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

  1. #211
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    GuantĂĄnamo's perversion of justice
    US military commissions revoke for al-Qaida suspects the standard of justice extended to Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...ersion-justice

    Richard Dicker
    guardian.co.uk, Monday 3 September 2012 09.26 EDT

    In the course of three days in late August, I travelled from Courtroom 600 in Nuremberg, Germany, where an international military tribunal tried 21 top Nazi leaders in 1945-46, to Courtroom 2 at GuantĂĄnamo Bay, Cuba. Courtroom 2 is the site of proceedings against Khalid Sheik Mohammed and the four others accused of masterminding the attacks on 11 September 2001. The contrast could not be more stark.

    At Nuremberg, the US government insisted on a trial – in the face of strenuous opposition from the British and Russians, who wanted to summarily execute the most senior Nazi party members. Washington demonstrated a commitment – not without shortcomings in the course of the trials – to the uncharted path of international prosecution for monstrous crimes. In Guantánamo's Camp Justice, on the other hand, the US government is restricting the exercise of basic fair trial rights guaranteed by international and US domestic law.

    While denigrated by some critics simply as "victor's justice", the Nuremberg trial marked a stunning turning-point in using law to punish the most egregious crimes. It also laid the foundation for the still-evolving system of international justice, in which those responsible for mass atrocities are increasingly being held to account under law. Unlike Nuremberg, because of its expected unfairness, the 9/11 trial is unlikely to serve history as a positive reference point.

    In Courtroom 600 at Nuremberg, which I visited while attending a conference about an international justice institute at the site, I saw the wooden benches that Herman Goering and others occupied in the dock. These men, once seemingly omnipotent, believed they could exterminate millions without consequence. Their passage from power to prosecution signaled an unprecedented shift in international practice to bring to justice even the most powerful. I saw where Goering disputed the evidence against him, sparring with Robert Jackson, the US supreme court justice who served as America's chief prosecutor in Nuremberg. Such exchanges are fundamental to a fair trial in an adversarial proceeding. At Nuremberg, three of the accused were acquitted.

    The Nuremberg tribunal staff made herculean efforts to make the trial visible worldwide, using newsreel footage, to underscore the importance of a public trial. Unknown, in its day, this initiative drove home the importance of projecting the trial sessions far beyond the courtroom.

    At GuantĂĄnamo, however, the rules curtail essential rights of the defense to rebut incriminating evidence. The military commissions there allow hearsay evidence, which international tribunals permit as well. But at GuantĂĄnamo, the circumstances around which much of the evidence was obtained are considered a national security matter and even the defense lawyers, with top secret security clearance, are denied access. The prosecutor may introduce evidence the defendant has no way to challenge.

    Moreover, at GuantĂĄnamo, everything the so-called "high-value detainees" say is presumed classified. So, if the 9/11 defendants speak up about torture in custody, or their lawyers try to, the audio feed from the courtroom is immediately cut off and the information will never appear in the public record. These rules effectively pre-empt the confrontation at the core of due process in an adversarial trial.

    Further, an important legacy of Nuremberg was the permanent documentation of Nazi crimes; suppressing evidence in GuantĂĄnamo will prevent creation of a definitive historical record.

    In addition, in Courtroom 2 the prosecutor has a power unknown in US federal court or any international tribunal: the prosecutor can unilaterally veto a defense attorney's decision to call a witness. A defense lawyer who wishes to summon a witness must first get the prosecutor's consent. If the prosecutor says no, the lawyer must argue its merits with the prosecutor in front of the judge. This unfair allocation of power between prosecution and defense directly violates an essential fair trial principle, known as "equality of arms", and locks in a prosecutorial advantage that undercuts a vigorous and effective defense.

    A fair trial of the 9/11 accused at GuantĂĄnamo would renew Nuremberg's powerful example of justice being done and being seen to be done. Instead, the Obama administration, despite improvements in the 2009 Military Commissions Act, is departing from the farsighted example of Presidents Roosevelt and Truman.

