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Thread: Key 9/11 Suspect To Be Tried In New York

  1. #161
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    9/11 defense attorneys denounce Guantanamo court system as 'rigged,' 'unjust'

    http://www.kansascity.com/2012/05/06...-denounce.html

    By Carol Rosenberg
    Miami Herald

    GUANTANAMO BAY NAVY BASE, Cuba -- The five men accused of plotting the Sept. 11 attacks used their weekend war court appearances to stage “peaceful resistance to an unjust system” being used for political reasons, defense lawyers said Sunday — a day after the 9/11accused turned the judge’s plans to hold a simple arraignment into a 13-hour marathon of prayer and protest.

    “The system is a rigged game to prevent us from doing our jobs,” argued criminal defense attorney David Nevin, accusing the prison camp commander of making it impossible to learn from alleged mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed how the CIA waterboarded him 183 times and used other since-outlawed techniques to break him.

    Mohammed, his nephew and three other men allegedly trained, advised and financed the 19 hijackers who crashed airliners into the World Trade Center, Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field, killing 2,976 people. All could get the death penalty, if convicted.

    “The government wants to kill Mr. Mohammed,” Nevin said, “to extinguish the last eyewitness to his torture.”

    Nevin other attorneys met with the media Sunday morning to discuss the proceedings that lasted until 10:30 p.m. Saturday. “We’re here for a political reason,” said Nevin, who also referred to Attorney General Eric Holder’s plan to take the case to New York until Congress overruled him.

    But the Pentagon’s chief prosecutor predicted no speedy resolution to the trial, due to start a year from now at the soonest. “We’ve got to do this methodically and patiently. It’s going to take time,” said Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, deflecting a reporter’s question on whether the Pentagon was preparing an execution site at this remote outpost in the Caribbean.

    The military commissions can cope with “deplorable and disappointing” episodes of torture or cruel treatment, Martins said. But he said he disagreed with critics of the prosecution that “some instance of mistreatment or torture pollutes everything in the case.”

    “The remedy is not to dismiss all charges. Everything is polluted and tainted? Everybody goes free? That’s not justice,” he said. “We have to submit that to our courts methodically.”

    During Saturday’s hearing, however, both the accused and their attorneys did their best to frustrate the methodology that the judge had scripted.

    Each of the accused steadfastly refused to answer basic questions posed to them by Army Col. James L. Pohl, the war court’s chief judge, on whether they accepted their Pentagon-appointed attorneys. Instead, they periodically disrupted the proceedings with demonstrations of Muslim prayer and protests of prison conditions.

    Ramzi bin al Shibh, 40, a Yemeni who allegedly organized a cell of 9/11 hijackers in Germany, likened the Guantánamo detention center to that of the brutal regime of Moammar Gadhafi in Libya. Fellow Yemeni Walid bin Attash, 33, who allegedly trained some hijackers in hand-to-hand combat, took off his shirt to try to display scars his lawyer said resulted from abuse by the guards at Guantánamo. The judge barked at him to put it back on.

    “These men have endured years of inhumane treatment and torture” that will “infect every aspect of this military commission tribunal,” attorney James Connell III warned Sunday morning. On Saturday, he said, “The accused participated in peaceful resistance to an unjust system.”

    Connell’s client, Pakistani Ammar al Baluchi, affected an air of disinterest, leafing through a magazine. During a recess, he handed it to Saudi co-defendant Mustafa al Hawsawi, 43, who like Baluchi is accused of wiring money to the hijackers.

    Criticism didn’t come from only the defense attorneys. Retired Rear Adm. Donald Guter, the Navy’s top lawyer on Sept. 11, 2001, declared Sunday, “I am convinced more than ever that this belongs in federal court.” He came to Guantánamo to watch the proceedings for Human Rights First, as a critic of commissions.

    It wasn’t just the 13-hour proceeding that ended with a reading of the charges that discomfited critics but also the tug-of-war over fundamental issues — from prison camp conditions to restrictions on communications between the accused and their defenders. Hawsawi’s attorney, Navy Cmdr. Walter Ruiz, struggled throughout the arraignment to get the judge to hear arguments on why the defense is hobbled by limited resources, and why the case should be dismissed as improper.

    Pohl said he’d address those issues at the next hearing June 12-15. He stuck to a script of approving the legal teams, then taking questions from the defense teams about his background and potential conflicts at trials. The defense lawyers postponed until later whether they would challenge the judge’s ability to preside at the first capital trials of his career.

    Pohl sought to waive the reading of the 87-page charge sheet, but Bin Attash asked for them it be read, a single defendant’s prerogative, extending the arraignment into the night.

    “The participants were raced up to the coliseum for the pleasure of the masters,” Ruiz told reporters bitterly.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  2. #162
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    9/11 families angered over behaviour of alleged plotters at Guantánamo hearing
    Arraignment marked by near-farcical defiance sets stage for lengthy trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four co-defendents

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012...?newsfeed=true

    Ed Pilkington in New York
    guardian.co.uk, Sunday 6 May 2012 13.50 EDT

    Family members of those killed in the 9/11 attacks have expressed anger over displays of defiance shown by the alleged plotters during an arraignment hearing at Guantánamo Bay.

    The hearing, which was expected to last two hours, stretched to 13 hours as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his four co-defendants refused to accept the start of trial proceedings in a controversial "military commission" inside the US naval base in Cuba.

    The hearing was marked by near-farcical scenes in which the defendants prayed, read the Economist, talked among each other and ignored the judicial events around them.

    Eddie Bracken travelled from Staten Island in New York to Guantánamo, having won, by lottery, one of six places set aside for 9/11 family members at the arraignment hearing. His sister Lucy Fishman died in the Twin Towers in New York.

