Copyright 1995 The Atlanta Constitution
The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
March 29, 1995, Wednesday,
ALL EDITIONS
SECTION: NATIONAL NEWS,
Pg. 2C
HEADLINE: Witness says he lied at mail Bomb trial
BYLINE: Bill Rankin; STAFF WRITER
BODY:
Against his attorney's advice, a Florida boatmaker Tuesday testified that he
lied repeatedly as a government witness during the 1991 trial in which Walter
Leroy Moody was convicted of mailing pipe
bombs that killed a federal judge and a civil rights lawyer.
Ted Banks, of Titusville, Fla., said he was coerced and threatened by federal
agents and prosecutors into making false statements during the trial.
But he admitted under cross examination Tuesday that he had lied for Moody on
numerous occasions in other legal proceedings.
In 1991, Moody was convicted of mailing the pipe
bombs that killed Judge
Robert Vance of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Savannah lawyer Robert Robinson
in December 1989.
Banks' testimony consumed a bizarre day of legal maneuvering that began with
Moody's request that the hearing on his motion for a new trial be postponed. He
said he is devoting all of his time to representing himself in Alabama where he
faces a death penalty trial for Vance's slaying.
But U.S. District Judge Thomas Flannery of Washington, D.C., who is hearing the
case because all Southern judges have recused themselves, denied Moody's
request.
When instructed to proceed, Moody said
"I don't propose to do anything."
Flannery then called on Banks as a
"court's witness," saying his testimony was needed
"in the interest of justice."
Banks, 68,
a convicted counterfeiter and admitted con man, walked into court holding a
rumpled red cap and wearing a faded shirt that would not stay tucked into his
blue jeans.
In 1991, Banks testified that he welded three six-inch pipes for Moody, that he
had a friend buy some gunpowder for Moody and that he suspected the pipes were
for
bombs.
But Banks testified Tuesday that none of this was true.
"Anything pertaining to the pipes I made Roy and the
bombs. . . . I never talked to him about it," Banks said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney John Malcolm noted that part of Banks' plea agreement
called for him to testify truthfully, and Flannery noted that Banks's new
disclosures are tantamount to an admission of perjury.
Banks' court-appointed lawyer, John Goger, repeatedly asked Flannery to cut off
Banks's testimony,
but to no avail.
"This is one of the worst days of my life," he said while walking out of the courtroom.
"This is not what I wanted to see happen."