Ghost Prisoner Two Years in Secret CIA Detention
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Hearing for Majid Khan
C05403115 o (b)(1) (b)(3) Verbatim Transcript of Combatant Status Review Tribnnal Hearing for ISN 10020 OPENING PRESIDENT: This hearing shall come to order. RECORDER: This Tribunal is being conducted at 08:42 on 15 April 2007 on board U.S. Naval Base Guantanarno Bay, Cuba. The following personnel are present: Colonel United States Air Force, President, Commander United States Navy, Member, Lieutenant Colonel United States Air Force, Member, Major United States Air Force, Personal Representative, Sergeant First Class United States Army, Reporter, Major_United States Air Force, Recorder. Lieutenant Colonel_is the Judge Advocate member ofthe Tribunal. OATH SESSION 1 RECORDER: All rise. PRESIDENT: The Recorder will be sworn. Do you, Major-swear or affirm that you will faithfully perform the duties as ~signed in this Tribunal, so help you God? RECORDER: I do. PRESIDENT: The Reporter will now be sworn. The Recorder will administer the oath. RECORDER: Do you, Sergeant First Class swear that you will faithfully discharge your duties as Reporter assigned in this Tribunal, so help you God? REPORTER: [ do. PRESIDENT: We'll take a briefrecess while the Detainee is brought into the room. RECORDER: The time is 08:43 on IS Apri12007. This Tribunal is now in recess. All rise. [All personnel depart the room.] CONVENING AUTHORITY RECORDER: [All personnel return into the room at 08:48.] All rise. PRESIDENT: This hearing will come to order. You may be seated. Good morning. DETAINEE: Good morning. How are you guys doing? ISN # 10020 Enclosure (3) Page1 of50 C05403115 PRESIDENT: Very good, fine, thank you. This Tribunal is convened by order ofthe Director, Combatant Status Review Tribunals under the provisions ofhis Order of 12 February 2007. -
True and False Confessions: the Efficacy of Torture and Brutal
Chapter 7 True and False Confessions The Efficacy of Torture and Brutal Interrogations Central to the debate on the use of “enhanced” interrogation techniques is the question of whether those techniques are effective in gaining intelligence. If the techniques are the only way to get actionable intelligence that prevents terrorist attacks, their use presents a moral dilemma for some. On the other hand, if brutality does not produce useful intelligence — that is, it is not better at getting information than other methods — the debate is moot. This chapter focuses on the effectiveness of the CIA’s enhanced interrogation technique program. There are far fewer people who defend brutal interrogations by the military. Most of the military’s mistreatment of captives was not authorized in detail at high levels, and some was entirely unauthorized. Many military captives were either foot soldiers or were entirely innocent, and had no valuable intelligence to reveal. Many of the perpetrators of abuse in the military were young interrogators with limited training and experience, or were not interrogators at all. The officials who authorized the CIA’s interrogation program have consistently maintained that it produced useful intelligence, led to the capture of terrorist suspects, disrupted terrorist attacks, and saved American lives. Vice President Dick Cheney, in a 2009 speech, stated that the enhanced interrogation of captives “prevented the violent death of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of innocent people.” President George W. Bush similarly stated in his memoirs that “[t]he CIA interrogation program saved lives,” and “helped break up plots to attack military and diplomatic facilities abroad, Heathrow Airport and Canary Wharf in London, and multiple targets in the United States.” John Brennan, President Obama’s recent nominee for CIA director, said, of the CIA’s program in a televised interview in 2007, “[t]here [has] been a lot of information that has come out from these interrogation procedures. -
Homeland Security Implications of Radicalization