    "I felt very angry," he said, referring to the silence maintained by the five accused through most of Saturday. "They are complaining [about the trial] but our families can't complain no more. They took my sister's life. I wouldn't care if they were on a bed of nails, but it's our justice system and they have rights."

    Bracken said that he had been particularly aggrieved when some of the defendants ignored the court proceedings and began talking among each other. "That wasn't right. My sister who was lost can't converse with anybody.

    "When they get put to death or locked down for the rest of their lives they shouldn't be allowed to converse with anybody ever – solitary life forever."

    Family members watched Mohammed, who has not been seen in public for about three years, from behind a thick glass wall. The alleged architect of 9/11 sat silently through most of the hearing stroking his henna-dyed beard, wearing a white turban and tunic. Walid bin Attash, a Yemeni accused of having researched flight simulators for the 9/11 hijackers, refused even to attend the hearing and was brought into it against his will strapped into a restraint chair.

    "They're engaging in jihad in a courtroom," said Debra Burlingame, who watched the arraignment as it was shown by live feed in a special facility in Brooklyn. Burlingame's brother, Charles, was pilot of the plane flown into the Pentagon.

    Family members said that listening to the details of 9/11 reinvoked by the hearing brought back painful memories. "It brought back all the memories of that day," Bracken said.

    The arraignment underlined what observers of the 9/11 prosecutions have long suspected – that this is going to be a very drawn out and contentious affair. The military judge at the proceedings – Army Colonel James Pohl – indicated that it would be at least a year before the trial began.

    Once it does get going, it might then drag on for several years. Army Brig Gen Mark Martins told reporters on Sunday that with the defence having filed hundreds of motions challenging the specifics of the military commissions there would be no speedy end.

    "I am getting ready for hundreds of motions because we want them to shoot everything they can shoot at us," he said.

    The idea of subjecting the alleged mastermind of 9/11, Mohammed, to military justice has been hotly disputed from the start. The Obama administration had preferred to try him under civilian law, but backed off when the idea of holding a trial in New York close to Ground Zero generated massive local opposition.

    Martins tried to justify the military trial system, insisting it would extend to the five defendants their full legal rights. "We are giving them every fairness as a matter of statute and a matter of fairness."

    He added that the process would balance a fair trial with the need for public access to the proceedings and defence of national security. "I believe transparency is absolutely critical in this issue because we have a lot of contentious issues and I want as many people as possible to understand them," Martins said.

    One of the most contentious of those issues is torture. Defence lawyers at the arraignment attempted to raise the question but were slapped down by Pohl who said: "We'll get to it when I said we'll get to it".

    It is known that Mohammed alone was subjected to simulated drowning, or waterboarding, 183 times.

    Speaking after the arraignment, defence lawyer James Connell said the behaviour of the five defendants had amounted to "peaceful resistance to an unjust system". He said the scenes in the courtroom had demonstrated "that this will be a long hard-fought but peaceful struggle against secrecy, torture and the misguided institution of the military commissions".

    In addition to Mohammed and Bin Attash, the defendants include Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali and Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  3. #163
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    U.S. begins prosecution of 9/11 suspects; tentative trial date set for next year

    http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/201..._of_911_s.html

    Published: Monday, May 07, 2012, 9:06 AM Updated: Monday, May 07, 2012, 9:06 AM

    GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba — The U.S. has finally started the prosecution of five Guantanamo Bay prisoners charged in the Sept. 11 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, but the trial won't be starting anytime soon, and both sides said Sunday that the case could continue for years.

    Defense lawyer James Connell said a tentative trial date of May 2013 is a "placeholder" until a true date can be set for the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-described mastermind of the attacks, and his co-defendants.

    "It's going to take time," said the chief prosecutor, Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, who said he expects to battle a barrage of defense motions before the case goes to trial.

    "I am getting ready for hundreds of motions because we want them to shoot everything they can shoot at us," he said.

    Saturday's arraignment lasted 13 hours, including meal and prayer breaks, as the accused appeared to make a concerted effort to stall the initial hearing, which didn't end until almost 11 p.m.

    "Everyone is frustrated by the delay," Martins said on Sunday. He noted that the civilian trial of convicted Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui took four years, and he pleaded guilty in 2006 before being sentenced to life in prison.

    On Saturday, Mohammed and his co-defendants refused to respond to the judge or use the court's translation system and one of the men demanded a lengthy reading of the charges. Connell called the tactics "peaceful resistance to an unjust system."

    The arraignment, Connell said, "demonstrates that this will be a long, hard-fought but peaceful struggle against secrecy, torture and the misguided institution of the military commissions."

    The defendants' actions outraged relatives of the victims.

    "They're engaging in jihad in a courtroom," said Debra Burlingame, whose brother, Charles, was the pilot of the plane that flew into the Pentagon. She watched the proceeding from Brooklyn on one of the closed-circuit video feeds around the United States.

    A handful of those who lost family members in the attacks were selected by a lottery and flown to watch the proceedings at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, where Mohammed and his co-defendants put off their pleas until a later date.

    They face 2,976 counts of murder and terrorism in the 2001 attacks that sent hijacked jetliners into New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The charges carry the death penalty.

    The detainees' lawyers spent hours questioning the judge, Army Col. James Pohl, about his qualifications to hear the case and suggested their clients were being mistreated at the hearing, in a strategy that could pave the way for future appeals. Mohammed was subjected to a strip search and "inflammatory and unnecessary" treatment before court, said his attorney, David Nevin.

    It was the defendants' first appearance in more than three years after stalled efforts to try them for the terror attacks.
    911-trial-judge.jpgJanet Hamlin/Miami Herald/MCTArmy Col. James Pohl, the military commission judge overseeing the case against five accused co-conspirators in the 9/11 terrorist, appears in this courtroom sketch in a courtroom at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Saturday, May 5, 2012.

