UNC attacker appears in court -
says 'Allah is my lawyer'
Since 03-07-06
Replace SUV with Airplane and you have a smaller 9/11 terrorist attack - the media and the US Government are trying to hide this story.
By BETH VELLIQUETTE : The Herald-Sun
bvelliquette@heraldsun.com
Mar 6, 2006 : 11:59 am ET
HILLSBOROUGH -- Mohammed Reza Taheri-azar, the 22-year-old former UNC student
charged with trying to run down other students at the University of North
Carolina on Friday with a SUV (9 students injured), thanked the judge Monday during his first appearance for the
opportunity tell people about Allah.
"I'm thankful you're here to give me this trial to learn more about the will of
Allah, the creator and the merciful," Taheri-azar said to the judge during the
short hearing in Orange County District Criminal Court.
Taheri-Azar, wearing the typical orange jumpsuit of jail inmates, was escorted
into the crowded courtroom under tight security by the Orange County Sheriff's
Office and was immediately seated in the defendant's chair.
Orange-Chatham District Attorney Jim Woodall told Judge Pat DeVine that
Taheri-Azar had been charged with nine counts of attempted murder and nine
counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious
injury. He then read through each of the 18 warrants, naming each of the nine
victims.
Taheri-Azar sat quietly, only glancing once to his right at the phalanx of
deputies who stood nearby. He answered each of DeVine's questions politely as
she explained his rights and the procedures. Susan Seahorn, an assistant public
defender, stood behind his chair.
When DeVine asked Taheri-Azar if he wanted to hire his own attorney or have one
appointed for him, he answered, "I am representing myself."
Taheri-Azar spoke softly and it was difficult to hear exactly what he said.
Woodall, who was standing near him during the first appearance, later said
Seahorn spoke to Taheri-azar as he was sitting in the defendant's chair. "She
whispered in his ear to stop talking, and he said he would decide when to stop
talking," Woodall said.
Although Taheri-Azar said he would represent himself, DeVine still appointed the
Public Defender's office to represent him "out of an abundance of caution," she
said.
DeVine told Taheri-Azar that his bond would remain at $5.5 million and that he
would remain in custody under a safekeeping order at Central Prison in Raleigh.
After speaking briefly in a backroom with two representatives of the Public
Defender's office, deputies escorted Taheri-Azar to a sheriff's car that was
waiting to transport him back to the prison.
As news reporters shouted questions at him about representing himself, Taheri-Azar replied, "Allah is my lawyer."