In 2003, Motassadeq, a 31-year-old Moroccan, was convicted of 3,000 counts of accessory to murder and a German court sentenced him to 15 years. But the country's supreme court quashed the conviction last year, ruling that he was unfairly denied key evidence from al-Qa'ida suspects in the United States which suggested he was not aware of the 9/11 plot. Yesterday, judges concluded there was no proof he knew about the plot.
Prosecutors said Motassadeq provided key assistance to the Hamburg cell of 9/11 plotters headed by the suicide hijacker, Mohamed Atta. He signed Atta's will and managed the bank account of another hijacker.
Motassadeq had admitted attending an al-Qa'ida training camp in Afghanistan in 2000.
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