    Worldwide, there is a growing awareness of the efforts that have succeeded in bringing some of those accused of the world's worst crimes to justice: Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian wartime leader; the former Liberian President Charles Taylor; and the former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori. The GuantĂĄnamo trial will be compared with these proceedings. While policymakers in Washington have advocated fair trials for those implicated in ethnic cleansing and the use of rape as a weapon of war, gutting due process guarantees at Camp Justice will undercut US credibility in pressing for justice elsewhere.

    A flawed trial at GuantĂĄnamo will debase the United States' better practices and devalue US government commitments to accountability for serious crimes from Syria to Sri Lanka. Nuremberg created a powerful positive precedent; GuantĂĄnamo has the potential to mar that achievement with the stain of hypocrisy.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  2. #212
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    U.S. judge blocks new restrictions on Guantanamo lawyers

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/...8851E720120906

    By Jane Sutton
    MIAMI | Thu Sep 6, 2012 7:23pm EDT

    (Reuters) - The Obama administration overstepped its authority by trying to impose new restrictions on attorney access to prisoners held at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, a federal judge ruled on Thursday.

    Ruling in Washington, Chief Judge Royce Lamberth said the previous rules established by the U.S. District Court in Washington four years ago were working well and would continue to govern lawyers' access to Guantanamo prisoners.

    The government had argued the new rules did not make substantial changes. In a scathing opinion, Lamberth called one of the government's arguments "quite preposterous" and said another "does not pass the smell test."

    "The government's attempt to supersede the court's authority is an illegitimate exercise of executive power," he wrote in the ruling.

    The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The federal court in Washington handles legal challenges from Guantanamo prisoners who are seeking their freedom by challenging the government's evidence for holding them. That court negotiated the rules governing lawyers' access to their Guantanamo clients.

    A few months ago, the Justice Department sought to put new restrictions on attorney visits to prisoners whose cases had been denied or dismissed.

    It asked them to sign a "memorandum of understanding" that the court said essentially gave the commander of the detention operation unfettered authority and discretion over attorney visits.

    The new rules would have restricted the number of lawyers and interpreters who could visit any given prisoner and put new restrictions on what the lawyers could do with classified information learned from prisoners, including documents the lawyers themselves had written.

    Some of the lawyers refused to sign the memorandum of understanding and challenged the issue in court.

    Lamberth said few of the prisoners were fluent in English or knowledgeable about U.S. law, and that they were held in an isolated location without the means to file legal challenges on their own. He said those who had lost their cases still had the right to file appeals or new challenges under laws that had been revised.

    "In the case of Guantanamo detainees, access to the courts means nothing without access to counsel," Lamberth wrote.

    The Center for Constitutional Rights, which has challenged the Guantanamo detention operation, praised the decision.

    "The new rules came out of the blue and can only be seen as an effort to punish the men at Guantanamo for exercising their right to challenge their detention," the group's executive director, Vincent Warren, said in a statement.

    The detention camp was established at the Guantanamo base in Cuba shortly after the September 11 attacks to hold foreign captives suspected of involvement with al Qaeda, the Taliban or other militant groups. Of the 779 men held there, 168 remain.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  3. #213
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    Prison camps not a campaign issue this time
    The once hot-button topic of GuantĂĄnamo that President Barack Obama pressed in his first presidential race is a non-issue this time around.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/09/2...ign-issue.html

    By CAROL ROSENBERG
    crosenberg@miamiherald.com

    In 2007, Mitt Romney set himself apart from the pack of presidential candidates by staking out an extreme position on the prison camps at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. He said he wanted to “grow them” at a time when both Barack Obama and John McCain were advocating closure to improve America’s standing in the world.

    This time around, it’s not even part of the presidential campaign conversation.

    When asked, spokesmen for the candidates couldn’t muster anything more than canned talking points — Romney will keep them, Obama still wants to close them. And there’s no evidence that either man has raised the issue along the campaign trail where the economy is the chief concern but national security is never far behind.

