From the Los Angeles Times
Guantanamo prisoner denounces war-crime trial
The
brother-in-law of a 9/11 hijacker tells a military judge that the
terror conspiracy case against him is a sham and has himself removed
from the courtroom.
By Carol J. Williams
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
11:41 AM PDT, April 9, 2008
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA
—
A Saudi prisoner today denounced the war-crimes case against him as a
politically motivated "sham" and had himself removed from the courtroom
in symbolic protest.
Ahmed Mohammed Ahmed Haza Al-Darbi, whose brother-in-law was among the
Sept. 11 hijackers, informed the military judge hearing his terror
conspiracy case that he wanted neither legal representation nor to be
present at his trial.
Al-Darbi, 33, has been charged with conspiracy and material support for
terrorism for allegedly training with Al Qaeda and plotting to attack
ships in the Strait of Hormuz.
Al-Darbi, whose war-crimes case is one of seven inching their way
toward trial by the military commissions, has yet to enter a plea and
made clear he wouldn't be returning for future sessions.
He arrived in court in the white tunic and blue canvas shoes denoting a
compliant detainee and politely told the judge, Army Col. James Pohl,
that he neither wanted to be represented by the military lawyer
assigned to his case nor by any civilian attorney.
"History will record these trials as a scandal," Al-Darbi said. "I
advise you, the judge, and everyone else who is present to not continue
with this play, this sham."
Another detainee charged with attempted murder in a grenade attack that
wounded two U.S. National Guardsmen in Afghanistan also refused to
cooperate last month. Mohammed Jawad, a 23-year-old Afghan who had to
be dragged from his cell for a March 12 arraignment, said he would
boycott proceedings he considers illegitimate.
Pretrial hearings have begun for two other defendants and three await
arraignment, including one this week.
Prosecutors have announced their intentions to try seven other
Guantanamo prisoners but have yet to serve them with the war-crimes
charges announced as long as two months ago. Among those cases awaiting
activation are capital charges against Sept. 11 alleged mastermind
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and five others accused of roles in those
attacks.
The Army lawyer assigned to defend Al-Darbi, Lt. Col. Brian Broyles, is
required by military commissions rules to represent the absent
defendant anyway. But Broyles said he would seek guidance from his bar
association in Kentucky, as well as from the Army judge advocate
general corps, on whether ethical standards would prohibit his
representation of a client who doesn't want him.
Broyles faces a dilemma if he is ordered by the judge to defend
Al-Darbi and advised by legal ethicists against an active role.
"There's every possibility that I'll end up being a potted plant,"
Broyles said.
In his brief address to Pohl, Al-Darbi repeated claims that he had been
abused while in U.S. custody in Afghanistan.
Broyles had told journalists last month that he'd been told by
Al-Darbi that an Army counterintelligence specialist had beaten him and
left him hanging from handcuffs during interrogations at Bagram Air
Base north of Kabul. The soldier, Pfc. Damien Corsetti, was
court-martialed in 2006 for abuse involving another detainee.
Broyles indicated any trial of his client would probably be bogged down
in procedural wrangling for months. Al-Darbi has never been determined
to be an unlawful enemy combatant, a necessary step before the tribunal
can claim jurisdiction in the case.
None of the allegations against Al-Darbi tie him to the Sept. 11, 2001,
terror attacks. His brother-in-law, Khalid al-Mihdhar, was one of the
five Al Qaeda hijackers who commandeered American Airlines Flight 77 on
Sept. 11, 2001, and plowed it into the Pentagon.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times