LOS
ANGELES: A California man linked to an anti-Islam film that stoked
violent protests in the Muslim world denied on Wednesday he had violated
his probation on a fraud conviction, and was sent back to jail until
his case can be heard on its merits.
The Egyptian-born man,
who has been known publicly as Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, denied in court
committing eight probation violations, including lying to officials
over the scope his role in the film and using aliases.
A crudely
made 13-minute video attributed to the man, who appeared in court on
Wednesday under the name Mark Basseley Youssef, was filmed in California
and circulated online under several titles including "Innocence of
Muslims."
It sparked a torrent of anti-American unrest in Arab and
Muslim countries last month. The violence coincided with a separate
attack on U.S. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi that killed four
Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.
As outrage against the film mounted, U.S. authorities said they were not investigating the film itself.
But
prosecutors have said they could seek to have Youssef, 55, sent back to
prison for up to two years if he is found to have violated his
probation on a bank fraud conviction.
Youssef, who was escorted to
court by five U.S. Marshals, was ordered held without bail last month
and has been staying at a high-rise federal jail in downtown Los
Angeles.
Under the terms of his release from prison last year,
Youssef was barred from using aliases without the permission of a
probation officer and restricted from accessing the Internet. An
evidentiary hearing in his probation case was set for November 9.
"It
will be interesting to see what the judge does and what the reaction is
around the world," said Stan Goldman, a Loyola Law School professor.
Goldman
said attorneys for Youssef could argue the terms of his 2011 release
from prison in the bank fraud case did not apply directly to his recent
activities, in which people associated with the film have said he
misrepresented himself.
"It's not exactly like an armed robber on
probation, getting caught with an automatic weapon in his possession.
It's a little more technical," Goldman said.
The defendant, who
had worked in the gas station industry and most recently lived in a
suburb of Los Angeles, declared at the outset of his last hearing that
he had changed his name to Mark Basseley Youssef in 2002.
The
probation issues were the latest of Youssef's legal woes. An actress who
says she was duped into appearing in the anti-Islam film has sued him
over the matter, identifying him as the film's producer. Cindy Lee
Garcia also named YouTube and its parent company Google Inc as
defendants in the case.
Google has refused to remove the film from
YouTube, despite pressure from the White House and others to take it
down, though the company has blocked the trailer in Egypt, Libya and
other Muslim countries |
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