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so much for the "slam dunk"
another nice job by Holder and the Obama Admin.
Alleged Al-Qaeda terrorist Ahmed Ghailani acquitted of all but one charge in embassy bombing trial the panel cleared Ghailani of more than 280 other counts, including the top charges of murder and murder conspiracy. |
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this case was supposed to be a "test case" for future trials....
The first detainee from Guanatamo Bay to be tried in U.S. civilian court has been acquitted on all but one of the more than 280 charges he faced for his alleged role in the coordinated terror bombings of two U.S. embassies overseas. A jury convicted Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani Wednesday on just one count of conspiracy for the 1998 al Qaeda car bomb attacks on American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania — attacks that killed 224. Prosecutors had alleged that Ghailani helped an al-Qaeda cell purchase a truck and components for explosives used in the suicide attack. “This is Ahmed Ghailani. This is Al Qaeda. This is a terrorist. This is a killer,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Harry Chernoff said in closing arguments.On Wednesday, Ghailani was acquitted on all 276 murder and attempted murder accounts, as well as five other conspiracy charges. After deliberating for five days, the jury returned with a guilty verdict on just one conspiracy count, a minor charge for “conspiracy to damage or destroy U.S. property with explosives.” Attorney General Eric Holder, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee under questioning from Sen. Herb Kohl, a Wisconsin Democrat: Kohl: Mr. Holder, last week you announced that the department will bring to Guantanamo [sic in transcript] detainees accused of planning the 9/11 attacks to trial in federal court in New York, as we've talked about this morning. On Friday you said that you'd not have authorized prosecution if you were not confident that the outcome would be successful. However, many critics have offered their own predictions about how such a trial might well play out. One concern we have heard from critics of your decision is that the defendants could get off on legal technicalities, in which case these terrorists would walk free. Does this scenario have any merit? If not, why? And in the worst case scenario that the trial does not result in a conviction, what would be your next steps? Holder: Many of those who have criticized the decision--and not all--but many of those who have criticized the decision have done so, I think, from a position of ignorance. They have not had access to the materials that I have had access to. They've not had a chance to look at the facts, look at the applicable laws and make the determination as to what our chances of success are. I would not have put these cases in Article III courts if I did not think our chances of success were not good--in fact, if I didn't think our chances of success were enhanced by bringing the cases there. My expectation is that these capable prosecutors from the Justice Department will be successful in the prosecution of these cases. Kohl: But taking into account that you never know what happens when you walk into a court of law, in the event that for whatever reason they do not get convicted, what would be your next step? I'm sure you must have talked about it. Holder: What I told the prosecutors and what I will tell you and what I spoke to them about is that failure is not an option. Failure is not an option. This--these are cases that have to be won. I don't expect that we will have a contrary result. |
Holder needs to be fired.
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failure is not an option
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This upsets me.
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I think you're forgetting the part about the guy having to serve 20 to life depending on the sentence.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
I think people.....myself included....prefer he was hanging from the end of a rope
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The problem was not the choice of a court. The problem with this case was Bush’s authorizing the illegal detention, abuse and torture of detainees. Ghailani was held for five years in outlaw C.I.A. prisons and at Guantánamo and was abused and tortured.. The prosecution could not use his interrogation b/c of that and couldn't introduce testimony by another witness because interrogators learned his name from Ghailani’s coerced testimony. That tainted evidence would have been excluded in a military trial. The military tribunals act bars coerced evidence. He had a fair trial and now will prob. never see the outside of the prison.
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Holder: Many of those who have criticized the decision--and not all--but many of those who have criticized the decision have done so, I think, from a position of ignorance. They have not had access to the materials that I have had access to. They've not had a chance to look at the facts, look at the applicable laws and make the determination as to what our chances of success are. I would not have put these cases in Article III courts if I did not think our chances of success were not good--in fact, if I didn't think our chances of success were enhanced by bringing the cases there. My expectation is that these capable prosecutors from the Justice Department will be successful in the prosecution of these cases. |
so he got off?
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I'm sure that the families of the 212 murdered feel that way, yes....
this was the test trial for future prosecutions...he "escaped" all but one of nearly 300 charges...and will appeal the one that he did not escape...not looking good for future trials...dumb decision by Holder and Obama |
I thought the sentence could be 20 to life? If I had anything to do with the case, I'd be pissed at anyone whose actions led to some of the evidence not being allowed in court (civilian or military).
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So what would have been the difference if its was a military court - nothing. Much of the evidence would have still been thrown out. The military tribunals act bars coerced evidence. Blame Bush.
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"One news report suggests the verdict was a compromise to appease one juror who was holding out for an acquittal on all charges." Review & Outlook: The Verdict on Holder - WSJ.com |
The article never mentions the all important fact that that the tribunals act bars coerced evidence.