    The Obama administration renewed plans to try the men at Guantanamo Bay after a bid to try the men in New York City blocks from the trade center site hit political opposition. Officials adopted new rules with Congress that forbade testimony obtained through torture or cruel treatment, and they now say that defendants could be tried as fairly here as in a civilian court.

    Nevin said it would be impossible to present testimony against his client that wasn't corrupted by treatment that he says amounted torture. "It's not possible to untaint the evidence any more than it is to unring a bell."

    Eddie Bracken of Staten Island, New York, was one of the victims' relatives allowed to attend the hearing, and said it was important to him to see the people accused of killing his sister, Lucy Fishman, a Brooklyn mother of two who worked in the World Trade Center.

    He said he came away impressed by the military justice system, with defense lawyers putting up an aggressive defense.

    "If they had done this in another country it would have been a different story," Bracken said Sunday. "But this is America."

    Human rights groups and defense lawyers say the secrecy of Guantanamo and the military tribunals will make it impossible for the defense. They argued the U.S. kept the case out of civilian court to prevent disclosure of the treatment of prisoners like Mohammed, who was waterboarded 183 times.

    Attorney General Eric Holder announced in 2009 that Mohammed and his co-defendants would be tried blocks from the site of the destroyed trade center in downtown Manhattan, but the plan was shelved after New York officials cited huge costs to secure the neighborhood and family opposition to trying the suspects in the U.S.

    Congress then blocked the transfer of any prisoners from Guantanamo to the U.S., forcing the Obama administration to refile the charges under a reformed military commission system.

    Mohammed, a Pakistani citizen who grew up in Kuwait and attended college in Greensboro, North Carolina, has admitted to military authorities that he was responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks "from A to Z," as well as about 30 other plots, and that he personally killed Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Mohammed was captured in 2003 in Pakistan.

    Ramzi Binalshibh was allegedly chosen to be a hijacker but couldn't get a U.S. visa and ended up providing assistance such as finding flight schools. Walid bin Attash, also from Yemen, allegedly ran an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan and researched flight simulators and timetables. Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi is a Saudi accused of helping the hijackers with money, Western clothing, traveler's checks and credit cards. Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, a Pakistani national and nephew of Mohammed, allegedly provided money to the hijackers.

    During the failed first effort to prosecute the men at the base in Cuba, Mohammed mocked the tribunal and said he and his co-defendants would plead guilty and welcome execution. The lawyers' statements indicate that plan has changed.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  4. #164
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    9/11 defense team says Guantanamo tribunal is unjust
    Civilian lawyers argue that the military system is rigged to put Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and his four codefendants to death. A prosecutor defends the process.

    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...tional+News%29

    By Richard A. Serrano, Washington Bureau
    May 6, 2012, 8:22 p.m.

    U.S. NAVAL BASE GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba — The defense team for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, now formally charged with capital murder in connection with the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, on Sunday angrily called the military commission legal process a political "regime" set up to put him and his four accused collaborators to death.

    David Nevin, Mohammed's civilian attorney, said new rules imposed under the Obama administration barred the lawyers from discussing with their clients whether they were mistreated by U.S. authorities and, in the case of Mohammed, tortured after their arrests eight years ago.

    "We are operating under a regime here," Nevin said. "We are forbidden from talking to our clients about very important matters.

    "And now the government wants to kill Mr. Mohammed. They want to extinguish the last eyewitness so he can never talk about his torture. They want the political cover so he'll be convicted and executed."

    According to CIA accounts and other documents, Mohammed was subjected to waterboarding 183 times at a classified CIA "black site" before he was moved to the prison at Guantanamo Bay.

    On Saturday, he and four Sept. 11 codefendants were formally arraigned on conspiracy, terrorism and murder charges. They deferred entering pleas of guilt or innocence, with the government planning to ultimately seek five death sentences. The trial is tentatively set to begin in May 2013.

    Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, the chief prosecutor, said Sunday that the public should remember Sept. 11, 2001, and what happened that morning when nearly 3,000 people died at New York's World Trade Center, the Pentagon outside Washington and a field in western Pennsylvania.

    "The enemy force was sophisticated, patient, disciplined and lethal," he said.

    But Martins also vigorously defended the military tribunal process, saying it was fair to both sides.

    "However long the journey — and the arraignment was only the start of a legal process that could take many months — the United States is committed to gaining accountability for those who attacked and killed innocent people," he said.

    Martins said defense lawyers could talk to their clients but could not show them classified documents that disclosed harsh treatment. Otherwise, he said, "they can talk to their clients about anything."

    He added that even if there was some form of torture, it should not "pollute" the entire case.

    "The remedy is not to just dismiss all the charges," he said. "It does not mean that everybody goes free, that everybody is free of accountability just because somebody else did something wrong. That's not good."

    Rather, he said, it is important for the case to proceed and the public to decide its fairness.

    "This will be in the highest traditions of our country," Martins said. "It's important that people realize that this will be done methodically and patiently. Justice in every society is methodical, determined and patient."

    On the accusation that prosecutors are purposely seeking the death penalty, Martins said their goal was simply to submit the case to a jury of 12U.S. militaryservice members.

    "That's what we want," he said. "That's justice, I believe. It will be a real jury, and we will trust this thing with them. These people will be impartial, and that's what's going to happen.

    "This death penalty stuff is premature. We are trying to put this through the process."

    Martins also defended women on his prosecution team who he said were dressed appropriately at the arraignment Saturday. He was responding to complaints from Cheryl Bormann, a Chicago defense attorney for Walid bin Attash who wore a long black abaya to court.