THE HOMELAND SECURITY IMPLICATIONS OF RADICALIZATION HEARING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE, INFORMATION SHARING, AND TERRORISM RISK ASSESSMENT OF THE COMMITTEE ON HOMELAND SECURITY HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION SEPTEMBER 20, 2006 Serial No. 109–104 Printed for the use of the Committee on Homeland Security Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/congress/index.html U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 35–626 PDF WASHINGTON : 2008 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402–0001 COMMITTEE ON HOMELAND SECURITY PETER T. KING, New York, Chairman DON YOUNG, Alaska BENNIE G. THOMPSON, Mississippi LAMAR S. SMITH, Texas LORETTA SANCHEZ, California CURT WELDON, Pennsylvania EDWARD J. MARKEY, Massachusetts CHRISTOPHER SHAYS, Connecticut NORMAN D. DICKS, Washington JOHN LINDER, Georgia JANE HARMAN, California MARK E. SOUDER, Indiana PETER A. DEFAZIO, Oregon TOM DAVIS, Virginia NITA M. LOWEY, New York DANIEL E. LUNGREN, California ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON, District of JIM GIBBONS, Nevada Columbia ROB SIMMONS, Connecticut ZOE LOFGREN, California MIKE ROGERS, Alabama SHEILA JACKSON-LEE, Texas STEVAN PEARCE, New Mexico BILL PASCRELL, JR., New Jersey KATHERINE HARRIS, Florida DONNA M. CHRISTENSEN, U.S. Virgin Islands BOBBY JINDAL, Louisiana BOB ETHERIDGE, North Carolina DAVE G. REICHERT, Washington JAMES R. LANGEVIN, Rhode Island MICHAEL MCCAUL, Texas KENDRICK B. MEEK, Florida CHARLIE DENT, Pennsylvania GINNY BROWN-WAITE, Florida SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE, INFORMATION SHARING, AND TERRORISM RISK ASSESSMENT ROB SIMMONS, Connecticut, Chairman CURT WELDON, Pennsylvania ZOE LOFGREN, California MARK E. -
Requests Report
Received Request ID Requester Name Organization Closed Date Request Description Date 12-F-0001 Vahter, Tarmo Eesti Ajalehed AS 10/3/2011 3/19/2012 All U.S. Department of Defense documents about the meeting between Estonian president Arnold Ruutel (Ruutel) and Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney on July 19, 1991. 12-F-0002 Jeung, Michelle - 10/3/2011 - Copies of correspondence from Congresswoman Shelley Berkley and/or her office from January 1, 1999 to the present. 12-F-0003 Lemmer, Thomas McKenna Long & Aldridge 10/3/2011 11/22/2011 Records relating to the regulatory history of the following provisions of the Department of Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS), the former Defense Acquisition Regulation (DAR), and the former Armed Services Procurement Regulation (ASPR). 12-F-0004 Tambini, Peter Weitz Luxenberg Law 10/3/2011 12/12/2011 Documents relating to the purchase, delivery, testing, sampling, installation, Office maintenance, repair, abatement, conversion, demolition, removal of asbestos containing materials and/or equipment incorporating asbestos-containing parts within its in the Pentagon. 12-F-0005 Ravnitzky, Michael - 10/3/2011 2/9/2012 Copy of the contract statement of work, and the final report and presentation from Contract MDA9720110005 awarded to the University of New Mexico. I would prefer to receive these documents electronically if possible. 12-F-0006 Claybrook, Rick Crowell & Moring LLP 10/3/2011 12/29/2011 All interagency or other agreements with effect to use USA Staffing for human resources management. 12-F-0007 Leopold, Jason Truthout 10/4/2011 - All documents revolving around the decision that was made to administer the anti- malarial drug MEFLOQUINE (aka LARIAM) to all war on terror detainees held at the Guantanamo Bay prison facility as stated in the January 23, 2002, Infection Control Standard Operating Procedure (SOP). -
Military Commissions: a Place Outside the Law’S Reach
MILITARY COMMISSIONS: A PLACE OUTSIDE THE LAW’S REACH JANET COOPER ALEXANDER* “We have turned our backs on the law and created what we believed was a place outside the law’s reach.” Colonel Morris D. Davis, former chief prosecutor of the Guantánamo military commissions1 Ten years after 9/11, it is hard to remember that the decision to treat the attacks as the trigger for taking the country to a state of war was not inevitable. Previous acts of terrorism had been investigated and prosecuted as crimes, even when they were carried out or planned by al Qaeda.2 But on September 12, 2001, President Bush pronounced the attacks “acts of war,”3 and he repeatedly defined himself as a “war president.”4 The war * Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law, Stanford Law School. I would like to thank participants at the 2011 Childress Lecture at Saint Louis University School of Law and a Stanford Law School faculty workshop for their comments, and Nicolas Martinez for invaluable research assistance. 1 Ed Vulliamy, Ten Years On, Former Chief Prosecutor at Guantanamo Slams ‘Camp of Torture,’ OBSERVER, Oct. 30, 2011, at 29. 2 Previous al Qaeda attacks that were prosecuted as crimes include the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, the Manila Air (or Bojinka) plot to blow up a dozen jumbo jets, and the 1998 embassy bombings in East Africa. Mary Jo White, Prosecuting Terrorism in New York, MIDDLE E.Q., Spring 2001, at 11, 11–14; see also Christopher S. Wren, U.S. Jury Convicts 3 in a Conspiracy to Bomb Airliners, N.Y. -
