AG: Gitmo 9/11 Suspects Heading To NYC To Stand Trial
WASHINGTON (AP/1010 WINS) -- Hauling the professed 9/11 mastermind and four alleged henchmen to a New York courthouse is a risky proposition for President Barack Obama. The move will bar evidence obtained under duress and complicate a case where anything short of slamdunk convictions will empower the president's critics.
Attorney General Eric Holder announced the decision Friday to bring Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four others detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to trial at a lower Manhattan courthouse hard by the site of the World Trade Center, whose twin towers they will be charged with destroying.
The case is likely to force the civilian federal court to confront a host of difficult issues, including rough treatment of detainees, sensitive intelligence gathering and the potential spectacle of defiant terrorists disrupting proceedings. U.S. civilian courts prohibit evidence obtained through coercion, and a number of detainees were questioned using harsh methods some call torture.
Holder insisted both the court system and the untainted evidence against the five men are strong enough to deliver a guilty verdict and the penalty he expects to seek: a death sentence for the deaths of nearly 3,000 people who were killed when four hijacked jetliners slammed into the towers, the Pentagon, and a field in western Pennsylvania.
``After eight years of delay, those allegedly responsible for the attacks of September the 11th will finally face justice. They will be brought to New York -- to New York,'' Holder repeated for emphasis -- ``to answer for their alleged crimes in a courthouse just blocks away from where the twin towers once stood.''
Holder said he decided to bring Mohammed and the other four before a civilian court rather than a military commission because of the nature of the undisclosed evidence against them, because the 9/11 victims were mostly civilians and because the attacks took place on U.S. soil. Institutionally, the Justice Department, where Holder has spent most of his career, has long wanted to reassert the ability of federal courts to handle terrorism cases.
Lawyers for the accused will almost certainly try to have charges thrown out based on the rough treatment of the detainees at the hands of U.S. interrogators, including the repeated waterboarding, or simulated drowning, of Mohammed.
The question has been raised as to whether the government can make its case without using coerced confessions.
That may not matter, said Pat Rowan, a former Justice Department official.
``When you consider everything that's come out in the proceedings at Gitmo, either from the mouth of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others or from their written statements submitted to the court, it seems clear that they won't need to use any coerced confessions in order to demonstrate their guilt,'' said Rowan.
Held at Guantanamo since September 2006, Mohammed said in military proceedings there that he wanted to plead guilty and be executed to achieve what he views as martyrdom. In a letter from him released by the war crimes court, he referred to the attacks as a ``noble victory'' and urged U.S. authorities to ``pass your sentence on me and give me no respite.''
Holder insisted the case is on firm legal footing, but he acknowledged the political ground may be more shaky when it comes to bringing feared al-Qaida terrorists to U.S. soil.
``To the extent that there are political consequences, I'll just have to take my lumps,'' he said. But any political consequences will reach beyond Holder to his boss, Obama.
Bringing such notorious suspects to U.S. soil to face trial is a key step in Obama's plan to close the detention center in Cuba. Obama initially planned to close the prison by next Jan. 22, but the administration is no longer expected to meet that deadline.
Obama said he is ``absolutely convinced that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed will be subject to the most exacting demands of justice. The American people will insist on it and my administration will insist on it.''
After the announcement, political criticism and praise for the decision divided mostly along party lines.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said bringing the terrorism suspects into the U.S. ``is a step backwards for the security of our country and puts Americans unnecessarily at risk.''
Former President George W, Bush's last attorney general, Michael Mukasey, a former federal judge in New York, also objected that federal courts were not well suited to this task. ``The plan seems to be to abandon the view that we are at war,'' Mukasey told a conference of conservative lawyers. He said trial in open court ``creates a cornucopia of intelligence for those still at large and a circus for those being tried,'' and he advocated military tribunals instead.
But Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said the federal courts are capable of trying high-profile terrorism cases.
``By trying them in our federal courts, we demonstrate to the world that the most powerful nation on earth also trusts its judicial system -- a system respected around the world,'' Leahy said.
Family members of Sept. 11 victims were also divided.
``We have a president who doesn't know we're at war,'' said Debra Burlingame, whose brother, Charles Burlingame, had been the pilot of the hijacked plane that crashed into the Pentagon. She said she was sickened by ``the prospect of these barbarians being turned into victims by their attorneys.''
