Prosecutors and defense lawyers in the 9/11 case have wrapped up their first round of plea bargain talks -- and are headed back to the U.S. with topics that require wider government action. My dispatch from Guantanamo Bay on some of the issues, the scene. nytimes.com/2022/03/26/us/…
Unresolved questions include whether, as convicts, the men can still be held in communal confinement and whether the Pentagon will provide civilian-run health care for victims of torture.
This story includes the latest photo of KSM. It was taken earlier this year by the @ICRC at #Guantánamo as part of the Geneva based agency’s photos-for-family program. About what they wear to court… nytimes.com/2019/12/27/us/…
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Update: The military judge has released the death-penalty defender Cheryl Bormann from the 9/11 case, according to people who've seen the 15-page ruling. The Pentagon has yet to release it. One source says the judge declined to abate the proceedings. nytimes.com/2022/03/10/us/…
Now the new chief defense counsel for war court cases, Army Brig. Gen. Jackie L. Thompson Jr., needs to hire a new learned counsel. General Thompson says there is no such qualified lawyer on the team of defendant Walid bin Attash. Hearings could resume as soon as May 9.
In his ruling, the judge, Col. Matthew McCall, makes "no findings" on the adequacy of the inhouse investigation of Ms. Bormann's "performance and conduct" and nor does he make findings on "the veracity of the allegations." (He also offers no details.)
BREAKING: An eight-officer jury has handed down a 26-year sentence to this confessed Al Qaeda courier, starting from his February 2012 guilty plea.
It's symbolic. Defendant Majid Khan has a side deal with a senior Pentagon official for a shorter sentence. nytimes.com/2021/10/28/us/…
The jury panel was given a sentencing range of 25 to 40 years. Prosecutors had asked for the upper end. Defense lawyers asked for the lowest, 25 years, invoking the prisoner's torturous 2003-06 odyssey through the black sites and his contrition.
In the side deal, Mr. Khan's sentence could end as early as February or as late as 2025 -- depending on analysis of his role as a government cooperator.
Based on quick math the U.S. military jury sentenced him to imprisonment at Guantanamo Bay until 2038.
Good morning from Camp Justice at Guantanamo Bay. It is Day 2 of the sentencing hearing in the Majid Khan guilty plea case and we expect the eight-member panel of military officers (aka, The Jury) to deliberate today. nytimes.com/2021/10/28/us/…
They can sentence Mr. Khan to anywhere from 25 to 40 years, don't know that it is a formality. The 41-year-old man who has spent nearly half his life as a war prisoner has a deal with senior Pentagon official that could end the sentence in 2022, could let him go from Guantanamo.
Yesterday was a marathon day. Hearings stretched from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. -- and there's a bunch more to go. Prosecutors get to rebut Mr. Khan's 2+ hour talk to the jury, which at times included him using his hands and legs to demonstrate stress and shackle positions. No chains.
For the first time in public, a detainee has been allowed to describes his torture in more than three years of C.I.A. black site custody. It was graphic, unclassified and offered new, never before disclosed details.
My dispatch from Guantanamo Bay... nytimes.com/2021/10/28/us/…
Mr. Khan, who joined al Qaeda after the 9/11 attacks, expressed remorse for hurting people through his embrace of violence — and also found a way through a maze of national security classifications to realize a decade-long ambition to tell the world what the CIA had done to him.
Mr. Khan juxtaposed his remarks of contrition with previously unheard details of his torture by agents of the United States— the country his Pakistani-American parents and siblings adopted by becoming citizens even as he did not.
Good morning from the war court compound at Guantanamo Bay, called Camp Justice, where today the court will be picking a jury -- they call it panel -- of military officers for a formal sentencing hearing of the prisoner Majid Khan. That's the jury box at the top of this picture.
Unbeknownst to the 20 US military officers who were brought to Gitmo yesterday as a jury pool, this is a formality. Khan pleaded guilty in February 2012, turned government witness and has a reduced sentence deal with the overseer of military commissions. nytimes.com/2021/05/14/us/…
But today and tomorrow we will watch lawyers pick a jury, tell them about Mr. Khan's crimes as an Al Qaeda courier and hear him address the panel. Then, probably tomorrow, the panel will deliberate a for-the-record sentence of 25-40 years from February 2012. (But we know better.)