    On Sunday, she said her client was offended by women who did not dress in conservative Islamic attire, feeling that it caused him to sin. "It is distracting to him to see a woman who has anything bare other than her face," she said.

    She added that she had met with her client a dozen times and always dressed respectfully. "He is that conservative," she said.

    James Connell, civilian attorney for Ammar al Baluchi, also known as Ali Abdul Aziz Ali, noted that the five defendants coordinated a silent protest at the arraignment, refusing to answer the judge's questions. Except for one short outburst, their behavior was sharply different from their last public hearing four years ago, when they shouted that they hoped their executions would win them martyrdom.

    "The accused participated in peaceful resistance to an unjust system," Connell said of their silent, defiant behavior Saturday. "These men have endured years of inhumane treatment and torture. This treatment has had serious long-term effects and will ultimately infect every aspect of this military commission tribunal."

    He said issues of torture and cruel treatment should be litigated before the case went forward. "These proceedings may turn out to be the only public examination of the torture years," he said.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  5. #165
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    The Ten Strangest Things about the 9/11 Arraignment

    http://www.newyorker.com/online/blog...html?mbid=gnep

    Posted by Amy Davidson
    5/6/2012

    “Why is this so hard?” Colonel James Pohl, the judge presiding over the military prosecution of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other 9/11 defendants, said at their arraignment yesterday. At that point, it was already well into the hearing, which would careen on for more than thirteen hours, including breaks for lunch and prayer and shouting. The actual arraignment began about nine hours in; the defendants deferred entering a plea, and the next hearing was set for June 12th. The prosecutors read the eighty-seven-page charge sheet in shifts.

    About a dozen relatives of people who died on 9/11 watched from behind a plexiglas partition, as did, separately, a contingent of reporters; there were also a few pool reporters in the courtroom, and a closed-circuit feed to a number of military bases, where other family members watched. What they saw shouldn’t inspire much faith in the ability of the military tribunal system to handle a trial of this complexity.

    It also included some moments that were genuinely strange, if not outright surreal. Here’s a countdown to the strangest, from the dispatches and tweets of reporters who were there.

    10. The Leg: Walid bin Attash, who is accused of training the hijackers, was brought into court in a restraint chair by three guards. As Michelle Shephard, of the Toronto Star, describes it, “A fourth guard brought in his prosthetic leg separately about a minute later.”

    9. The Beard: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was last seen with a salt-and-pepper beard. Saturday, he had a red beard. During a break, a Navy spokesman, Captain Robert Durand, told Carol Rosenberg, of the Miami Herald, that the prison “does not provide detainees with hair dye.”

    8. “Bite-sized chunks”: The defendants wouldn’t put their earphones in for the simultaneous translation. The court brought in interpreters who would just repeat the proceedings in Arabic for everyone to hear. This got noisy, confusing, and long, with overlapping talk. After some trial and error, Pohl instructed the lawyers to speak in “bite-sized chunks.” The interpreters ended up interpreting complaints about the quality of their interpretation.

    7. The Audio Feed: On a forty-second delay, because of classified information, it cut out a few times, once apparently because of the mention of torture—which has long since ceased being a secret.

    6. The Judge’s Reading Material: Defense lawyers questioned Pohl about his fitness to run the trial, asking about his religion (he declined to answer) and reading list (“The Black Banners,” by Ali Soufan and about ten pages of the 9/11 Commission report, among other things). Pohl said that he thought journalists tended to get things wrong. (“Gitmo media center groans,” tweets Rosenberg.)

    5. The Defendant’s Reading Material: “One detainee, Ali Abd al Aziz Ali, had a copy of the Economist magazine, which he appeared to be reading and later handed to a detainee sitting behind him, Mustafa al Hawsawi, who leafed through it,” Charlie Savage, of the Times, reported. It appears to have been the April 21st issue, with articles on hunger in Yemen and couples sharing housework.

    4. What Was That About Qaddafi?: “The era of Qaddafi is over but you have Qaddafi in the camp,” Ramzi Bin al-Shibh yells. Alive and well and living in Gitmo? Apparently, the line was meant metaphorically. Al-Shibh also says he might be murdered and made to look like a suicide.

    3. The Shirtless Defendant: Bin Attash, the one-legged defendant, took off his shirt, in order, he said, to show scars on his arms. “No, no, no,” Pohl said. “You will put your shirt on.”

    2. The Covered Lawyer: “I’m not suggesting everyone in the room wear what I’m wearing,” bin Attash’s lawyer, Cheryl Bormann, said. She was wearing a black abaya and hijab, and talked about how distracting it would be for the defendants if the women on the prosecution team didn’t dress modestly. According to reporters there, all of those women were dressed perfectly professionally, in skirt suits or military dress.

    And, above all,

    1. The Venue: What should be the most important trial of our time is being improvised in a newly cobbled-together fake court, in which no side seems to have figured out the most basic rules. This was a big reason why everything took so long, with everything disputed, and went so quickly off the rails. Yes, the 9/11 defendants were always going to try to make a spectacle of things. Defendants have tried to do that for centuries, which is why our federal courts have a wealth of jurisprudence for dealing with that issue, as well as with problems of classification and evidence and the many intricacies of terrorism and conspiracy prosecutions. Instead, our government has decided that it’s preferable to make this one up as it goes along. On Saturday, it showed.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


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    Guantánamo's 9/11 show trials
    When evidence about torture is suppressed as 'contraband information', let's not pretend that the US is dispensing justice

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...?newsfeed=true

    Anthony Romero
    guardian.co.uk, Monday 7 May 2012 16.08 EDT

    I have been going to Guantánamo Bay since 2004 to observe the military commissions originally established by the Bush administration to try accused terrorists. It was painfully apparent on Saturday that despite some improvements, not enough has changed.

