t r u t h o u t | 11.02
http://www.truthout.org/110208E
Cases Against Detainees Have Thinned
Sunday 02 November 2008
by: Del Quentin Wilber, The
Algerians' habeas corpus hearings will begin with fewer and lesser charges.
The six Algerians were scooped up in
The case would seem to be an easy victory for the Bush administration, which is preparing to defend the men's lengthy detentions in landmark federal court proceedings scheduled to begin this week.
But now the government is backpedaling.
The charges of plotting to blow up the embassy have been dropped. Other allegations, made by a witness whom federal prosecutors called a liar in court filings five years ago, have dissolved. The government now justifies the detentions on far narrower grounds: It says the men were planning to travel to
Lawyers who have represented
"We've always said that when the government's lawyers have to stand up and defend their so-called evidence in front of a judge, many of their allegations on paper are going to crumble to dust," said Shayana Kadidal, an attorney for the Center for Constitutional Rights, which is representing many of the detainees.
The government also has withdrawn allegations recently that another detainee is linked to a high-profile "dirty bomb" plot. Together, the legal moves raise questions about the government's claims over the years that it has disrupted imminent terrorism threats.
A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.
Scott Silliman, a former military prosecutor and attorney and a professor of national security law at Duke University, reviewed the government's public court filings, which were heavily redacted. He said he was "surprised at how weak the government's case" is against the Algerians. But, Silliman noted, the Justice Department is holding a potentially powerful weapon in reserve.
The government told U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon that lawyers also had filed a set of secret documents that he should review only if the judge "determines that the weight of the evidence otherwise supports" the Algerians' release.
Attorneys for the Algerians, Robert Kirsch and Stephen H. Olesky, have reviewed other classified documents in the matter and said they want access to that information. Legal experts say filing such secret evidence is unusual but not unprecedented.
The six Algerians won their access to federal court in June, when the Supreme Court granted all
It was the third Supreme Court victory for detainees in a legal battle they have waged collectively for years.
Legal scholars and the detainees' attorneys acknowledge that the hearings probably will not lead to quick release of the captives, regardless of the strength of the government's evidence. They note that the Justice Department is vigorously appealing a federal judge's Oct. 7 order in a separate case that freed 17 Chinese Muslims at
"No matter how fast the judges hold hearings, you are looking at a year or two of litigation, appealing and contesting rulings," said Robert Chesney, a national security law professor at Wake Forest University's law school.
As Justice Department and detainee lawyers have sparred in court over the past few months, some judges have looked skeptically on government claims. A few weeks ago, the government withdrew accusations that a detainee was plotting a dirty bomb attack in the
In the case of the Chinese Muslims, the government did not even present evidence to the federal judge to justify the detentions after its facts and legal theories were sharply criticized by an appeals court in another proceeding.
Leon is expected to hold hearings for the six Algerians over six days beginning Thursday, the detainees' attorneys said. The judge has told the government it must prove by a preponderance of the evidence, the burden in civil cases, that the detentions are justified.
The detainees' attorneys said their clients will be able to watch some of the proceedings and testify by video or audio links.
In a pertinent ruling Monday,
The six Algerians were living in
Over the next three months, Bosnian authorities investigated the men's backgrounds but found no links to terrorism, according to court filings by Alija Behmen, who at the time was
The Bosnian Supreme Court ordered them released on Jan. 17, 2002, ruling that there was not enough evidence to hold them. The Bosnian Human Rights Chamber issued a separate decision saying the men could not be deported.
But under pressure from the
Besides withdrawing the bombing accusations, Justice Department lawyers also have pulled back on charges that one of the men trained at a military-skills camp in
Those allegations were made by a felon sentenced to 10 years in prison on federal racketeering charges. In 2003, prosecutors wrote in court filings that the man, Enaam M. Arnaout, former director of an Islamic charity who had alleged ties to Osama bin Laden, was not reliable and "lied openly and notoriously" about his conduct.
"The government's much broader, far-reaching allegations are starting to collapse," said Kirsch, one of the lawyers representing the Algerians in federal court.
By dropping the bomb-plotting accusation and Arnaout's statements, the government has been left to argue that one of the men, Belkacem Bensayah, was an "al-Qaeda member, facilitator and financier" and had "significant ties to other members" of the terrorist group, according to federal court filings. They have alleged that the other Algerians had ties to Bensayah and that some worked for charities later accused by the
U.S. authorities have said in military court that Bensayah "had conversations" with al-Qaeda operative Zayn al-Abidin Muhammed Hussein, better known as Abu Zubaida - who was subjected to waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques while in CIA custody - and made 70 phone calls to Afghanistan after the Sept. 11. attacks.
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