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Keyword: gitmo

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  • Psychologist critical of Muslim ‘inbreeding’ informed expert’s opinion on Khadr

    10/28/2010 11:46:04 PM PDT · by george76 · 22 replies · 1+ views
    The Canadian Press ^ | Oct 27 2010 | Colin Perkel
    GUANTANAMO BAY-- A Danish psychologist who believes Muslims are raised to be aggressive and that inbreeding has damaged their genes informed a damning expert opinion of the risk Omar Khadr poses to public safety, court heard Wednesday. Under cross-examination by defence lawyers, Dr. Michael Welner said he talked to Nicolai Sennels before coming to the conclusion that the Canadian-born Khadr was “highly dangerous” — an opinion he gave Tuesday on the first day of Khadr’s sentencing hearing. “Massive inbreeding within the Muslim culture during the last 1,400 years may have done catastrophic damage to their gene pool.” Sennels, 34, attributed...
  • Detainee Pleads Guilty at Military Commission Hearing [Omar Khadr]

    10/25/2010 1:45:12 PM PDT · by Cindy · 22 replies
    DEFENSE.gov - No. 972-10 ^ | October 25, 2010 | n/a
    NOTE The following text is a quote: IMMEDIATE RELEASE No. 972-10 October 25, 2010 Detainee Pleads Guilty at Military Commission Hearing The Department of Defense announced that Omar Khadr pleaded guilty today in a military commission. In accordance with a pre-trial agreement, Khadr admitted, in open court, to committing murder in violation of the law of war, attempted murder in violation of the law of war, providing material support to terrorism, conspiracy, and spying. His sentence will be determined at a hearing that begins Oct. 26. Khadr admitted to throwing a grenade on July 27, 2002, that killed Sgt. 1st...
  • Omar Khadr pleads guilty

    10/25/2010 12:31:16 PM PDT · by Nachum · 8 replies
    Toronto Star ^ | 10/25/10 | Michelle Shephard
    Guantanamo Bay, Cuba - It took less than an hour inside a sombre military courtroom Monday for Canadian Omar Khadr to plead guilty to murdering an American soldier and end a war crimes case that has dragged on for eight years. The Toronto-born detainee told military judge Army Col. Patrick Parrish that he understood the charges, his confession, and the conditions of a plea agreement. In addition to pleading guilty to throwing a grenade when he was 15 that fatally wounded Sgt. First Class Christopher Speer, Khadr is convicted of attempted murder, spying, conspiracy and providing material support to terrorism.
  • Judge finds that Kuwaiti Gitmo detainee was no charity worker

    10/11/2010 2:36:35 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 6 replies
    The Long War Journal ^ | October 9, 2010 | Thomas Joscelyn
    On Sept. 15, DC District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly denied the petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed by a Kuwaiti detainee held at Guantanamo named Fayiz al Kandari. The ruling remained classified until late September, when it was released online. Al Kandari and his attorney have repeatedly claimed that he was a mere charity worker in Afghanistan in 2001. Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly disagreed, finding that al Kandari’s story was “implausible” and “not credible.” In particular, Judge Kollar-Kotelly found that al Kandari was overly evasive for a man who claimed to be innocent. Both during his interrogations at Guantanamo, and...
  • Civil Court? Gitmo guys now have rights!

    10/07/2010 8:02:14 PM PDT · by 51773photo · 2 replies
    Barrysobamanation ^ | Oct 7 2010 | Jesse Ellis
    .....If one were to follow the logic of trying the Gitmo guys for trying to hurt us then why is it ok to fire back on them? Isn’t that wrong? In a Civil Court of law, what applies to one party, applies to the other. Aren’t the soldiers being fired on, taking justice into their own hands by firing back? I mean after all, according to the Civil Justice System that the Gitmo terrorists will be held to, isn’t a person considered innocent until proven guilty in ....
  • Vanity: Hey, what about Gitmo?

    10/06/2010 12:42:03 PM PDT · by From The Deer Stand · 5 replies
    Local | October 6, 2010 | From The Deer Stand
    The local discussion group this morning was Gitmo. It wasn't too long ago - I believe when "W" was president - that the Left was having fits that our government was operating that "torturous" Camp Gitmo and demanding that Gitmo be closed. Then came "0" who campaigned that he would close that horrible Camp Gitmo within one year. Well, Gitmo is going great guns, doing the job it's supposed to do, totally ignored by the Teleprompter Reader, and the Left has disappeared. What's up? Where's the outrage?
  • First civilian trial of a Guantánamo Bay detainee halted