    The most prominent mention so far came in Clint Eastwood’s conversation with an empty chair at the Republican National Convention in Tampa. “Why close it? We spent so much money on it.”

    Congress’ straight-jacketing legislation may explain it. Once Obama sought to make good on his 2008 campaign pledge by ordering his administration to close the camps by Jan. 22, 2009, Congress replied with a succession of financial and bureaucratic restrictions on the prison and the prisoners that today make a policy debate on the topic largely theoretical.

    “It’s been neutralized as an issue for both sides. Whether they like it or not, the reality is there will be detainees detained at Guantánamo Bay for as long as you can see into the future,” said Steve Schmidt, senior campaign advisor in 2008 to McCain.

    Congressional restrictions also forced the Obama administration to retreat on Attorney General Eric Holder’s vow to hold a civilian Sept. 11 terror trial in Manhattan, not far from 9/11’s Ground Zero. The capital case is instead being prosecuted before a military commission at the Navy base in southeast Cuba.

    Guantánamo is “not on the mind of out-of-work Ohio auto workers who may determine the outcome of this election,” Schmidt said. “Scoring points on Guantánamo Bay denies you the opportunity to score points on the economy. If Mitt Romney can’t make an economic case he won’t win the election.”

    For the record, White House national security spokesman Tommy Vietor said there’s no change in the presidential policy that seeks to close the camps that cost $800,000 a year per prisoner: “The president has made clear that the policy of this administration is to do what is clearly in our national security interest — to close the detention facility at Guantánamo.”

    Getting there is more complicated. The Democrats’ 2008 platform bluntly pledged closure. The Guantánamo passage in the 2012 platform is more nuanced: “We are substantially reducing the population at Guantánamo Bay without adding to it,” it says. “And we remain committed to working with all branches of government to close the prison altogether because it is inconsistent with our national security interests and our values.”

    Neither the 2008 nor 2012 Republican platforms make mention of Guantánamo, meaning Romney’s most detailed vision comes from a May 2007 Fox News debate among McCain, Romney and Rudolph Giuliani at the University of South Carolina.

    “I don’t want them on our soil,” Romney said then. “I want them on Guantánamo, where they don’t get the access to lawyers they get when they’re on our soil. I don’t want them in our prisons. I want them there. Some people have said we ought to close Guantánamo. My view is we ought to double Guantánamo.”

    The Romney campaign won’t elaborate on what the Massachusetts governor wanted to double that day, when the Pentagon held more than 380 captives.

    But since then, the Pentagon has downsized the detention center population by half.

    The Bush administration transferred more than 100, the majority to Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. Then the Obama administration transferred and resettled another 100, many across Europe and to such far-flung places as Palau, Cape Verde and Bermuda. Five captives died.

    Today’s Guantánamo prisoner population is 167.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  4. #214
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    Pentagon prosecutors moving away from gag order on 9/11 suspects at Guantanamo

    http://www.thestate.com/2012/09/26/2...l#.UGL26hgoo0w

    Carol Rosenberg - The Miami Herald
    9/26/2012

    Defense lawyers in the Sept. 11 case said Tuesday that the Pentagon prosecutor is backing away from a national security doctrine that reflexively gags anything the accused 9/11 plotters say to anyone at GuantĂĄnamo.

    At issue is the controversial theory of “presumptive classification.” Because the accused 9/11 conspirators were held for years in secret custody by the CIA, and are now confined to a secret prison at Guantánamo, anything they say starts off classified as a national security secret.

    They are facing a death-penalty trial at the GuantĂĄnamo war court, and their defense lawyers have argued that the interpretation has straight-jacketed their trial preparation.

    Moreover, the American Civil Liberties Union disputes the concept of “presumptive classification” as being at odds with the public’s right to know what happened to the captives in secret U.S. custody. Agents seized the men in 2002 and 2003, and then turned them over to the military at Guantánamo in 2006.

