Abdul Majid Giaka

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Abdul Majid Giaka gave evidence for the prosecution in the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial in September 2000.

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[edit] Prosecution witness

By the start of the trial Giaka had been in a U.S. federal witness protection program for nearly a decade, and had acquired American citizenship. He claimed to have worked for Libyan intelligence in the early 1980s before becoming a paid informant for the CIA in the late 1980s. He was billed as the "star" prosecution witness against the two accused Libyans.

[edit] Lying in the witness box

Defence lawyers were quick to pull his evidence apart. William Taylor QC called Giaka a liar no less than 30 times, without any objection from the prosecution. And Richard Keen QC ended each line of questioning with:

"That's a complete lie," or,
"Either now you're lying or you lied before. Which is it?"

[edit] Judgment

The three trial Judges rejected most of Giaka's testimony as unreliable. However, they accepted his evidence that defendant Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi was a Libyan intelligence agent, which led to Megrahi's conviction for the Lockerbie bombing. The other defendant, Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah, was acquitted.

[edit] References