christian louboutin wedges clearance Times Square Suspect Makes Court Appearance – NPR_10201 Posted by gameettydesign under Game May 18, 2010 A Pakistani-American man accused of driving a homemade car bomb into Times Square appeared in a court Tuesday for the first time since his arrest two weeks ago. Faisal Shahzad appeared before U.S. Magistrate James C. Francis IV to address five felony charges related to the May 1 botched bombing. He was led out of court after a 10-minute appearance. Assistant public defender Julia Gatto identified herself as Shahzad’s attorney at the appearance. Assistant U.S. Attorney Randall Jackson asked that Shahzad be detained without bail. Gatto agreed,christian louboutin wedges clearance, saying she was not prepared to argue for bail. Gatto asked during the hearing if Shahzad could be provided with halal meals in custody. She did not <a href="http://www.ghdstraightenerscheapest.com/ghd-iv-black-styler-p-5738.html"><strong>best straighteners</strong></a> comment afterward. Shahzad did not enter a plea to the charges. But he did say “yes” when asked to confirm the affidavit. The 30-year-old Shahzad has been held at an undisclosed location since his May 3 arrest on charges he abandoned a bomb-laden SUV in Times Square. Authorities say he has voluntarily waived his rights to an initial court appearance while he cooperates. A cousin of his father calls his arrest “a conspiracy.” Shahzad, of Bridgeport, Conn.,jordan heels in stores, was arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport on charges he drove an SUV rigged with a homemade car bomb into Times Square. An initial appearance in court typically happens within a day or two of a suspect’s arrest. The U.S. attorney’s office said Shahzad is charged with attempted use of weapons of mass destruction and attempting acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries,christian <a href="http://www.ghdstraightenerscheapest.com/ghd-iv-pink-styler-p-5742.html"><strong>uk ghd straighteners</strong></a> louboutin nitoinimoi bandage ankle boots red sale, each carrying a maximum life term. He’s charged with using a destructive device in an attempted violent crime, punishable by up to 30 years in prison; transporting and receiving explosives, punishable by up to 10 years; and attempting to damage and destroy property with fire and explosives, punishable by up to five years. New York attorney Ron Kuby, in a letter to the chief U.S. <a href="http://www.ghdforsalediscount.com/2010-new-ghd-butterfly-pink-p-5733.html"><strong>ghd straighteners uk</strong></a> District Court judge in Manhattan, accused authorities of violating Shahzad’s rights by “squeezing him for information” in secret. Kuby doesn’t represent Shahzad. But in the letter, he argued that federal authorities — by holding Shahzad for “an unprecedented third week of captivity” — were violating criminal procedures requiring suspects to be promptly presented in court. “A suspect buried in the bowels of a Manhattan version of Guantanamo … is essentially without power to compel the government to comply” with the procedures, he wrote. Without an appearance, “there is no reason to think the waiver is voluntary,” Kuby wrote. RELATED:
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