    The commissions remain a cynical tool to obfuscate the fact that the US sanctioned the use of torture at the highest level of government. The world knows the CIA subjected the 9/11 defendants to years of shameful abuse, including waterboarding, extended sleep deprivation, debilitating stress positions, and other so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques". Yet, the US government seeks to classify any information about the torture, and suppress it from the public.

    Less than an hour into the hearing, the word "torture" came up – and the censors immediately cut off the commission audio feed. The context was the defendants' refusal to wear earphones for an Arabic translation of court proceedings. David Nevin, counsel for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, explained that Mohammed didn't want to use earphones because of "past experiences". Presumably, this was a reference to when the defendants were forced to wear headphones and subjected repeatedly to loud music blasted into their ears.

    Prosecutors later said the government would provide an unredacted transcript of what was said, but this de facto government censorship of the public's right to access judicial proceedings is prohibited by our first amendment of the US constitution and has no place in an American courtroom.

    Last week, the ACLU filed a motion challenging the government's censorship of torture and abuse in the 9/11 defendants' case. Although the judge did not rule on our motion Saturday, we hope he will give us a hearing when the case resumes in mid June.

    From the start, it was obvious the Obama administration – like the Bush administration before it – has not provided adequate resources to the defense. One military defense lawyer told the court his client has not had a translator for over a year, despite repeated requests. That defendant has also been denied a civilian lawyer of his own choosing with extensive experience in death penalty cases.

    The basic protections of attorney-client confidentiality – necessary for lawyers to represent their clients – are not possible under the Guantánamo regime. The commander at Guantánamo has forbidden any written communications between defendants and their lawyers about "information contraband", which includes discussions about any US personnel who may have tortured the defendants. That those torture sessions were illegal is an inconvenient truth that the US government would like to ignore.

    Defense lawyers are caught in an impossible dilemma: either they abide by the Guantánamo rules and violate their ethical obligations as lawyers, or they abide by their ethical obligations and violate a direct military order, jeopardizing their security clearances and access to their clients.

    The commissions system is so stacked against the defense that when the defense lawyers took an oath on Saturday to represent the interests of their clients and uphold the constitution, each felt compelled to add "to the best of my abilities". They are in an untenable situation.

    These proceedings have all the makings of a show trial – the kind we condemn in other countries. Improvements to the military commissions in 2009 did little to change that. The rules still permit the judge to admit, under certain circumstances, evidence that has been coerced out of witnesses. Hearsay evidence, second- and third-hand information, which is normally banned in federal courts because it is inherently unreliable, are presumptively permitted in the Guantánamo commissions.

    The rules also permit the prosecution to provide the defense summaries only of secret, classified information and limit the defense's right to challenge the basis for secrecy if new information comes to light. No wonder America's allies think so poorly of the Guantánamo commissions that they refuse to turn over terrorism suspects or intelligence if either might end up in the commissions.

    I have now been to Guantánamo six times. Eight years after my first visit, nothing has changed my view that the military commissions are a second-tier system of justice where the outcome – in this instance, convictions that result in death sentences – is all but guaranteed. Everyone, no matter how serious the allegations, deserves a fair trial. And the public deserves justice, which can only be achieved with fair trials.

    The devastating truth is that the most important terrorism trials ever held by our nation are being conducted in a system that is incapable of providing fair trials for the defendants – or justice for the victims of the 9/11 attacks.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


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    Missing words from 9-11 tribunal: CIA and "big-boy pants"

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/...84901O20120510

    By Jane Sutton
    MIAMI | Wed May 9, 2012 9:03pm EDT

    (Reuters) - The Pentagon revealed on Wednesday what was said when an over-cautious court security officer blocked the sound during Saturday's arraignment of five Guantanamo prisoners charged with plotting the September 11 attacks.

    It was a snide reference to Bush-era CIA interrogators, a transcript showed. Air Force Captain Michael Schwartz was explaining why defendant Walid Bin Attash was refusing to cooperate during the hearing in the Guantanamo war crimes tribunal.

    "The reason for that is the torture that my client was subjected to by the men and women wearing the big-boy pants down at the CIA, it makes it impossible ..." Schwartz said during the blocked portion of the arraignment.

    That was a dig at Jose Rodriguez, the former director of the CIA's National Clandestine Services, who described in a recent interview with the CBS television show "60 Minutes" how the agency obtained legal authorization from the Bush White House to use "enhanced interrogation techniques" on suspected al Qaeda captives.

    "We needed to get everybody in government to put their big-boy pants on and provide the authorities that we needed," Rodriguez said in the interview.

    Spectators in the top-security courtroom at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. naval base did not hear Schwartz's remark during Saturday's hearing. They sit behind a glass wall and listen to the courtroom conversation via an audio feed that is delayed by 40 seconds.

    When it appeared Schwartz was venturing into classified territory about the CIA treatment of his client, the court security officer blocked the audio feed with 'white noise' static.

    The Pentagon office in charge of the tribunals conducted a review and decided nothing secret had been disclosed. The agency released a transcript of the muffled portion on Wednesday, which covered less than a page.

    Bin Attash and his co-defendants, including the admitted mastermind of the 2001 hijacked plane attacks on the United States, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, were formally arraigned during the hearing on death penalty charges that include murdering 2,976 people.

    The defendants are alleged al Qaeda operatives who were held in secret CIA prisons for about three years before being sent to Guantanamo in 2006. All have said they were tortured and the CIA has acknowledged subjecting Mohammed to the simulated drowning technique known as water boarding 183 times.

    Rodriguez said in the interview that the interrogation methods produced valuable information that helped save lives.

    Guantanamo defense attorneys say it was torture, and will argue that it is a mitigating factor that should prevent the 9-11 defendants from being executed if they are convicted.