View Issue As
national lawyers guild Volume 68 Number 4 Winter 2011 Turn to the Constitution in 193 Prayer: Freedom from Religion Foundation v. Obama, the Constitutionality and the Politics of the National Day of Prayer Gail Schnitzer Eisenberg Anatomy of a “Terrorism” 234 Prosecution: Dr. Rafil Dhafir and the Help the Needy Muslim Charity Case Katherine Hughes The National Defense 247 Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012: Battlefield Earth Nathan Goetting editor’s preface On April 17, 1952, with the U.S. nearly two years into the bloody “police action” against the “Godless Communists” in Korea and Tailgunner Joe McCarthy at the height of his foaming and fulminating power in the Sen- ate, President Truman signed into law a bill requiring presidents to exhort Americans to do the one thing the First Amendment seems most emphatic the federal government should never ask citizens to do—pray. The law establish- ing the National Day of Prayer was the result of a mass effort of evangelical Christians, such as Billy Graham, who rallied support for it during one of his “crusades,” to use the organs of government and the bully pulpit of the presidency to aid them in their effort to further Christianize the nation. After a push by the doddering Senator Strom Thurmond from South Carolina, who for decades expressed a uniquely southern zeal for God matched only by his uniquely southern zeal for racial segregation, the law was amended in 1988 so that the National Day of Prayer would be fixed on the first Thursday of every May. It has since become a jealously guarded and zealously promoted evangelical holiday of the politically active Christian right, who use it to perpetuate the false and self-serving narrative that a nation whose founding documents were drafted largely by Enlightenment-era skeptics and deists was actually designed by a council of holy men to be an Augustinian City of God. -
Download Legal Document
Case 1:08-cv-00437-RCL Document 21-2 Filed 08/28/2009 Page 1 of 26 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ____________________________________ ) AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, ) AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION ) FOUNDATION, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 08-00437 (RCL) ) DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, ) ) CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________) MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT TONY WEST Assistant Attorney General JOHN R. TYLER Assistant Director JAMES J. SCHWARTZ (D.C. Bar No. 468625) Senior Counsel United States Department of Justice Civil Division, Federal Programs Branch 20 Massachusetts Avenue N.W. Room 7140 Washington, D.C. 20530 Tel.: (202) 616-8267 Fax: (202) 616-8202 Email: [email protected] Attorneys for Defendants Case 1:08-cv-00437-RCL Document 21-2 Filed 08/28/2009 Page 2 of 26 INTRODUCTION Plaintiffs in this Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) action, the American Civil Liberties Union, seeks records from the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) regarding records related to the hearings of fourteen detainees before Combatant Status Review Tribunal (“CSRT”) at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo, Bay Cuba. Complaint at ¶ 2 (D.E. 1). DoD and CIA have reviewed, processed and provided to Plaintiffs the requested documents with certain redactions. See Declaration of Wendy M. Hilton, Associate Information Review Officer for the National Clandestine Service of the CIA. (“Hilton Decl.”) ¶ 13-24 (attached hereto as Exhibit A). In making these redactions, the CIA and DoD withheld limited information pursuant to exemptions applicable to classified national security information, personally identifying information, and national security information protected from disclosure by separate statutes. -
1 United States District Court for the District Of
