death penalty.
Rana, a Canadian national who has lived in Chicago for years and owns an immigration services business on Devon Avenue, has pleaded not guilty.
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