    Their trial is not expected to start for at least a year.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  8. #168
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    What Constitutes a Fair Trial?

    http://townhall.com/columnists/judge...s_a_fair_trial

    5/11/2012

    The trial of the alleged masterminds of 9/11, which began last week at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, will address some of the most profound issues of our era. Are natural rights truly inalienable, as Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence, or can the government take them away from those it hates or fears? Does the Constitution protect the rights of all persons who come in contact with the government, or does it protect only certain Americans, as the government argues? Can the government deny a person due process by changing the rules retroactively, or is the Constitution's guarantee of due process to all persons truly a guarantee?

    These are all questions that the government does not want to answer. But it should know better, because by structuring the trial after the crime was committed and by establishing retroactive rules -- which are prohibited by the Constitution -- that have never before been used in any American civilian or military court, Congress has created and the Obama administration will conduct a trial that will resemble none in our history.

    The trial is being held in Cuba because President Obama caved to political pressure from New York City politicians who did not want the trial at the location where the murders took place. In one of the few rules of criminal procedure laid down in the Constitution itself, the Framers required all trials to be held in the same judicial district where the alleged crime took place. They were familiar with the British practice of trying colonists in London for alleged crimes committed in New York. But today New York politicians and their allies in Congress and the president think they can pick and choose which parts of the Constitution to uphold and which parts they can ignore.

    The Constitution guarantees the right to confront evidence and witnesses. The colonists were all too familiar with Star Chamber, a British trial system in which evidence against an accused was summarized by a clerk of the court, rather than presented by witnesses with personal knowledge or revealed in documents for all to see. In trials at Gitmo, the government may summarize evidence for the court, and it may keep documents it plans to use away from the defendants.

    The rules for this trial also permit hearsay: basically, anonymous accusations that were also the hallmark of Star Chamber. They permit the Secretary of Defense, who is the boss of both the prosecutors and the judge, to replace the judge if the secretary is displeased by his rulings. This is a procedure that is taken right out of the Communist Party playbook in Stalinist Russia.

    Perhaps the most radical departure from American due process and pronounced return to Star Chamber is the congressional authorization for the admission of evidence obtained under torture. There is no question that these defendants were tortured. The CIA has admitted publicly that it waterboarded one of them 183 times and then destroyed the videotapes of the torture so jurors could not see how horrific this procedure is.

    Torture is so abhorrent to American values that its use by rogue cops has resulted in what is known as the "shocks the conscience of the court" rule. This principle, which has been in place since colonial times, permits the court to dismiss the charges -- no matter how grave -- when the government's behavior shocks the conscience of the court. And all intentional torture is in that category.

    I understand the emotions that are fueling these prosecutions, and I understand the pain and loss suffered by those whose loved ones were murdered on 9/11, and I understand the horrific nature of the crimes for which these defendants have been charged. But in America, we still have the rule of law. And that means that no one is above the law and no one is beneath it. Everyone is subject to the law, and the government may not exclude anyone from its protections. That is the essence of our system of justice. It is mandated by the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and its preservation is the reason we have fought our just wars.

    This trial may have dire unforeseen consequences. From the president who opposed all this when he was a senator but now effectuates it, to members of Congress who enacted the Military Commissions Act that authorizes incarceration after acquittal (a procedure even the Soviets did not utilize), to the victims' families who surely would not want this rough justice visited upon their children; all these people now crying for blood could one day see the ruination of due process in America, with this case as precedent.

    What constitutes a fair trial is the due process of American justice, which is guaranteed and required by the Constitution itself. If we deviate from the moral values of that system for the people we hate, woe to us for making law retroactively and based on hatred.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  9. #169
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    Chaos at Guantánamo as the 9/11 Trial Begins

    http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/201...-trial-begins/

    Andy Worthington
    5/5/2012

    Saturday, the eyes of the world were on Guantánamo, as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other men accused of planning and facilitating the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 — Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi and Walid bin Attash — appeared in a courtroom for the first time since December 2008. All were dressed in white, apparently at the insistence of the authorities at Guantánamo, and most observers made a point of noting that Mohammed’s long gray beard was streaked red with henna.

    For the Obama administration and the Pentagon, the five men’s appearance — for their arraignment prior to their planned trial by military commission — was supposed to show that the commissions are a competent and legitimate alternative to the federal court trial that the Obama administration announced for the men in November 2009, but then abandoned after caving in to pressure from Republicans. The five defendants face 2,976 counts of murder — one for each of the victims of the 9/11 attacks — as well as charges of terrorism, hijacking, conspiracy and destruction of property, and the prosecution is seeking the death penalty.

    Unfortunately for the administration, the omens were not good. The military commissions have been condemned as an inadequate trial system ever since the Bush administration first resurrected them in November 2001, intending, in the heat of post-9/11 vengeance, to use them to swiftly try and execute those it regarded as terrorists. However, after long delays and chaotic hearings, this first reincarnation of the commissions was struck down as illegal by the Supreme Court in June 2006. The commissions were then revived by Congress a few months later, and were then tweaked and revived by President Obama in the summer of 2009, despite criticism from legal experts.

    However, in all these years, just seven cases have been decided. Under Bush, there was a plea deal for the Australian David Hicks; a short sentence for Salim Hamdan, who drove a car for Osama bin Laden; and a life sentence for Ali Hamza al-Bahlul, who made a video for al-Qaeda, and refused to participate in his trial. Since Obama revived the commissions another four cases have been decided by plea deal — those of Ibrahim al-Qosi, a cook; Omar Khadr, a child at the time of his capture; Noor Uthman Muhammed, a training camp instructor; and Majid Khan, an alleged accomplice of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

    Another case — that of Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the alleged bomber of the USS Cole — is also proceeding to trial, but it is fair to say that the 9/11 trial is the barometer of whether or not the commissions are credible, or whether they are a second-tier judicial system, and the proceedings are little better than show trials.