    “Today, the prosecution in the 9/11 military commission filed a document retreating from its argument for ‘presumptive classification’ of all detainee statements, regardless of their topic,” said James Connell, lawyer for Ammar al Baluchi, the nephew of alleged mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed. “Defense attorneys have vigorously opposed the practice of presumptive classification.”

    A military judge is set to consider the legality of the doctrine during hearings at GuantĂĄnamo Oct. 15-19.

    The chief prosecutor declined to say whether or how he had retreated from the doctrine in the filing. Under war court rules, it was filed under seal — lawyers get to read it, the public cannot — until U.S. intelligence authorities decide which portions to redact.

    “The government is committed to considering every reasonable and appropriate measure that could help facilitate the attorney-client relationship,” the prosecutor, Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, said in statement.

    Martins’ remarks suggest that defense lawyers will now be able to discuss certain off-limit topics with the accused terrorists. Left unclear was whether the lawyers will now be allowed to talk publicly about their conversations with their clients.

    Attorney Cheryl Bohrmann, defending alleged al Qaida lieutenant Walid bin Attash, explained the rules this way in May: “Everything is presumptively Top Secret. So if my client had a tuna fish sandwich for lunch, I couldn’t tell you that.”
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  5. #215
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    9/11 mastermind loses appeal to delay Monday hearing

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp...e938d9485bc.e1

    (AFP) – 2 hours ago

    WASHINGTON — The self-proclaimed mastermind of the September 11 terror attacks has lost an appeal citing rats and mold as a reason to delay his court appearance on Monday, a defense lawyer said.

    Judge James Pohl's decision was still sealed Thursday, three days before the hearing in question, but lawyer James Connell said he had received word by mid-afternoon.

    Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's "emergency motion to delay October hearings -- due to defense offices deemed unsafe due to the presence of hazardous mold, rodents and rodent feces -- was denied," announced Connell, defense lawyer for one of the five men accused of plotting the September 11, 2001 attacks.

    The new series of preliminary hearings for the five men is scheduled to begin Monday at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    The hearings had already been postponed so that the defendants could observe the holy month of Ramadan and were then pushed back a day when a derailed freight train in the US state of Maryland caused an Internet outage at the base. They were delayed once more due to Tropical Storm Isaac.

    This time, it was Mohammed's lawyers who had asked for the delay, saying the offices they were provided were "not habitable due to extensive, ongoing and serious health hazards presented by exposure to hazardous mold, airborne particulates, rodents, rodent feces and other significant matters."

    According to their request, filed in early October, the decaying body of a dead rat was removed from the ceiling on September 25, and, the month before, several large rats were removed, causing rat feces to drop into the workspace.

    The defense team said the uneasy work conditions left them unable to adequately prepare for the hearing.

    Soon after their motion was filed, Pohl said he was astonished these offices had been designated for the lawyers when a team of air quality and mold inspectors had recommended they not be used.

    He ordered the offices to be repaired or another "decent workspace" be provided.

    As a result, the vents and the offices were cleaned, disinfected and re-inspected by a Guantanamo hospital team, which re-authorized them to be used, a base spokesman said.

    Mohammed is awaiting trial along with his Pakistani nephew Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, also known as Ammar al-Baluchi, Mustapha Ahmed al-Hawsawi of Saudi Arabia and Yemenis Ramzi Binalshibh and Walid bin Attash.

    The five men face the death penalty if convicted for their roles in the 2001 attacks by Al-Qaeda militants in which hijacked planes were used to strike New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pennsylvania, killing 2,976 people.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  6. #216
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    Continuance Denied in the 9/11 Case; Hearing Still On

    http://www.lawfareblog.com/2012/10/c...ring-still-on/

    By Wells Bennett
    Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 5:33 PM

    Remember the defense’s request, in U.S. v. Mohammed et al, to postpone next week’s motions hearing on account of an infestation of rodents, rodent poop, and mold in the defense’s offices? Well, earlier today Judge James L. Pohl denied it, citing “professional assessments” conducted by the Commanding Officer of GTMO’s naval hospital. (In its papers, the government had noted a then-upcoming “remediation project,” which, upon completion on October 9, would rid the offending stuff from the defense attorneys’ offices.)