Valerie Lucznikowska, whose nephew died at the World Trade Center, said she wouldn't care if the suspects sounded off in court _ as long as the victims' families got to see them put on trial.
``What are words? It was a horrible thing to have 3,000 people killed,'' she said.
The five suspects are headed to New York together because they are all accused of conspiring in the 2001 attacks, and are likely to face thousands of counts of murder and conspiracy.
The government also announced five other Guantanamo detainees, including the alleged mastermind of the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, would be sent to military commissions to face charges.
Holder said no decision had been made on where commission-bound detainees would go. A Navy brig in South Carolina has been high on the list of sites under consideration.
The actual transfer of the detainees from Guantanamo to New York isn't expected to happen for many more weeks because formal charges have not been filed against most of them.
Other trial locations that Holder considered, including Virginia, Washington, D.C., and a different courthouse in New York City, could end up conducting trials of other Guantanamo detainees later.
The administration has already sent one detainee, Ahmed Ghailani, to New York to face trial.
The four other detainees headed to military commissions in the United States are: Omar Khadr, Ahmed Mohammed al Darbi, Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi and Noor Uthman Muhammed. Their cases are not specifically connected, but two of them are accused of plotting against or attacking U.S. military personnel.
Barry Coburn, a lawyer for Khadr, called the decision about his client ``devastating and shocking.''
Khadr ``was 15 years old when he was detained in Afghanistan as a child soldier and has been locked away in Guantanamo ever since,'' he said.
TM & Copyright 2009 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO & EYE Logo TM & Copyright 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. TheAssociated Press contributed to this report.
11/13/2009 8:37AM
9/11 Mastermind, Other Suspects Headed To NYC For Trial
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and 4 other Guantanamo Bay detainees suspected in the Sept. 11th terror attacks will stand trial in NYC. Share your thoughts/comments here.
11/13/2009 8:49AM
Day in Court
I think the justice system will prevail -- they will spend the rest of their lives behind bars or worse. Hopefully worse.
11/13/2009 9:35AM
Reopen Sept 11 Wounds
What a decision our government has made, lets re-open all the wounds from September 11, 2001 in NYC - Way to go Obama - you should stick to giving out Halloween candy.Let them rot in Guantanamo Bay or prosecute them in Virginia for the deaths at the Pentagon, at least they have a death penalty.
11/13/2009 11:22AM
Next step
What would be the next step? Release them on bond or desk appearance ticket?
11/13/2009 11:25AM
Why NY is right
Why are they prosecuting these guys in NY. They will spend the rest of their lives in jail. When was the last time the death penalty was carried out. Prosecute them in Virginia where they that sentence will be carried out.
11/13/2009 11:34AM
Revenge is Sweet
After NYC jurors find them guilty, send them to Rikers, where the correst punishment will be doled out to them.
11/13/2009 11:42AM
No to the Death Penalty!!!
That's exactly what this piece of ___ wants...I say we let him rot in jail and let the homeys in general population take care of him for the rest of his life.
11/13/2009 1:09PM
A Show Trial is no Substitute for a real Investigation of 9/11
These men were found guilty by TV commentators before the smoking towers fell. A show trial such as this is anticlimactic after a high tech lynching. And a show trial is illogical too in that KSM supposedly confessed to the crime of the century. A newand real investigation of 9/11 is what we need.
11/13/2009 1:41PM
Fitting..
It's fitting that they stand trial in NY and since it's Federal they have the death penalty. I'm normally against the DP, but for these guys I am VERY willing to make an exception!!!!
11/13/2009 2:20PM
Court
I am beyond disgusted about this situation. How can we - AMERICA - bring the same terrorists that terrorized our nation back into our country and try them in regular federal courts?!! These terrorists should be tried in military tribunals, as set forth in our Constitution. Why are we opening the doors to these terrorists? What is the matter w/our president that he believes this is right? I, as well as many others, are completely against this and are very saddened w/the presidents decisions & moves. Certainly this isn’t justice, especially for the victims of September 11th…..
11/13/2009 4:19PM
No Clue
How did this country elect such an incredible fool as the commander in chief...what a shame.