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USA - Guantanamo Bay
USA - Guantanamo Bay
USA - Guantanamo's Prosecutors will appeal the torture decision

April 29, 2025:

April 29, 2025 - USA. Prosecutors will appeal the torture decision, although they lost a similar appeal this year.

When a military judge threw out a defendant’s confession in the Sept. 11 case this month, he gave 2 main reasons.

The prisoner’s statements, the judge ruled, were obtained through the C.I.A.’s use of torture, including beatings and sleep deprivation.

But equally troubling to the judge was what happened to the prisoner in the years after his physical torture ended, when the agency held him in isolation and kept questioning him from 2003 to 2006.

The defendant, Ammar al-Baluchi, is accused of sending money and providing other support to some of the hijackers who carried out the terrorist attack, which killed 3,000 people. In court, Mr. Baluchi is charged as Ali Abdul Aziz Ali.

He is the nephew of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the man accused of masterminding the plot.

The judge, Col. Matthew N. McCall, wrote that it was easy to focus on the torture because it was “so absurdly far outside the norms of what is expected of U.S. custody preceding law enforcement questioning.”

“However,” he added, “the 3 1/2 years of uncharged, incommunicado detention and essentially solitary confinement — all while being continually questioned and conditioned — is just as egregious” as the physical torture.

Many of the questions confronting the future of the wartime prison have converged in the sentencing case of a confessed commander of Al Qaeda.

But the 111-page ruling was the latest blow to the government’s 2-decade-old effort to hold death penalty trials at Guantánamo Bay by sweeping aside a legacy of state-sponsored torture.

Military judges in the 2 capital cases at Guantánamo have rejected the use of confessions taken from prisoners after they were in C.I.A. detention, illustrating the enduring stain of a Bush administration decision after Sept. 11, 2001, to interrogate and hide suspected members of Al Qaeda in black sites rather than use the court-monitored law enforcement system.

From his capture in Pakistan in early 2003 to his transfer to Guantánamo in 2006, Mr. Baluchi was kept out of the reach of lawyers, a court and the International Red Cross, according to evidence presented at years of pretrial hearings.

In his first days in custody, Mr. Baluchi was deprived of sleep for 82 straight hours. He was shackled at the ankles and the wrists in a way that forced him to stand, naked, with a hood on his head. He was made to fear he would be drowned in a mock waterboarding technique while he was in a dungeonlike setting in Afghanistan.

In time, he was shuttled between five overseas prisons, including in Eastern Europe. Food and clothing were used as rewards for his cooperation with C.I.A. debriefers in a program described in court by 2psychologists who carried out some of the interrogations for the agency.

The judge referred to classified C.I.A. accounts showing that Mr. Baluchi was questioned about Al Qaeda and his role in the Sept. 11 attacks more than 1,000 times before he was transferred to Guantánamo. Then, in January 2007, the Bush administration adopted a concept called clean teams.

The idea was to have agents who had not been involved in previous interrogations question a suspect anew to try to obtain admissible evidence for a court case. In the case of Mr. Baluchi, 3F.B.I. agents questioned him over four days at Guantánamo in January 2007, four months after he was transferred there from a black site.

The F.B.I. agents wrote a memo containing his confessions, which Judge McCall rejected on April 11 as illegally derived from torture.

Prosecutors had argued that Mr. Baluchi’s brutal interrogations lasted only a few days. For the next 3years, they said, he gradually became less afraid of his captors and in time voluntarily answered questions from the C.I.A. debriefers and, later, from the F.B.I. questioners at Guantánamo.

The judge disagreed. “The goal of the program was to condition him through torture and other inhumane and coercive methods to become compliant during any government questioning,” he wrote. “The program worked.”

Uncertainty over whether the statements would be admissible was one reason the prosecutors sought to settle the case with guilty pleas in exchange for life sentences rather than through a death-penalty trial.

Mr. Baluchi and his lawyers never reached a plea agreement. But Mr. Mohammed and 2 other defendants did in a settlement that the Justice Department is now trying to overturn. If the courts uphold the deal and the plea goes forward, Mr. Mohammed has agreed to let prosecutors use portions of his 2007 interrogations at Guantánamo at a sentencing hearing.

