Jurors in trial of Salman Rushdie's attacker likely won't hear about his
motive
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[October 05, 2024]
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
MAYVILLE, N.Y. (AP) —
Jurors picked for the trial of a man who severely injured author Salman
Rushdie in a knife attack likely won’t hear about the fatwa that
authorities have said motivated him to act, a prosecutor said Friday.
“We're not going there,” District Attorney Jason Schmidt said during a
conference in preparation for the Oct. 15 start of Hadi Matar's trial in
Chautauqua County Court. Schmidt said raising a motive was unnecessary,
given that the attack was witnessed and recorded by a live audience who
had gathered to hear Rushdie speak.
Potential jurors will nevertheless face questions meant to root out
implicit bias because Matar, of Fairview, New Jersey, is the son of
Lebanese immigrants and practices Islam, Judge David Foley said. He said
it would be foolish to assume potential jurors had not heard about the
fatwa through media coverage of the case.
Matar, 26, is charged with attempted murder for stabbing Rushdie, 77,
more than a dozen times, blinding him in one eye, as he took the stage
at a literary conference at the Chautauqua Institution in August 2022.
A separate federal indictment charges him with terrorism, alleging Matar
was attempting to carry out a fatwa, a call for Rushdie's death, first
issued in 1989.
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Had Matar, charged with attempted murder for stabbing author Salman
Rushdie more than a dozen times, is escorted into the courtroom for
a hearing in Chautauqua County Court, Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, in
Mayville, N.Y. (AP Photo/Carolyn Thompson)
Defense attorney Nathaniel Barone
sought assurances that jurors in the state trial would be properly
vetted, fearing the current global unrest would influence their
feelings toward Matar, who he said faced racism growing up.
“We're concerned there may be prejudicial feelings in the
community,” said Barone, who also has sought a change of venue out
of Chautauqua County. The request is pending before an appellate
court.
Rushdie spent years in hiding after the Ayatollah Khomeini issued
the fatwa over his novel “The Satanic Verses,” which some Muslims
consider blasphemous. Rushdie slowly began to reemerge into public
life in the late 1990s, and he has traveled freely over the past two
decades.
The author, who detailed the attack and his recovery in a memoir, is
expected to testify early in Matar's trial.
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