    10/06/2010 11:37:40 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 9 replies
    The Guardian UK ^ | October 6, 2010
    The first civilian trial of a Guantánamo Bay detainee was delayed today after a Manhattan judge told prosecutors they could not call their star witness. Judge Lewis Kaplan blocked the government in Washington from calling a man whom authorities said sold explosives to Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, the defendant. Defence lawyers say investigators learned about the witness only after Ghailani underwent harsh interrogation at a secret CIA camp between 2004 and 2006. "The court has not reached this conclusion lightly," Kaplan wrote. "It is acutely aware of the perilous nature of the world in which we live. But the constitution is...
  • Administration halts prosecution of alleged USS Cole bomber

    08/27/2010 3:57:13 AM PDT · by afraidfortherepublic · 46 replies
    Washington Post ^ | 8-26-10 | Peter Finn
    The Obama administration has shelved the planned prosecution of Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the alleged coordinator of the Oct. 2000 suicide attack on the USS Cole in Yemen, according to a court filing. The decision at least temporarily scuttles what was supposed to be the signature trial of a major al-Qaeda figure under a reformed system of military commissions. And it comes practically on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the attack, which killed 17 sailors and wounded dozens when a boat packed with explosives ripped a hole in the side of the warship in the port of Aden. In...
  • No evidence Khadr was tortured: Judge (GTMO prisoner Omar Khadr)

    08/21/2010 6:42:33 PM PDT · by Clive · 8 replies
    MIAMI - A U.S. military judge has ruled there is no credible evidence that a Canadian prisoner on trial in Guantanamo on murder and terrorism conspiracy charges was tortured into confessing after his capture in Afghanistan. In a written ruling released by the Pentagon Friday, Army Colonel Patrick Parrish gave his arguments for rejecting a motion by lawyers of Omar Khadr requesting that confessions made by Khadr to U.S. interrogators should not used as evidence in his trial on grounds they were obtained through torture. A military tribunal trying Khadr opened proceedings last week at the Guantanamo Bay naval base...
  • Lindsey Graham quietly files Gitmo habeas bill

    08/13/2010 7:29:42 AM PDT · by rabscuttle385 · 11 replies
    Politico ^ | 2010-08-11 | Josh Gerstein
    In a move reflecting apparent frustration over stalled talks with the White House on Guantanamo and detainee issues, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is moving forward — without the Obama administration’s blessing — with legislation to address a series of thorny legal questions raised by the long-term detention of terrorism suspects. A bill Graham quietly introduced last week would set standards and rules for legal challenges brought by prisoners at Guantanamo as well as other suspected enemy fighters whom U.S. forces may capture in the future.
  • Commission Sentences bin Laden Aide to 14 Years

    08/12/2010 2:31:53 PM PDT · by SandRat · 3 replies · 1+ views
    WASHINGTON, Aug. 12, 2010 – A military commission at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, sentenced a Sudanese man to 14 years’ confinement yesterday for material support he provided al-Qaida in the years leading up to its Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, military officials reported. Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, 50, pleaded guilty July 7 to two charges of conspiracy to commit terrorism and providing material support to al-Qaida from August 1996 until his capture in December 2001. Prosecutors presented evidence that al Qosi performed an important function in al-Qaida’s ability to recruit and train operatives and to...
  • Officer off Gitmo jury for agreeing with Obama (juror wants to close Gitmo)

    08/11/2010 10:26:11 PM PDT · by Ready4Freddy · 5 replies
    NBc News ^ | Aug 11, 2010 | Michael Isikoff
    GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba — A veteran U.S. Army officer who agreed with President Barack Obama that the Guantanamo Bay prison should be closed was excluded from the jury in a U.S. military commission trial Wednesday after prosecutors objected that he had "pre-conceived" views that might jeopardize their case. The move came as prosecutors and jurors selected a seven-person jury of military officers to hear the case of Omar Khadr, the so-called "child soldier" accused of hurling a hand grenade that killed an American soldier in a firefight in Afghanistan eight years ago. Khadr, now 23, has spent a third of...
  • Bin Laden's cook sentenced to 14 years

    08/11/2010 3:39:19 PM PDT · by Ready4Freddy · 38 replies
    MSNBC ^ | Aug 11, 2010 | MSNBC
    GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — A Guantanamo court on Wednesday sentenced Osama bin Laden's former cook to 14 years in prison. Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al-Qosi of Sudan pleaded guilty last month to supporting terrorism, making him only the fourth Guantanamo detainee to be convicted since the prison, which has held nearly 800 men, was opened in 2002. Al-Qosi could be released much sooner under plea deal that remains sealed, Reuters reported. Al-Qosi avoided a possible life sentence at trial by pleading guilty July 7 to one count each of providing material support for terrorism and conspiracy. The jury of...
  • AP Exclusive: CIA whisked detainees from Gitmo