Government lawyers have to meet a high bar in appealing to reinstate Mr. Baluchi’s 2007 statements. In January, the military commissions appeals court upheld a judge’s decision to throw out the same type of evidence in the U.S.S. Cole case, the longest-running capital case at Guantánamo Bay.

In it, the appellate panel endorsed the analysis of the judge in that case that the C.I.A. had “conditioned” its captives “to answer questions from United States government officials — be they debriefers, interrogators or interviewers.”

The abandoned Bagram prison at the former U.S. military-controlled airfield in Afghanistan, where the C.I.A. had a black site.

In his third month at Guantánamo, Mr. Baluchi reported to a medical staff member that guards had withheld water from him “for 48 hours because he wrote his name in his shower with steam,” the judge noted.

Court testimony showed that each former C.I.A. prisoner’s cell was equipped with an intercom and individual shower that required little contact with guards. So Mr. Baluchi was punished for writing his name in a place where only he, the guards and the prison’s surveillance system could see it.

Moves between black sites started with a cavity search, the judge said in a section that explained the process in detail. Mr. Baluchi was blindfolded, and his ears and mouth were covered to prevent him from hearing or communicating with others.

“He was diapered and then strapped into a seat or strapped to the floor like cargo for however long the flight lasted,” the judge recounted. The prisoner “did not know where he was going or how long he would have to remain in a soiled diaper.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/29/us/politics/cia-torture-sept-11.html

(Source: New York Times, 29/04/2025)

IRAN - Identified the other two executed in Karaj on April 30
NIGERIA: GOSPEL SINGER OSINACHI’S HUSBAND SENTENCED TO DEATH BY HANGING
IRAN - 4 men executed in Karaj (Ghezel Hesar) on April 30
IRAN - Moslem Darvishipour and Mohammad Salamat executed in Ahvaz on April 30
IRAN - Mohammad-Nabi Zirkari and Ali Kabi executed in Ahvaz on April 30
IRAN - 6 men executed in Mashhad on April 30
IRAN - Three more people executed in Ghezel Hesar on April 30
SRI LANKA: FIVE SENTENCED TO DEATH OVER 2012 YOUTH MURDER IN COLOMBO
IRAN - Houshang Abbasi executed in Tabriz on April 30
KUWAIT: FIVE EXECUTED AS TWO CONVICTS WIN PARDON, ONE AWAITS FATE
SAUDI ARABIA: CITIZEN SENTENCED TO DEATH ON TERRORISM CHARGES
USA - North Carolina. House committee approves HB 270 on death penalty
SRI LANKA: MAN SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR KILLING WOMAN, HIDING BODY IN TRAVEL BAG
USA - Oklahoma. House passes death penalty for first-time child rapists
USA - Oklahoma. House Passes SB 599: Death Penalty for First Child Rape Offense
IRAN - 5 men 1 woman executed in Isfahan on April 28
IRAN - Abolfazl Kianpour Hanged in Ahvaz on April 28
VIETNAM: 9 SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR SMUGGLING 91 KG OF DRUGS FROM CAMBODIA
PAKISTAN: CHRISTIAN IS SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR BLASPHEMY IN AFTER 'DESECRATING THE KORAN'
IRAN - Qader Samimi executed in Nishapur on April 26
IRAN - Rostam Zeinaldini and Abdolsamad Shahbazi executed in Zahedan on April 26
USA - Alabama. James Osgood, 55, White, was executed on April 24
USA - Louisiana. Jimmie Duncan’s conviction overturned
INDIA: SC COMMUTES DEATH SENTENCE OF KERALA MAN WHO KILLED WIFE, 4 CHILDREN IN 2008
IRAN - Mehran Zolfi and Asghar Nourinia executed in Tabriz on April 23
CHINA GIVES SUSPENDED DEATH SENTENCE TO FORMER XINJIANG OFFICIAL FOR CORRUPTION
IRAN - Akbar Shekhi executed in Hamedan on April 23
IRAN - Nezam Sadeghi executed in Zanjan on April 23
IRAN - At Least 5 Prisoners Executed in Karaj (Ghezel Hesar) on April 23
USA - Texas. Moises Mendoza, 41, Hispanic, was executed on April 23

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