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Widow of Orlando nightclub gunman acquitted

Published:Friday | March 30, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Pulse nightclub owner Barbara Poma (centre), who was present for the verdict, leaves the courthouse with a group of family members of Pulse victims after Noor Salman was acquitted yesterday in Orlando, Forida.

The widow of the gunman who slaughtered 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, was acquitted yesterday of helping to plot the attack and lying to the FBI afterward - a rare and stinging defeat for the US government in a terrorism case.

Noor Salman, 31, sobbed upon hearing the jury's verdict of not guilty of obstruction and providing material support to a terrorist organisation, charges that could have brought a life sentence. Her family gasped each time the words "not guilty" were pronounced.

On the other side of the Orlando courtroom, the families of the victims of the June 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting sat stone-faced and silent.

Within hours, Salman was released from jail and got into a waiting car without answering questions.

"Noor is so grateful. Her belief in the process was shown. She wants to get back to her son," her attorney Linda Moreno said. Family spokeswoman Susan Clary said Salman's family "always thought that Noor was the first victim" of her husband, Omar Mateen.

The verdict reverberated through Orlando and legal circles beyond.

 

IMPRESSIVE WIN

 

"The government rarely, rarely loses these kinds of cases. It's got every single factor on its side," said David Oscar Markus, a Miami attorney who routinely tries federal cases. "It's a pretty impressive win for the defence and a devastating loss for the government."

Mateen, the American-born son of Afghan immigrants, was killed by police after opening fire in the name of the Islamic State group.

Relying heavily on an alleged confession from Salman, federal prosecutors charged that she and Mateen had scouted out potential targets together - including Disney World's shopping and entertainment complex - and that she gave him the "green light to commit terrorism".

AP