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America’s 9/11 Terrorist Trial
By Michael Webster:
Syndicated Investigative Reporter.
Nov 14, 2009 3:00 PM PST
 Photo’s
of Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed at the time of his arrest and now.
Op/Ed
The Obama administration Friday decided to transfer five
of the Guantánamo detainees, including the self-confessed
mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, to the US mainland for
tr ial.
The decision
apparently
is part of Barack Obama's promise to close
Guantánamo Bay by January 2010; with the 200-plus
detainees either tried or released a timetable that
he is now unlikely to meet. Many of the cases are
still under review.
The New York trial in federal court in the southern district
will see the appearance of Mohammed, Walid Bin Attash, Ramzi
Binalshibh, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali and Mustafa Ahmed Adam
al-Hawsawi, all charged with conspiracy to carry out the
9/11 attacks.
It will be one of the trials of the century, the suspected
plotters of the 9/11 attacks in a civilian court only half a
mile from the scene of the crime, Ground Zero.
I love this country, I consider myself a true patriot. But I
do think America’s so called juridical justice system
stinks. The only justice one gets in America is the justice
one can afford.
As far as the monster terrorists are concerned I want those
bastards to burn in hell, but not at the expense of our
constitution and
the
Bill of Rights
therein.
What concerns me about the terrorist being tried in our
court system is it will defy many of the very important
things that Americans are suppose to stand for and will
tarnish the constitution and much of what it stands for.
For President Obama and Attorney General to say that the
terrorist will receive a fair trail is not very realistic.
The U.S. Constitution guarantees all Americans and others
(yes, even terrorist) certain rights in the form of the
“Bill of Rights.
"No person shall be held to answer for any capital, or
otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or
indictment of a Grand Jury ... nor be deprived of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law."
Notice that says "no person", not "no American citizen".
Many of those rights have been gradually eroded since our
founding fathers wrote them and by trying the terrorist in
Federal Court will only erode them further.
One of the cornerstones of what separates the free world
from the rest of the world is our rights under the
constitution. Those constitutional rights guarantees a fair
trial
for all Americans and the terrorist, which means they must
be afforded an attorney to represent them, be able to
confront their accusers, present evidence on their own
behalf, present witnesses and items of physical evidence,
and use subpoena power to subpoena witnesses, records and
other documents and to force witnesses to appear. Further
during trial
cross-examine the witnesses. Be allowed to object to
testimony or exhibits on the basis of the rules of evidence,
and the judge will then decide whether the material in
question may be presented to the jury. They must be able to
see all the charges and evidence against them, have a speedy
trial
and have an unbiased jury of their peers.
Why is the constitution 'worth' protecting? Because
the American Constitution's Bill Of Rights is the
bastion of freedom. America has always stood for fair
trials. We believe in "innocent until proven guilty." We
believe it is better to set 100 guilty men free than to jail
one innocent person unjustly. That is one very important
thing that makes us better than most of the rest of the
world. That is what makes us free Americans.
If that is true
and
I
believe
it
is
than how can the terrorist have a fair trial?
If they don’t have a fair trial
than it will create a mockery our great constitution and
will do more damage to America’s image around the world and
will weaken the constitution even more and likely harm
Americans trying to get a fair trial
in the future. If the President and the Attorney General are
so sure they will get a conviction against the terrorist
than the fix must be in.
Some
of
the
other
problems
Right out of the shut will be jury selection. Jury selection
is likely to be another deeply complex issue. According to
the jurors' handbook for the southern district, potential
jurors should be asked whether they "have any personal
interest in the case, or know of any reason why they cannot
render an impartial verdict".
Other questions are designed to determine "whether any panel
members have a prejudice or a feeling that might influence
them in rendering a verdict". The right of jury selection is
designed to work to find an unbiased jury. Where in the
United states will they be able to find an unbiased jury
much less in New York City where the horrible attacks took
place.
In law, the act or process of questioning prospective jurors
is called Voir dire and consists of oral questions asked of
prospective jurors by the judge, the parties, or the
attorneys, or some combination thereof. It is used to
determine whether prospective jurors are qualified and
suitable to serve on a jury. The purpose of voir dire is not
to educate jurors but to enable the parties to select an
impartial panel. Therefore, voir dire questions should test
the capacity and competency of the jurors without
intentionally or unintentionally planting prejudicial matter
in their minds. Trial judges have wide latitude in setting
the parameters of questioning, including the abilities to
determine the materiality and propriety of the questions and
to set the time allowed for voir dire.
A prospective juror must answer questions fully and
truthfully. The questions are designed to weed out any bias
or preconceived notions of guilt or innocence on the part of
any prospective juror and determine whether a potential
juror is biased, has any knowledge of the case, has heard
about the case through the media, knows any of the parties,
counsel, or witnesses, and if so should otherwise be
excluded from jury. Voir dire is a tool used to achieve the
constitutional right to an impartial jury.
Attorneys may dismiss a juror for cause, such as when bias
or preconceived notions of guilt or innocence are in
evidence; but have a limited number of peremptory challenges
that they can use to dismiss a juror for any or no reason.
Which means when they run out of challenges, persons
selected may very well have bias and preconceived notions of
guilt or innocence. In all of New York City is there anyone
much less twelve jurors of the terrorist peers that are not
bias and/or have preconceived notions of guilt or innocence.
I think not, so where is the guaranteed of a fair trial
in all this?
