Biden administration battles on against plea deal for accused 9/11 mastermind
The Biden administration doubled down Thursday on its unusual court battle to derail a plea deal that the government itself had reached with accused 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
It urged a federal appeals panel
to block Mohammed's guilty plea from going forward as scheduled Friday at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Defense lawyers described the
attempts to throw out the agreement as the latest in two decades of
"fitful" and "negligent" mishandling of the case by the
U.S. military and successive administrations.
The fight has put the Biden
administration at odds with the U.S. military officials it had appointed to
oversee justice in al-Qaida's attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, that killed nearly
3,000 people. It was the latest tumult and uncertainty in two decades of troubled
prosecution tied to one of the deadliest attacks on American soil.
A new filing Thursday from
Justice Department lawyers argued that the gravity of the "extraordinarily
important case" warranted Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin intervening to
throw out the plea deal.
Asked about the appeal Thursday
after a meeting in Germany with allies about military support for Ukraine,
Austin told reporters he had not changed his mind on the matter and cited the
court challenge in declining further comment.
The deal, negotiated over two
years and approved by military prosecutors and the Pentagon's senior official
for Guantanamo in late July, would spare Mohammed and two co-defendants the
risk of the death penalty. It also obligates them to answer any lingering questions
that families of the victims have about the attacks.
Defense attorneys say that the
plea agreements are already in effect and that Austin has no legal authority to
throw them out after the fact.
At Guantanamo, preparations have
moved ahead for Friday's proceedings, and family members of some of the victims
already have gathered. If the hearing goes forward, Mohammed would swear an
oath in the military courtroom and then defense attorney Gary Sowards would
enter pleas on his behalf to 2,976 counts of murder, along with other charges.
Pleas by co-defendants Walid bin
Attash and Mustafa al Hawsawi would follow later this month. Attorneys say
months of sentencing hearings to follow would give the government an
opportunity to outline its case and allow families to speak of their loss.
The federal appeals panel appears
on track to rule Thursday on the emergency request by the Biden administration.
Legal and logistical challenges
have bogged down the 9/11 case in the 17 years since charges were filed against
Mohammed, who prosecutors say conceived the idea of using hijacked planes in
the attacks. The case remains in pretrial hearings, with no trial date set.
Years of defense and prosecution
testimony have dragged on about how much the torture of Mohammed and other
defendants in CIA custody renders their later statements unusable in court.
With that in mind, military
prosecutors notified families of the victims this summer that the senior
Pentagon official overseeing Guantanamo had approved a plea deal. They called
it "the best path to finality and justice."
Austin unexpectedly announced on
Aug. 2 that he was scrapping the agreement. He argued that a decision on death
penalties in an attack as grave as Sept. 11 should be made only by the defense
secretary.
The Biden administration went to
the District of Columbia federal appeals court this week after the Guantanamo
judge and a military review panel rejected Austin's intervention.
Mohammed's attorneys argued that
Austin's "extraordinary intervention in this case is solely a product of
his lack of oversight over his own duly appointed delegate," meaning the
senior Pentagon official overseeing Guantanamo.
The Justice Department said the
government would be irreparably harmed if the guilty pleas were accepted.
It said the government would be
denied a chance for a public trial and the opportunity to "seek capital
punishment against three men charged with a heinous act of mass murder that
caused the death of thousands of people and shocked the nation and the
world."
Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke
Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a Comment