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION 125 Broad Street New York, NY 10004 AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION 125 Broad Street New York, NY 10004, No. Plaintiffs, v. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 1000 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1000 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Washington, D.C. 20505, Defendants. COMPLAINT FOR INJUNCTIVE RELIEF 1. This is an action under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552, and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, seeking the immediate processing and release of agency records requested by plaintiffs American Civil Liberties Union and American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (collectively “ACLU”) from defendants U.S. Department of Defense (“DoD”) and Central Intelligence Agency (“CIA”). 2. Plaintiffs’ FOIA request (“Request”), which was submitted on April 20, 2007, seeks the release of unredacted records related to the hearings of fourteen prisoners 1 before the Combatant Status Review Tribunals (“CSRTs”) at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba (“Guantánamo”). 3. Though defendant CIA has granted plaintiffs’ request for expedited processing, defendant DoD has not. Neither defendant has released any records in response to plaintiffs’ FOIA request. While defendants have published redacted versions of some of the records that plaintiffs seek, they have withheld critical portions in which the prisoners describe their treatment at the hands of U.S. personnel. 4. The publication of these prisoners’ own descriptions of their treatment will not cause harm to national security. Defendants have continued to withhold these records not to protect any legitimate national security interest, but rather to conceal evidence of unlawful activity by U.S. -
SUBJECT: Combatant Status Review Tribunal Inputandrecommendationfor Continued Detentionunder Control ( CD) for Guantanamodetainee, ISN: -010018DP (S)
SECRET//NOFORN // 20311208 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE HEADQUARTERS, JOINT TASK FORCE GUANTANAMO U.S. NAVAL STATION , GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA APO AE 09360 JTF- GTMO-CDR 8 December 2006 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, United States Southern Command, 3511 NW 91st Avenue , Miami, FL 33172 SUBJECT : Combatant Status Review Tribunal Input and Recommendation for Continued DetentionUnder DoD Control (CD) for Guantanamo Detainee Ammar al-Baluchi, ISN: 010018DP (S) JTF- GTMO Detainee Assessment 1. ( S // NF ) Personal Information : JDIMS/NDRC Reference Name: Ammar al-Baluchi Aliases and Current/ True Name: Mustafa al- Baluchi, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, Mohammad Ali, Amanullah , Habib, Jammy Place of Birth : al- Ahmadi, Kuwait (KU ) Date of Birth: 29 August 1977 Citizenship Kuwait InternmentSerialNumber(ISN) : US9PK -010018DP 2. ( U // FOUO ) Health: Detainee is ingood health. 3. ( S //NF) JTF-GTMOAssessment: a. (S) Recommendation: JTF-GTMOrecommendsthis detaineefor ContinuedDetention UnderDoDControl(CD). b. ( S //NF) Executive Summary Detainee is a senior member and planner ofal-Qaida as well as the nephew ofal- Qaida military leader Khalid Shaykh Mohammed (KSM) . Under KSM's direction, detainee helpedplan and facilitate al-Qaida operations and personnel, CLASSIFIEDBY: MULTIPLESOURCES REASON: 12958, AS AMENDED SECTION1.4(C) DECLASSIFYON: 20311208 SECRET NOFORN 20311208 // 20311208 JTF-GTMO-CDR SUBJECT: Combatant Status Review Tribunal Input and Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control ( CD) for Guantanamo Detainee, ISN: -010018DP (S) including the travel of 9/11hijackers to the United States (US) . He is affiliated with numerous other senior leaders of al-Qaida including Usama Bin Laden ( UBL), Jemaah Islamiya ( ) ' leader Riduan bin Isomuddin aka ( Hambali ), Sayf al- Walid bin Attash aka (Khallad ), Shaykh Said al-Masri, Hamza Zubayr and others. -