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"So what would have been the difference if its was a military court - nothing." wait..I apologize..Biden hailed the result and claimed that the outcome would have been the same..or worse in a military proceeding....Vice President Joe Biden is not only painting the single Ahmed Ghailani guilty verdict as a victory, but saying that the outcome of this first-of-its-kind trial is better than if Ghailani had been tried in a military tribunal. Biden....."He's getting a longer sentence. He'll be in jail longer than if any other method were tried." |
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-spence |
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While there is a reasonable argument to the merits of trying suspected terrorists in civilian courts, 95 percent of the public debate is just political mud and fear mongering intended to paint Democrats as weak on national security...and perhaps at the very expense of our national security. The proof is in the pudding. Federal courts have a solid track record of trying and convicting (150 or so since 9/11) real terrorists. The result is a lot of life sentences. Say what you want about the most recent case...he's going to prison and may very well die there. How many terrorism convictions have military tribunals brought? I believe the answer is a thunderous THREE with two of those cases bringing no more than a slap on a wrist. As PaulS rightly observes, this debate is really about what you believe in. Do you respect the Rule of Law and believe in the proven strength of the US Constitution? Or do you find secret detentions, torture and tribunals (that may not even meet international legal standards) to be an acceptable and ethically sound mode by which to operate? Separate the politics from reality and the absurdity of threads like this is painfully clear. -spence |
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maybe watching too much MSNBC? |
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Regardless, even the Judge says had the guy been acquitted on all counts he wouldn't have been set free. Quote:
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-spence |
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wasn't even close? Jury ends day without verdict in NY terror case Deliberations at the first civilian trial of a Guantanamo detainee hit a snag Monday when a juror told the judge she felt threatened by other jurors and asked him to be removed from the panel. By TOM HAYS Associated Press Related NEW YORK — Deliberations at the first civilian trial of a Guantanamo detainee hit a snag Monday when a juror told the judge she felt threatened by other jurors and asked him to be removed from the panel. The note raised the specter of a hung jury because the juror said she was at odds with the rest of the panel as they try to settle on a verdict on terror charges against Ahmed Ghailani in federal court in Manhattan. "My conclusion is not going to change," she wrote without indicating her position. "I feel (I am being) attacked for my conclusion." |
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I guess we could remove the jury from the process if it would help make the conviction easier. We might as well just admit the evidence obtained under torture and/or coercion as well. Hell, if the point of the exercise is to punish the man, we might as well just ship him off to an undisclosed location and rub him out. The point is retribution and not justice...right? -spence |
yeah Spence this is great...did you read any of what you posted?
Acquittal in terror case shows justice system's strength Thursday, November 18, 2010; 8:44 PM THE STUNNING verdict in the first civilian trial of a Guantanamo detainee is an embarrassment for the Obama administration, but it should not deter officials from considering federal court prosecutions for others being held at the U.S. naval base. " fairly pervasive myth that military commissions represent the tough option, while federal courts represent the soft, wussy option. You know the trope:" is this legal lingo? and this guy sounds balance and fair and "separated from politics" A Fair Trial, Without Torture's Taint Updated November 19, 2010, 07:58 AM David Cole is a professor at Georgetown University Law Center, and the author, most recently, of “The Torture Memos: Rationalizing the Unthinkable.” Right-wing commentators, always eager to say “I told you so,” have jumped on the verdict in the criminal trial of Ahmed Ghailani as proof that we cannot try Al Qaeda terrorists in civilian courts. ............................... Andy McCarthy has been very good on this throughout... Coercion Is Not Torture November 19, 2010 12:05 P.M. By Andy McCarthy I empathize with commentators on legal matters. There usually isn’t enough airtime or print-space to explain adequately complex issues. So commentators naturally take shortcuts. Often, the shortcuts do a real disservice. That is consistently happening in the Ghailani coverage, in which experts are conflating two very different things: coercion and torture. The issue comes up because Ghailani’s confessions were not offered into evidence and a key witness identified during interrogation was not permitted to testify. Ghailani was subjected to enhanced interrogation tactics by the CIA in 2004. He repeated what he’d told the CIA to the FBI under the latter’s gentler questioning methods in 2007. Commentators are saying that the witness was barred and the confessions were not introduced because Ghailani was “tortured.” This is not true. It is also a slanderous allegation, and I’m surprised to hear normally careful people throw it around so casually. That’s undoubtedly why the Obama Justice Department has never prosecuted anyone over it, despite ceremoniously reopening torture investigations against the CIA. In any event, while we can stipulate that Ghailani was made very uncomfortable, there is no colorable evidence that he was “tortured” in the legal sense of that term .............. and offers a compromise...something in here for everyone I think How Should Terrorists Be Tried? - Andrew C. McCarthy - National Review Online |
You said name one, I named several. You can try to shoot the messenger, but the fact remains they all make a pretty consistent point.
What's interesting is that of all those indicted in the 1998 US Embassy bombing that are still alive and have been apprehended, two are being held in the UK fighting extradition, one is still in GITMO and all the rest have been successfully convicted in US Federal civilian courts. Why are you trying to distract people from the answer to your own question? -spence |
Hang em high.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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King and McCain know better. |
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A Compromise Verdict, and No Winners - Andrew C. McCarthy - National Review Online |
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