    On that basis, Saturday’s arraignment rather spectacularly failed to fulfil the administration’s hopes. As the Guardian noted, the hearing “descended into chaos,” as the defendants “refused to acknowledge the judge and their lawyers repeatedly challenged the legitimacy of the court.”

    At the last appearance of the five men in 2008, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had tried to plead guilty, and to become a martyr by being executed, but on Saturday he was more in the mood for quiet resistance, undermining the proceedings by refusing to acknowledge the judge. As the Washington Post described it, “The normally loquacious Mohammed refused to speak publicly throughout Saturday’s hearing, a stance that was largely adopted by all the other defendants, who tend to follow his lead.”

    Also noteworthy was the behavior of Walid bin Attash, an amputee, who was brought to the courtroom strapped into a restraining chair, after some kind of altercation outside, and only had his restraints removed when he promised to behave, and the behavior of Ramzi bin al-Shibh, whose mental health has long been called into question by his lawyers.

    At one point bin al-Shibh and Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali interrupted the proceedings by praying, at at another point bin al-Shibh shouted out, comparing Guantánamo to the prisons of Muammar Gaddafi, the former dictator of Syria. “Era of Gaddafi is over but you have Gaddafi in [Guantánamo] camp,” he said, adding, “Maybe they are going to kill us and say that we are committing suicide.” This was a sign, perhaps, that he had heard of the dubious circumstances in which five prisoners died at Guantánamo: three in June 2006, and two others in 2007 and 2009, and had even, perhaps, heard about the dubious death, in a Libyan prison in May 2009, of Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, the emir of a training camp in Afghanistan who had also been held in CIA “black sites,” and had been rendered to Egypt, where, under torture, he had falsely confessed that there were connections between al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, which, nevertheless, were used to justify the invasion of Iraq in March 2003.

    The arraignment took 13 hours to complete, although that was largely because of the men’s defense lawyers, who persistently attempted to question the credibility of the commissions, and made the most of their opportunity to question the judge’s impartiality, through the process known as voir dire. While this was happening, the defendants were mostly silent, and passed around the latest copy of the Economist, which may or may not have provided a boost to the London-based weekly magazine’s appeal. According to the Washington Post, throughout the hearing Khalid Sheikh Mohammed “whispered messages to his comrades, and they chatted and joked with one another during a short recess.”

    By the end of the arraignment, none of the defendants had entered a plea, and the judge, Army Col. James Pohl, adjourned proceedings until June 12, and tentatively set a trial date of May 2013, although, as the Guardian explained, he “acknowledged that there are likely to be more delays.” Throughout the day, he had tried to maintain his composure, but occasionally appeared rattled. When it became clear that the accused were going to refuse to participate in the proceedings, he stated that a plea of not guilty would eventually be entered on their behalf, adding, “One cannot choose not to participate and frustrate the normal course of business,” and at another point he asked in exasperation, “Why is this so hard?”

    Leading the defense’s complaints on Saturday, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s lawyer, David Nevin, told the court that “the world is watching” the proceedings, and when the accused removed their headphones, through which they were receiving a translation of what Judge Pohl was saying, he explained that, in Mohammed’s case, “The reason he’s not putting the headphones in his ears is because of the torture imposed on him.” Nevin then “asked to be allowed to elaborate,” as the Guardian described it, but Judge Pohl refused.

    Nevin’s attempts to raise the question of the men’s torture in secret CIA prisons for up to three and a half years before their transfer to Guantánamo in September 2006 was the most explicit attempt to allow discussion of how the men have been treated, although as was noted in the Daily Beast by Terry McDermott (the author, with Josh Meyer, of The Hunt for KSM: Inside the Pursuit and Takedown of the Real 9/11 Mastermind, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed), Judge Pohl deflected almost all the defense’s arguments, telling the lawyers that there would be time for them to raise whatever they thought was important at the next hearing in June. As McDermott explained, “He indicated he would eventually allow defense lawyers to argue every issue they wanted.”

    In his perceptive article, McDermott noted that, after Walid bin Attash’s attorney, Cheryl Borman, had told Judge Pohl that her client had been “repeatedly beaten by guards at Guantánamo,” he was obliged to point out that the treatment of the prisoners was something over which he “had little or no control,” although he stated that he “would investigate with the relevant authorities.” For McDermott, his “relative powerlessness over events beyond the courtroom” provided a vivid demonstration of the “central contradiction” of the commissions, which he described as “the attempt to conduct trials granting nearly all rights enjoyed in US courts when the defendants are prisoners in one of the most heavily controlled prisons in the world — held, usually in solitary confinement, under extreme security with almost all access to the outside world eliminated.”

    As McDermott added:
    Their lawyers are thousands of miles away and require special flights just to get to Guantánamo. Even when there, the lawyers are unable to talk with their clients about anything the American military decides is classified. This includes all issues having to do with the prisoners’ treatment. Thus, defense lawyers can’t talk in court about the specifics of their clients’ complaints.
    Just before the hearing began, the ACLU submitted a motion (PDF) calling for the judge “to reject the government’s attempts to censor any statements by defendants in the 9/11 military commission proceedings about their detention and treatment in US custody.”