A Jury of your Peers
A jury of your peers means anyone in your peer group. Back
when this was created it meant that if you were a farmer
your jury would be filled with farmers. If you were a
peasant, your jury would be full of peasants. Considering
the demographics of the population where these terrorist
defendants lived, what kind of people would constitute a
jury of their peers?
Your peers can also mean people of your skin color, religion
etc. such as: An African- American defendant means his peers
are fellow African- Americans, or in this case would the
jurors be Muslims? Or what if all the jurors selected are
Christians?
Will the terrorist defendants have a valid claim for appeal?
Did they receive a fair trial if their "jury peers" were all
Christians?
The 6th Amendment guarantees the accused the right to a
speedy and public trial by an impartial jury. The phrase
"jury of one's peers" is not included in the Constitution,
however, the courts interpret peer to mean equal, i.e., the
jury pool must include a cross section of the population of
the community in terms of gender, race, and national origin.
The jury selection process must not exclude or intentionally
narrow any particular group of people.
A jury of one's peers does not mean a black defendant must
be tried by an all black jury or a Muslim defendant must be
tried by an all Muslim panel. But it does mean the objective
is to select an impartial jury from a randomly selected
juror pool who will be fair, listen to the facts of the
case, and render a just verdict based on the 14th Amendment.
The issue than is does the selection process provide an
unbiased and impartial jury, not if it failed to ensure a
jury selected from a cross section of the community because
Muslims would not be fairly represented in that jury pool.
All potential jurors will have knowledge of the case and the
questions of being able to select an unbiased jury will be
impossible.
According to the government Manhattan, is one of the most
experienced US jurisdictions in trying terrorists, but such
a high profile case, so close to the scene of the crime on
of 9/11, will not only involve major security considerations
but will also have to consider how to present extremely
sensitive U.S. classified evidence that the prosecution will
try to present even though the government claims they will
not need the classified information in order to get a
conviction. The Government says they of new and different
evidence. Even so the defense may be able to raise sensitive
U.S. classified evidence issues as part of the defense.
"KSM", as he the main defendant has come to be known, and
his four co-defendants have already allegedly admitted to
their guilt and have described themselves "as terrorists to
the bone" in a filing before a military commission at
Guantánamo in March and have referred to their alleged
involvement as a "badge of honor". But the fact that
Mohammed was subjected to prolonged torture is likely to
reopen the thorny question of how much of what the men have
said can be relied on not to have been tainted. U.S. courts
have held that any information obtain through torture is not
admissible as evidence. President Obama has already publicly
stated he believes water boarding is torture.
The defense’s case is expected to
try and
force the US government to reveal government secrets and
confront a host of difficult legal issues surrounding U.S.
counterterrorism tactics and other questionable behavior
started after the 2001 9/11 attacks, including the harsh
interrogation techniques, rendition and other methods
adopted by the CIA and our allies. The U.S. Government has
already admitted that water boarding – or simulated drowning
and other techniques was used on Mohammed 183 times in 2003,
before the practice was banned.
Mohammed has already argued with a judge during the reading
of some charges against him and at that time refused to
accept any non- sharia law or an attorney appointed by a
court he does not recognize and is not governed by sharia
law. He has also described the US Constitution as "evil" and
said he would defend himself.
The likelihood that the process will be lengthy was
underlined by President Barack Obama. "I am absolutely
convinced that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed will be subject to the
most exacting demands of justice. The American people will
insist on it. My administration will insist on it," he said.
Obama's comments follow a ban on the use of hearsay and
confessions extracted under torture in military commissions
– words that will surely impact the coming trial process.
Although New York has banned the death penalty, Holder said
he would be asking for the death penalty in this case,
because it was a federal crime.
Addressing concerns about a fair trial, given the use of
torture, he said he would not have ordered the trial unless
he was confident of a prosecution and hinted that there was
evidence that could be presented other than had been
obtained by water boarding or other techniques.
"I am confident," Holder said, "in the ability of our courts
to provide these defendants a fair trial, just as they have
for over 200 years."
Although some legal experts had predicted that Mohammed and
his alleged co-conspirators would be charged for other
offenses, Holder said that they would be prosecuted for the
2001 strikes that launched America's war on terrorism, and
that in many ways defined the course of Bush's presidency.
"They will be charged for what we believe they did," Holder
said, "and that is to mastermind and carry out the 9/11
attacks."
Still there are other problems political problems: What if
the court system or jury finds the defendants not guilty for
what ever reason perhaps some technicality? Would their
Constitutional rights be violated again by re-arresting them
and charging them with other and new crimes? The fallout
from the Obama administration’s order to try the terrorist
in the American judicial system is most likely a big mistake
and will hurt this country and weaken our world image and
put our Constitution in more jeopardy.
Michael Webster’s Syndicated Investigative Reports are read
worldwide, in 100 or more U.S. outlets and in at least 136
countries and territories. He publishes articles in
association with global news agencies and media information
services with more than 350 news affiliates in 136
countries. Many of Mr. Webster’s articles are printed in six
working languages: English, French, Arabic, Chinese, Russian
and Spanish. With ten more languages planed in the near
future.
Mr. Webster publishes
on-line newspapers at
www.lagunajournal.com and
www.usborderfirereport.com and does investigative
reports for print, electronic and on-line News Agencies.
All of Mr. Webster's articles, books/CD's can be read or
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