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Meskini had first entered the U.S. as a stowaway in 1994 on a boat to Boston. He later moved to Brooklyn, where he made tens of thousands of dollars in bank fraud and credit card schemes. It was a skill he once testified he learned when he stole checks from superiors while an officer in the Algerian Army in 1990-91. Roughton said Meskini seemed to be living clean, a rarity in the 14-unit building he managed in Buckhead, Ga., where she estimated only three tenants did not participate in drugs or prostitution. She said eight women there were prostitutes and Meskini helped some of them, too. "We woke up getting high. We went to sleep getting high. The way we made money was having gentlemen come and see you," he said. She said she and other prostitutes had occasionally given Meskini oral sex but she did not say he ever demanded it. She said he lived purely enough that she was shocked once when she saw Meskini with a handgun. She said she cared enough about him that she went to work asking associates if they could locate an AK-47 when Meskini asked for it. She said he later said he found one on his own. Earlier this year, the owner of the apartment complex where Meskini had worked told Roughton that Meskini was a terrorist. "I almost spit in his face for disrespecting Ghani. ... I didn't believe it. No way in hell," she said, though she had testified that Meskini once said he had served time for running a gambling operation. The testimony left U.S. District Judge John F. Keenan wondering why she was testifying if she had such strong feelings for Meskini. "Because it is the truth," she said. And she added: "Because if I had gotten Ghani that AK and Ghani had used it and hurt innocent lives, I wouldn't want that on my conscience, to have knowingly helped a man who would have taken innocent lives." "Are you mad at Ghani for any reason?" the judge asked her. "No," she answered. "As weird as it is to say, no, I am not." "As far as you are concerned, you still like him?" Keenan asked. "Yes, as crazy as that is, I know," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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