    As the ACLU explained:
    [T]he government has asked or will ask this Commission to issue a protective order accepting the government’s claim that any statements made by the defendants concerning their “exposure” to the Central Intelligence Agency’s (“CIA”) detention and interrogation program are presumptively classified and must be kept from the public. The government has also asked or will ask the Commission to accept its assertion that defendants’ statements concerning their personal knowledge and experience of their imprisonment and treatment in Department of Defense (“DOD”) custody are classified and must be suppressed.
    The ACLU also asked the judge not to accept the government’s insistence that there must be “a 40-second delay in the audio feed the government makes available to the public, media, and representatives of non-governmental organizations who observe the tribunal,” in order to “permit a courtroom security official to cut off the audio feed whenever the defendants describe their detention and interrogation in US custody.”

    The 40-second delay was only used briefly on one occasion on Saturday, apparently when Walid bin Attash said something that prosecutors wanted suppressed, but how secrets are dealt with is central to the 9/11 trial and its claim to credibility, and it remains to be seen whether Judge Pohl will genuinely acknowledge the tensions between the absolute secrecy surrounding the Bush administration’s torture program and the need for something that resembles a fair hearing in the men’s trial by military commission.

    What is clear, at present, is that, in the five years and eight months since Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, his co-defendants and nine other “high-value detainees” arrived at Guantánamo from the CIA’s secret prisons, the only words that any of them have uttered that have been made available to the public are the words they said at their pre-trial hearings — in the cases of KSM and his co-accused, what they said in June, September and December 2008, and on Saturday. Everything else — every single word that has been exchanged between these 14 men and their lawyers — is presumptively classified.

    This not unusual in the sense that every word exchanged between the other prisoners in Guantánamo and their lawyers is also presumptively classified, but in the cases of the other prisoners, at least parts of these exchanges have been unclassified after being reviewed by a team of Pentagon censors known as the privilege review team. In the cases of the “high-value detainees,” however, every single word remains classified.

    The only possible reason for this is to prevent any discussion of of the torture to which these men were subjected in CIA “black sites” from leaking out of Guantánamo.

    This is something that was noted last week in an article for Salon by the commissions’ former chief prosecutor, Col. Morris Davis, who resigned in October 2007, when he was placed in a chain of command under William J. Haynes II, the Pentagon’s General Counsel, who insisted that information derived through the use of torture would be used in the commissions.

    Dismissing the administration’s spurious claims that military commissions are necessary because soldiers on a battlefield cannot spend their time worrying about reading rights to prisoners in wartime, Col. Davis stated:
    [T]he reason the apologists want a second-rate military commission option is because of what we did to the detainees, not because of what the detainees did to us. This is not about the exigencies of the battlefield and the problems our soldiers face trying to fight a war; this is about torture, coercion, rendition and a decade or more in confinement without an opportunity to confront the evidence — abuses that would have us up in arms if done to an American citizen by some other country — that make the tarnished military commissions uniquely suited to try and accommodate the small category of cases where we crossed over to the dark side.
    And that, in short, is the key problem with the commissions that dare not speak its name, and that Judge Pohl will have to decide whether or not to tackle — whether the search for justice is even possible when those who are supposed to be subjected to it were also the victims of America’s journey to “the dark side.”
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  10. #170
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    Justice and the Guantanamo trial

    http://www.kansascity.com/2012/05/11...amo-trial.html

    Posted on Fri, May. 11, 2012 07:59 AM

    The following editorial appeared in the Miami Herald on Thursday, May 10:

    In a series of remarkable speeches this year, the Pentagon's chief war crimes prosecutor in Guantanamo, Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, has been arguing that the controversial military commissions established to try the perpetrators of the terrorist attacks of 9/11 represent a justice system that is "fair and legitimate" and deserving of confidence.

    Gen. Martins' addresses, first at the New York City Bar in January, and later at Harvard Law School, represent the government's most elaborate and lucid defense of a judicial system that has been widely condemned as grossly unfair by civil liberties advocates at home and abroad. The prosecutor believes the critics themselves are being unfair.

    First, he acknowledges that the original commissions established in 2001 by presidential order and in 2006 "were flawed," but that the current version ordained under President Obama is a vast improvement over the original. In that, he is largely right.

    The amended 2009 law improves the ability of defendants to obtain witnesses and evidence, gives them greater leeway in using classified material to prepare a defense, and requires adherence to rules of evidence and accepted legal principles.

    Gen. Martins insists that the malign impact of "command influence" - the intrusion of higher authorities to undermine a fair trial - has been largely erased. Here, he seems to have a valid point.

    Far from being docile, military defense lawyers have offered repeated objections to the proceedings and put up a vigorous defense. They believe the commission's rules unfairly restrict the rights of the accused, and they haven't been shy about saying so.

    Closed circuit transmission of the trials, verbatim transcripts, and other "transparency improvements" outlined by Gen. Martins have also improved the Guantanamo process.

    Yet the general's argument - that federal courts are equipped to handle terrorist trials but not cases involving violations of the law of war - will not meet the objections of civil libertarians who argue that the terrorists are not soldiers in any conventional sense and therefore not subject to a judicial system designed for uninformed combatants.

    The larger problem is that the elaborate Guantanamo system attempts to square the circle - ostensibly offering a "fair trial" to the accused who have been tortured, held in secret jails, and subjected to years of detention without charges. For these defendants, the USS Fairness sailed long ago.

    No wonder the defendants refused to play along and disrupted the recent hearings. No wonder the trials probably won't start for at least another year.

    It is too late to rectify the mistakes of the past, but if Gen. Martins wants to create greater confidence in the military commissions, he should ask the government to declassify what was done to the accused 9/11 mastermind and his four fellow defendants while in "black site" custody.

    What the CIA did to prisoners now at Guantanamo was wrong. We know that from partially released CIA Inspector General's reports on torture, one under President Bush, and the other under President Obama. For the process to have a shred of the credibility Gen. Martins is seeking, the world must not only know what the terrorists did to America, but also what America did to them during their detour to the dark sites on their way to Guantanamo justice.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


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