    No real surprise there. The working conditions aside, it was already hard enough to imagine a further postponement of case, given that there’s been no hearing since May’s arraignment, and the upcoming session has already seen a string of delays.

    Which reminds me: Lawfare naturally will be covering next week’s Guantanamo proceedings, via closed-circuit television at Fort Meade. Be sure to tune in, y’all.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  7. #217
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    2 terror trials separated by more than a subway ride
    From logistics to the law, the latest New York City terror proceedings offer a stark contrast to the challenges of mounting the Sept. 11 trial at GuantĂĄnamo.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/10/1...d-by-more.html

    By CAROL ROSENBERG
    crosenberg@miamiherald.com

    Within hours of being handed over to U.S. custody last week, a radical Islamic preacher from London named Abu Hamza al Masri was brought before a federal court in New York City. He got a seasoned criminal defense attorney, open hearings and is now in a federal lockup awaiting an August terror trial. It took days, not years.

    Next week, the accused 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and four alleged accomplices get their second military commissions hearings of the Obama administration at the U.S. Navy base at GuantĂĄnamo. All five have been in U.S. custody for nine or more years.

    The contrasts don’t end there.

    One’s a military court. Another’s civilian. If the Sept. 11 prosecution ends in conviction and the military jury decides they deserve the death penalty, the secretary of defense will choose the method of execution. Masri and four other men who were extradited to U.S. custody from Britain can get at most life in prison, and release if they are acquitted.

    From logistics to the law, the cases of Masri and Mohammed illustrate how encumbered the GuantĂĄnamo war court system has become.

    Contrasting costs
    • Subway vs. charter commercial airliner

    The federal courthouse is a $2.25 subway ride away from the rest of New York City. GuantĂĄnamo lawyers, and everyone else from judge to victim family members, get to the GuantĂĄnamo proceedings on $90,000 charter jetliners. For the Oct. 15-19 proceedings, postponed from August by Tropical Storm Isaac, the Pentagon chartered two.

    • Permanent offices vs. makeshift work space

    Masri’s court-appointed defense lawyer, Jeremy Schneider, walked to his client’s arraignment from his downtown New York office, five blocks from the court. Guantánamo lawyers split their time between Washington Beltway offices and crude, cramped work space at Camp Justice, some of it recently declared a health hazard of toxic mold and rat droppings.

    • Federal lockup vs. designer detention

    Masri is held for trial next to the courthouse, in a 10-story federal lockup with solitary confinement for “high-risk” prisoners where lawyers can simply show up to see a client seven days a week. It costs $33,989 a year to keep an inmate in federal detention, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. The Obama administration says it costs $800,000 a year to keep a prisoner at Guantánamo. To see a client, a defense lawyer needs to get a slot on the prison camp’s military roster and a ride on the $90,000 charter plane.

    Different crimes
    To be sure, the Sept. 11 attacks were a crime unparalleled in American history. Nearly 3,000 people were killed in the four hijackings, al-Qaida’s first attack on U.S. soil.

    Masri, who was jailed in Britain since 2004 and convicted of incitement, is accused in U.S. federal court of abetting kidnappings of Americans in Yemen and conspiring to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon, crimes that date back to the 1990s.

    Each case took a roundabout route to U.S. justice. The same year Masri was convicted in a British court, the CIA moved Mohammed and his alleged co-conspirators to GuantĂĄnamo from years in secret agency detention specifically designed to keep them out of reach of the International Red Cross, as well as U.S. courts.

    The Bush era Pentagon charged Mohammed with war crimes in 2008. But the Obama administration withdrew the case, and chose to try the case in New York City with a civilian judge and jury.

    Congress and political opposition thwarted that effort. Now the case is back at the GuantĂĄnamo war court, where the Pentagon uses some Justice Department lawyers and blends both military and civilian practice.

