(19 Apr 2012) 1. Mid shot of Pele Rhino, former FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) member entering the court room
2. Close-up of Umar Patek, leading member of the al-Qaida-linked network Jemaah Islamiyah,sitting next to his lawyer
3. Various interiors of courtroom
4. Back shot of Pele Rhino giving testimony UPSOUND (English): "I arrived in Bali shortly after the bomb occurred."
5. Pan right from prosecutors to witnesses sitting on chairs
6. Back shot of Pele Rhino giving testimony UPSOUND (English): " I was able to see the damage that the bomb caused, the creator in front of Sari club, the damage in Paddy''s bar, cars thrown in the air on top of other cars. Although I am not a bomb expert I certainly saw the damages was extensive."
7. Mid of Umar Patek sitting next to his lawyers
8. Tilt up from people inside the court to Rhino testifying, UPSOUND (English): " The group that perpetrated the attack was Jemaah Islamiyah and many of the members that had already appeared before this court to include Amrozi, Mukhlas and now Mr. Patek."
9. Close up of Patek listening
10. Back shot of Pele Rhino giving testimony, UPSOUND (English): "Umar Patek''s name came up shortly after the bombing and a very famous sketch was drawn what he look like so his name surfaced as being somebody that was down in Bali, who help mixed the chemicals that were used in the bomb and that was known to everybody pretty quickly. But he eventually left Indonesia and could not be arrested."
11. Close-up of Patek
12. Wide of courtroom
STORYLINE
Two former FBI agents and members of the Australian Federal Police testified on Thursday in Jakarta in the trial of an Indonesian militant accused of helping to build the massive car bomb used in the 2002 Bali bombings.
Umar Patek, the 45-year-old leading member of the al-Qaida-linked network Jemaah Islamiyah, was arrested last year in Pakistan.
He is the last key suspect to be tried in the Bali bombings and faces a possible death penalty if found guilty of various terror-related and criminal charges.
On Thursday, Pele Rhino - a former FBI agent - described the extensive damage he witnessed shortly after the bombing.
The attack was Asia''s most deadly terror strike and killed 202 people, including 88 Australians and seven Americans.
Patek allegedly told Indonesian interrogators, after his capture and extradition, that he spent nearly a week with co-conspirators in a Bali safehouse, painstakingly assembling the huge car bomb using household items including a rice ladle, a grocer''s scale and plastic bags.
But he later denied the charges in court, saying he was present when the bombs were made but did not actually help build them.
He testified that he did not have the expertise to create such a massive explosive and that it was Malaysian bomb maker Azahari bin Husin, killed during a raid by anti-terrorism forces in 2005, who mixed almost all of the chemicals.
The three masterminds (Amrozi Bin Nurhasyim, Ali Imron and Muklas) of the Bali attack have already been tried and executed, and authorities have made strides in dismantling Jemaah Islamiyah, a movement aimed at creating a pan-Islamic state in Southeast Asia.
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