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Ankara: Ergenekon Suspects Attempt To Hide Evidence From Prosecutors

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  • Ankara: Ergenekon Suspects Attempt To Hide Evidence From Prosecutors

    ERGENEKON SUSPECTS ATTEMPT TO HIDE EVIDENCE FROM PROSECUTORS

    Today's Zaman
    12 August 2009, Wednesday

    An army officer arrested as part of the investigation into Ergenekon,
    a clandestine gang charged with many crimes including plotting to
    overthrow the government, smuggled dozens of documents that could
    be incriminating evidence outside his office days before he was
    apprehended, the prosecution has claimed based on phone conversations
    monitored by the police.

    The prosecution now says a senior lieutenant, Muhammed Sarýkaya,
    for whom a search and arrest warrant was issued by a court on Jan. 6,
    organized an operation to wipe out all evidence the investigators might
    find in his room located inside the Guvercinlik Gendarmerie Rangers
    Private Safety Operations Battalion Command facilities in Ankara. On
    Jan. 7, the police arrived at the premises with a search warrant
    issued by a court; however, the officers and the accompanying public
    prosecutor were kept waiting at the gate by the guards for a long time.

    Transcripts of phone conversations between the guards at the gate
    and Sarýkaya show that the officials immediately called the senior
    lieutenant, asking him to destroy military paperwork and other
    classified documents immediately, starting with any files that might
    be on his laptop.

    The first phone call made to Sarýkaya on that day is, however, not
    from the guards, but from another senior lieutenant, Noyan Pamukcu,
    who told him that a search warrant had been issued in his name and
    that he should meet with him immediately. This was at a time when
    Sarýkaya was waiting for a medical report required for him to be
    assigned to a post abroad.

    In a phone conversation that begins at 10:56 a.m. on Jan. 7, Pamukcu
    said: "Brother, rush to the guesthouse as fast as you can. I can't
    tell you now, this is more important than the report. I will send
    you a message. Leave the report alone, and get here as fast as you
    can. I'll see you outside."

    At 10:58, Pamukcu sent a message to Sarýkaya in which he said: "A
    judge has ordered a search of your room. Is there anything on your
    laptop? This is serious. Don't use your phone. Call me at 050054347xx
    using someone else's phone."

    At 11:08, another warning came from another friend, Ramazan Bulut,
    who called Sarýkaya and suggested he destroy every document on his
    laptop, or any other illegal or classified document, and leave the
    laptop in someone else's car if need be. Bulut said: "Don't ask me
    what's going on, OK? Go to your room, and things like your laptop or
    military publications or banned publications, go there, get those
    out and come back to the battalion. Get your laptop out, leave it
    in someone else's car and then get here as fast as you can. I'll see
    you when you get here."

    Bulut is also the officer who met the public prosecutor who arrived
    at the military facility to search Sarýkaya's room.

    Police records show that Sarýkaya, who was supposed to be at a
    hospital, was in his room during the search and that no documents
    had been seized by the police on his laptop or in his room during
    the search.

    Public prosecutor Mehmet Murat Yonder on Feb. 23, started a probe into
    Sarýkaya, Bulut and Pamukcu on charges of "destroying, obstructing
    or hiding evidence of a crime." Yonder later ruled the investigation
    outside his jurisdiction and referred the case to military prosecutors.

    Sarýkaya was arrested on Jan. 10 as part of the Ergenekon
    investigation. Bulut and Pamukcu continue to serve in their previous
    positions.

    Allegations against Sarýkaya Sarýkaya is accused in the third
    Ergenekon indictment of being the leader of death squads formed by the
    organization to assassinate important minority group leaders and other
    public figures, including the head of the Alevi-Bektaþi Federation,
    Ali Balkýz, and the spiritual leader of Turkey's Armenian community,
    Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan.

    In a document titled "The Intimidation Plan" found in the home of
    Ergenekon suspect Ýbrahim Þahin, who is accused of establishing
    death squads for Ergenekon using the military's resources, Sarýkaya
    is listed as the leader of cell number four.
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