As it turned out, Davis’s surrender was not an issue. He surrendered peaceably as police closed in on him.
Cohen joined attorneys Lynn Stewart and William Kunstler in defending Davis, who had become a folk hero among some black New Yorkers. He was acquitted of the most serious charges, including attempted murder, but was subsequently convicted of murdering a drug dealer. He was killed in a prison fight in 2008.
In 2010 Stewart was convicted of passing confidential information to a designated foreign terrorist organization from one of her clients, the blind Egyptian Sheik Abdel-Rahman, ringleader of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Now disbarred as an attorney, she was freed on a “compassionate release” in Januray. Cohen maintains that, like him, she was targeted by the government.
His first prominent Mideast client was Mousa Abu Marzook — of the political wing of Hamas and whom Cohen represented from 1997-99. “He was busted at Kennedy Airport on a federal immigration violation, although he had lived in the U.S. for 14 years.”
Cohen says Israel requested his arrest after a series of suicide bombings and demanded his extradition.
“I represented him for 22 months. Eventually, I negotiated a settlement whereby he gave up a lawful claim of residency in the U.S.. He was transported to Jordan where he lived for five years, then relocated to Damascus. He is now in Egypt. I have seen him two to three times a year for 15 years.”
Cohen says he has also represented Hezbollah, which the U.S. also designated a terrorist organization, following the marine barracks bombing in Lebanon in the early 1980s. “I was asked to give a legal opinion concerning al-Manar, a television station they run, after the U.S., designated that a foreign terrorist organization.”
While in Beirut at the beginning of the Syrian civil war, Cohen said he was asked for advice by the Syrian government. He says he ended up at a government palace outside Damascus, meeting with a female Syrian lawyer who was an advisor to Bashar Assad.
“She asked my opinion on the unfolding events in Syria. I spent two hours with her, saying they still had time to build a national consensus, that the government had to open up and offer opportunities to people. They didn’t take my advice. I never heard from her again.”
Cohen says he also developed contacts with the Iranian government. “Political people, intelligence people, military people, some of which was documented in the Abu Gaith trial. Iran and the U.S. were exchanging prisoners. The U.S. turned over people from revolutionary groups the Iranians wanted. The Iranians turned over at least 11 Al Qaeda activists. Seven ended up in Guantanamo, four disappeared.”
He says he saved the life of a CIA contract agent in Gaza, who was escorted to the border and released to Israel. He says the agent contacted him five years ago to thank him. “I received a phone call. ‘Is this Stanley Cohen? You have no idea who this is, I never got a chance to thank you for something in Gaza in 1997.’ Then he hung up.”
Then, there was Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter who was beheaded by Al Qaeda terrorists in Pakistan. “A client of mine, who was in trouble with the government, received a tape of the assassination. I was involved in negotiations in which the tape was given to the feds. There was a quid pro quo. It ended with my client’s being allowed to leave the country on the eve of his indictment.”
Cohen’s impending prison term doesn’t seem to faze him. Two weeks ago he was in Switzerland, speaking to the Swiss Islamic Association on “Nachba” — what Arabs call the “catastrophe” of the founding of Israel.
“I’m not afraid of prison. I don’t care about money, only about fighting the fascist state. I refuse to go silently. I am a role model for the next generation. I am 63, I have 15, 20 years of fight left. An International public outcry is developing, including Amnesty International, in South Africa, Paris, Istanbul. I am getting support from people all over the world.”