    08/10/2010 8:15:58 AM PDT · by Mikey_1962 · 23 replies · 5+ views
    AP ^ | 8-9-10 | AP
    Four of the nation's most highly valued terrorist prisoners were secretly moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2003, years earlier than has been disclosed, then were whisked back into overseas prisons before the Supreme Court could give them access to lawyers, The Associated Press has learned. The transfer allowed the U.S. to interrogate the detainees in CIA "black sites" for two more years without allowing them to speak with attorneys or human rights observers or challenge their detention in U.S. courts. Had they remained at the Guantanamo Bay prison for just three more months, they would have been afforded those...
  • State Department: former Gitmo detainee led terror cell in Jordan

    08/08/2010 2:25:00 AM PDT · by Cindy · 8 replies
    LONG WAR JOURNAL.org ^ | August 7, 2010 | By THOMAS JOSCELYN
    SNIPPET: "A former Guantanamo detainee named Usama Abu Kabir led a terror cell in Jordan that was broken up in 2009, according to a new report by the US State Department. On Thursday, the State Department released its Country Reports on Terrorism for 2009. "In April [2009]," the report notes, "four men were arrested and charged with plotting attacks in Israel in retaliation for the Israeli incursion into Gaza." Kabir was one of the four. A fifth member of the cell was arrested in May 2009. Kabir’s arrest was previously reported in the Israeli and Jordanian press. But the State...
  • AP Exclusive:To keep program secret, CIA whisked 9/11 figures from Gitmo before court ruling

    08/06/2010 10:48:56 PM PDT · by STARWISE · 35 replies
    AP ^ | 8-6-10 | Adam Goldman, Matt Apuzzo
    A white, unmarked Boeing 737 landed in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, before dawn on a CIA mission so secretive, many in the nation's war on terrorism were kept in the dark. Four of the nation's most highly valued terrorist prisoners were aboard. *snip* Then, months later, they were just as quietly whisked away before the Supreme Court could give them access to lawyers. *snip* It also shows how insistent the Bush administration was that terrorists must be held outside the U.S. court system.
  • CIA moved Gitmo suspects in 'game to hide detainees from the courts' (GOOD FOR THEM!)

    08/06/2010 4:13:41 AM PDT · by tobyhill · 31 replies · 1+ views
    MSNBC ^ | 8/6/2010 | ADAM GOLDMAN, MATT APUZZO/AP
    Four of the nation's most highly valued terrorist prisoners were secretly moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2003, years earlier than has been disclosed, then whisked back into overseas prisons before the Supreme Court could give them access to lawyers, The Associated Press has learned. The transfer allowed the U.S. to interrogate the detainees in CIA "black sites" for two more years without allowing them to speak with attorneys or human rights observers or challenge their detention in U.S. courts. Had they remained at the Guantanamo Bay prison for just three more months, they would have been afforded those rights....
  • Ex-Guantanamo detainee charged in native Algeria

    07/26/2010 2:19:15 PM PDT · by Berlin_Freeper · 2 replies
    AP ^ | July 26 2010 | AP
    Naji had fought his repatriation to Algeria, saying he feared he would be mistreated or killed there. The case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, but Naji lost his plea earlier this month, clearing the way for him and five other Algerian Guantanamo inmates to be repatriated.
  • Detainee Transfer Announced

    07/24/2010 2:48:24 PM PDT · by Cindy · 3 replies
    NOTE The following text is a quote: IMMEDIATE RELEASE No. 653-10 July 22, 2010 Detainee Transfer Announced The Department of Defense announced today the transfer of two detainees from the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay to the Governments of Spain and Latvia. As directed by the President’s January 22, 2009 executive order, the interagency Guantanamo Review Task Force conducted a comprehensive review of these cases. As a result of that review, which examined a number of factors, including security issues, the detainees were approved for transfer by unanimous consent among all the agencies involved in the task force. In accordance...
  • TWO GITMO DETAINEES TRANSFERRED TO ALGERIA, CAPE VERDE

    07/21/2010 2:29:26 AM PDT · by Cindy · 11 replies
    LONG WAR JOURNAL.org ^ | July 19, 2010 | By THOMAS JOSCELYN
    SNIPPET: "The Department of Defense announced the transfer of two Guantanamo detainees today. Abdul Aziz Naji, a native of Algeria, was repatriated to his home country. Abd-al-Nisr Mohammed Khantumani, a Syrian, was resettled in Cape Verde, an island republic approximately 300 miles off the west coast of Africa." SNIPPET: "US military officials at Gitmo alleged that Abdul Aziz Naji (whose internment serial number at Gitmo was 744) was a member of Laskar-e-Taiba (LET), a Pakistani-based terrorist organization closely linked to al Qaeda. A senior intelligence official contacted by the Long War Journal explained that not only was Naji a member...