One of the five defendants set to stand trial in May on charges of supporting ISIL has been denied a request to switch attorneys, after the presiding federal judge raised questions about the lawyer's track record and intentions.
Hamza Ahmed, whose charges include conspiracy to murder abroad and providing material support to a terror group, asked U.S. District Judge Michael Davis last week for permission to substitute attorney Mitchell Robinson for his current lawyer, JaneAnne Murray. In a written opinion this week, Davis said the swap would "delay the trial or other progress of the case."
Davis noted that Robinson has been reprimanded by the Minnesota Supreme Court and did not disclose it to Ahmed or his family.
And in a drug case in Texas, Davis concluded, Robinson's client served nine years in federal prison before a judge granted a new trial, citing Robinson's lack of preparation and failure to present exculpatory evidence. A judge wound up vacating the client's sentence.
At a hearing Friday in Minneapolis, Davis questioned Ahmed about his reasons and queried Robinson about his preparation for the terror-recruitment trial.
Ahmed told Davis that he had no irreconcilable conflicts or breakdown of communications with Murray, his lawyer since February 2015.
When asked by Davis if he had reviewed the discovery in the case — which includes roughly 28,000 pages of documents and more than 700 video files — Robinson only said "he believed the facts were straightforward and that he didn't see it as an extraordinarily complicated case."
Davis questioned whether Robinson even planned to try Ahmed's case, citing a retainer agreement that did not include trial fees.