    Different courts
    • UK vs. CIA

    In the Masri case, the British government imposed two conditions on the extradition of the five accused terrorists to U.S. soil — no execution if convicted and no military prosecution, then turned him and four other men over to U.S. jurisdiction. Mohammed came to military custody from the CIA, which still controls classifications in the 9/11 case, notably the details of his black site detentions and interrogations, including 183 rounds of waterboarding.

    • Federal judge vs. 40-second delay

    Spectators walked in off the street, went through a metal detector and sat in court for Masri’s 30-minute arraignment. Sketch artists sat in the jury box, close enough to illustrate that Masri’s arms end in stumps, he says from an explosion in the 1980s while he fought the Soviet invasions of Afghanistan. For Mohammed’s arraignment, the Pentagon vetted spectators — Sept. 11 victims, legal observers, reporters, who in Cuba watched the 13-hour 9/11 proceedings through a soundproofed window behind the court. Sound comes in a 40-second sound delay, time enough for a censor to muffle with white noise button sensitive information. The sketch artist was sequestered in back too. A security officer inspected her drawings before the public could see them.

    • Release vs. indefinite detention

    If a civilian jury acquits Masri, he goes free. The United States might seek to deport him back to his native Egypt or negotiate his return to Britain, where his family lives. Acquittal by military commission does not automatically guarantee you get out of Guantánamo. Obama detention doctrine says the Pentagon can keep a foreigner indefinitely as a captive of the war on terror — unless a federal court orders the government to let the man go.

    • Settled system versus expeditionary justice

    There’s no question that Masri is entitled to the protections of the U.S. Constitution at his trial. Not so at the U.S. military court in Cuba. Defense lawyers have asked the Army colonel presiding at the 9/11 trial to rule on whether military commissions are governed by the U.S. Constitution. The prosecutors want that issue decided later.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  8. #218
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    9/11 trials: Torture, secrecy on Gitmo hearings menu

    http://tribune.com.pk/story/451339/9...hearings-menu/

    By AFP
    Published: October 14, 2012

    WASHINGTON: The spectre of torture and the veil of secrecy will loom large over a new series of hearings starting on Monday at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for the accused plotters of the 9/11 attacks.

    It will mark the second appearance for the self-proclaimed mastermind, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and his four co-defendants before the special tribunal known as military commissions on the US naval base.

    The preliminary hearings designed to pave the way for the ‘trial of the century’ will take place all week at the outpost in south-eastern Cuba after being postponed more than two months so that the defendants could observe the holy month of Ramadan and due to an Internet outage and a storm.

    “One of the major issues that will be decided is whether the US Constitution, which governs all cases in the US, also applies to Guantanamo Bay or whether Guantanamo Bay is a sort of legal black hole as it’s been described,” said James Connell.

    He is representing Khalid Sheikh’s Pakistani nephew Ali Abd al Aziz Ali, also known as Ammar al Baluchi.

    At issue are the torture and abuse the five men said they suffered at the hands of US authorities, and the classified status that President Barack Obama’s administration says covers details of the suspects’ treatment, citing national security concerns.

    Among the petitions that will be examined during the five days of hearings are government motions to ‘protect against disclosure of national security information’ and to ‘protect unclassified discovery material where disclosure would be detrimental to the public interest.’

    With prosecutors refusing to reveal information deemed classified and holding parts of the debates behind closed doors, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) rights group and 14 media groups are calling for complete transparency.

    “The public has the right to see the proceedings,” said Connell.

    Cheryl Bormann, who is defending Walid bin Attash of Yemen, agreed that the hearings should be part of an ‘open process, a fair process, a transparent process.’

    “The government shouldn’t be able to hide behind classification issues,” she added.

    “If this is going to be a trial about what happened on 9/11… only the truth should come out and not the US government’s spin on the truth until they opened the process; right now, it’s just their spin.”

    Because of the men’s treatment at the CIA’s secret prisons where they were held prior to their 2006 transfer to Guantanamo, ‘there’s a presumptive classification about everything our clients say to us, even the most inaccurate things,’ said James Harrington, attorney for Yemeni Ramzi Binalshibh.

