NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (AP) -- A former Navy sailor was convicted Wednesday of leaking details about ship movements to suspected terrorism supporters, an act that could have endangered his crew mates.
A former Navy signalman has been convicted of leaking information, including the planned movements of his battle group. Jurors convicted Hassan Abu-Jihaad, 32,
of Phoenix, Arizona, of providing material support to terrorists and disclosing classified national defense information.
The American-born Muslim convert formerly known as Paul R. Hall could face 25 years in federal prison when he is sentenced May 23. His attorneys said an appeal
was likely. The leak came amid increased wariness on the part of U.S. Navy commanders whose ships headed to the Persian Gulf in the months after a terrorist
ambush in Yemen in 2000 killed 17 sailors aboard the USS Cole.
Abu-Jihaad, who was a signalman aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Benfold, was accused of passing along details that included the makeup of his Navy battle
group, its planned movements and a drawing of the group's formation when it was to pass through the dangerous Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf on April 29, 2001.
Abu-Jihaad's attorney said a four-year investigation that spanned two continents failed to turn up proof that Abu-Jihaad leaked details of ship movements and their
vulnerability to attack.
Federal prosecutors said he sympathized with the enemy and admitted disclosing military intelligence. But they acknowledged they did not have direct proof that he
leaked the ship details. Authorities said the details of ship movements had to have been leaked by an insider, saying they were not publicly known and contained military
jargon. The leaked documents closely matched what Abu-Jihaad would have had access to as a signalman, authorities said.
Dan LaBelle, Abu-Jihaad's attorney, tried to show that many details of ship movements he was accused of leaking to suspected terrorism supporters were publicly
available through news reports, press releases and Web sites. He also noted that Navy officials testified that the details were full of errors. Prosecutors say investigators
discovered files on a computer disk recovered from a suspected terrorism supporter's home in London that included the ship movements, as well as the number and
type of personnel on each ship and the ships' capabilities. The file ended with instructions to destroy the message, according to testimony.
Abu-Jihaad was charged in the same case that led to the 2004 arrest of Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist accused of running Web sites to raise money,
appeal for fighters and provide equipment such as gas masks and night vision goggles for terrorists. Ahmad, who lived with his parents where the computer file was
allegedly found, is to be extradited to the United States.
Abu-Jihaad, who was honorably discharged in 2002, was prosecuted in New Haven because the investigation first focused on a Connecticut-based Internet service provider.