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Padilla pleads not guilty to terrorism allegations

Bail is denied; risk of flight cited

MIAMI -- Jose Padilla, a US citizen who was held for more than three years as an enemy combatant, pleaded not guilty yesterday to criminal charges alleging he was part of a secret network that supported Muslim terrorists.

The plea, followed by a judge's denial of bail for Padilla, came one week after he was transferred from military to civilian custody. His trial was set for Sept. 9.

''Absolutely not guilty," said Michael Caruso, one of Padilla's lawyers. Padilla did not speak during the hearing, other than to confirm the pronunciation of his name.

In denying bail, US Magistrate Judge Barry Garber sided with prosecutors who said Padilla probably would flee and that the charges, including allegations that he attended an Al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, showed he was dangerous.

''How much more dangerous can someone be than someone who attended a terrorist training camp?" prosecutor Stephanie Pell said.

Padilla, 35, was arrested at Chicago's O'Hare Airport in May 2002 and held at a military brig without criminal charges, initially on suspicion of plotting to detonate a dirty bomb, one containing radioactive material, inside the United States. His case raised questions about whether US citizens detained on American soil can be held without trial in the name of the war on terrorism.

Before the Supreme Court could decide whether to take up Padilla's case, the government presented the case to a civilian grand jury, which indicted him in November. The charges do not involve the bomb allegations or claims that he plotted to blow up apartment buildings in the United States.

Last week, the high court approved Padilla's transfer to civilian custody in Miami, overruling a lower court that suggested the administration changed tactics to avert a Supreme Court ruling. The justices were scheduled to meet today to discuss whether to take up the case, according to attorneys on both sides.

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