    All documents and other communication between lawyers and their clients are subject to censorship.

    “That’s a clear violation of our rights as lawyers, (we should) be able to talk about things without interference, or Big Brother looking over your shoulder at everything you do,” Harrington told AFP.

    Journalists and a select number of members of the public follow the proceedings from behind soundproof glass, and the audio only reaches them after a 40-second delay.

    The delay allows a military censor to blur statements whose content is deemed a threat to national security.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  9. #219
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    ACLU to Argue Next Week at GuantĂĄnamo Tribunal Against Censorship of Torture Testimony

    http://www.aclu.org/national-securit...ture-testimony

    October 12, 2012

    ACLU Motion Asserts Public’s Constitutional Right to Open Trials and Challenges Government’s Proposed Censorship Regime

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org

    GUANTÁNAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba – Early next week, a military commission judge at Guantánamo Bay will hear oral argument on the American Civil Liberties Union’s challenge to censorship of torture testimony at the trial of the 9/11 defendants. This will be the ACLU’s first appearance arguing before the tribunal.

    Based on the schedule released by the judge, the ACLU expects to be heard Monday or Tuesday. The hearing was originally scheduled for August, but was delayed by Hurricane Isaac.

    In May, the ACLU filed a motion asking the commission to deny the government’s request to prevent the public from hearing any statements by the defendants about their torture and detention while in U.S. custody. On that basis, the motion asks the commission to bar a delayed audio feed of the proceedings, or, in the alternative, promptly release an uncensored transcript.

    “The government’s claim that it can keep from the public the defendants’ testimony about their ‘thoughts and experiences’ of torture is legally untenable and morally abhorrent,” said Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project and the attorney who will argue the motion Wednesday. “There is an ongoing public debate about the fairness and transparency of the Guantánamo military commissions, and if the government succeeds in imposing its desired censorship regime, the commissions will certainly not be seen as legitimate.”

    The government contends that any statements by the defendants’ concerning their “exposure” to the CIA’s detention and interrogation program are classified as “sources, methods and activities” of the U.S. and can be withheld from the public. A group of 14 press organizations will also be arguing next week for the media’s right to access the commission's proceedings.

    The ACLU’s motion is at:
    http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/acl...ess_5_2_12.pdf

    The ACLU’s reply brief to the government is at:
    http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/acl...guantanamo.pdf
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  10. #220
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    Victims' Families Invited to Watch 9/11 Hearings

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/v...7#.UHswkBjBiMM

    By DAVID B. CARUSO Associated Press
    NEW YORK October 14, 2012

    (AP) The families of people killed in the Sept. 11 attacks have been invited to military installations in four states to watch pretrial hearings in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for five men charged with planning or assisting the terrorist strike.

    The hearings, which begin Monday, are closed to the public, but relatives who register in advance can watch on closed-circuit television at forts in New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland and New York City.

    The suspects on trial before the military commission include Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-professed mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks.

    An earlier round of hearings in May was also transmitted to viewing locations for relatives of the victims, survivors of the attacks, and emergency personnel who responded to the disaster.

    Those proceedings were an exercise in frustration for some viewers, as the suspects refused to cooperate with the court, or interrupted proceedings to kneel in prayer.

    Jim Riches, whose firefighter son, Jimmy, died at the World Trade Center, said he planned to view Monday's hearing at Fort Hamilton, in Brooklyn.

    "It's difficult for the families. But it is 10 years later, and we have no justice," Riches said. "I just wish it was being broadcast throughout the whole world so everyone could see it, and could see what these guys are like."

    The nearly 3,000 people killed in the attacks each have many relatives who could see the trial, but attendance at the first round of hearings last spring was light, with only a few dozen people at each site.

    Riches said he didn't expect a large crowd for Monday's session either, largely due to the pain of reliving the attacks.

    "A lot of people are moving on with their lives. A lot of people are just trying to forget about it and move on. But you can't, really. They aren't going to walk back in through the door," he said, referring to the victims.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


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