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March 30, 2006 Stephen J. Toope, Chairman-Rapporteur Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances c/o OHCHR-UNOG CH-1211 Geneva 10 Switzerland Fax: (+41-22) 917 90 06 E-mail: [email protected] Re: General Allegation Regarding the United States Policy and Practice of Rendition Dear Mr. Toope, We write on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (“ACLU”), a non-profit organization that educates the public about civil liberties and employs lawyers who provide legal representation free of charge in cases involving civil and human rights. Since September 11, 2001, the United States government has relied increasingly in its counterterrorism operations on a practice that has commonly become known as “rendition,” or “extraordinary rendition.”1 While the circumstances of individual cases vary, the practice generally involves the abduction of persons either outside or inside the U.S. and their extrajudicial transfer either to U.S.-run detention facilities overseas or to the custody of foreign intelligence agencies. Following their abduction and detention, suspects are subjected to interrogation methods proscribed by United States and international law. Even when suspects are transferred to the custody of foreign agents under the rendition program, the United States often maintains a degree of control over their custody as well as the interrogation process itself.2 Because those subjected to this practice are generally held incommunicado in secret facilities, we believe that the practice either facilitates or effects enforced disappearances as this term has been defined under the Declaration for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance.3 1 See e.g.: Rajiv Chandrasekaran and Peter Finn, U.S. -
Pair of Lone Wolves
Case 6: Khan and the Parachas 1 Case 6: Khan and the Parachas John Mueller April 12, 2015 In his book, Mastermind: The Many Faces of the 9/11 Architect, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, journalist Richard Miniter begins by listing his subject’s admitted (or claimed) involvement with terrorist efforts in addition to 9/11. These include the 1993 World Trade Center and 2002 Bali bombings; plots on Heathrow airport, Big Ben, and the Panama Canal; plans to assassinate Bill Clinton, the Pope, and several prime ministers of Pakistan; two efforts to infiltrate agents into the United States; and the plan for a “second wave” of attacks by hijacked airliners on major U.S. landmarks to include the U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles, the Sears Tower in Chicago, the Plaza Bank Building in Seattle.1 Actually, Miniter does not do full service to his subject’s bloviating. In addition, to the plots on Miniter’s list, KSM declared himself to be the power behind the shoe bomber operation of 2001; an October 2002 attack in Kuwait; plots to attack oil tankers and U.S. naval ships in the Straits of Hormuz, the Straits of Gibraltar and the port of Singapore; plans to assassinate Jimmy Carter; a plot to blow up suspension bridges in New York City; a plan to destroy the Sears Tower in Chicago with burning fuel trucks; plans to “destroy” Canary Wharf in London; a planned attack on “many” nightclubs in Thailand; Barot’s plot of 2004 targeting U.S. financial targets; a plan to destroy buildings in Eilat, Israel; plans to destroy U.S. -
DAYID COHEN - Vefgus - 71Civ.2203 (CSH) SPBCIAL SERVICES DIVISION, Alvabureau of Speoial Services; WILLIAM H.T
I.INITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------x BARBARA HANDSCHU, RALPH DiGIA, ALEX MCKEIVER, SHABA OM, CURTIS M. POWELL, ABBIE HOFFMAN, MARK A. SAGAL, MICHAEL ZUMOFF, KENNETH THOMAS, ROBERT RUSCH, A}INETTE T. RUBINSTEIN, MICKEY SHEzuD,{}], JOE SUCHER, STEVEN FISCHLER, HOWARD BLATT' ELLIE BBNZONI, on bshalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs, DECLARATION OF DAYID COHEN - vefgus - 71Civ.2203 (CSH) SPBCIAL SERVICES DIVISION, alVaBureau of Speoial Services; WILLIAM H.T. SMITH; ARTHUR GRUBERT; MICHAEL'WILLIS; WLLIAM KNAPP; PATRICK MURPHY; POLICE DEPARTMENT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK; JOHN V, LINDSAY; and various unknown employees of the Police Deparhnent acting as undercover operators and informers, Defsndants. x DAVID COHEN, declares under penalty of perjury and pursuantlo 28 U.S.C. $174ó that the following staternents are true and correct: L I am Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence for the New York Cíty Police Department (,,NyPD',), This declaration is based upon personal knowledgo, books and records of the NypD, and upon infbrmation received from employees of the NYPD which I believe to bo true, Z. In my capacity as Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence, I have general oversight of the Intolligence Division, the unit within the N\?D that gathers and analyzes information to assist in the dotection and prevention of unlawful aotivity, including aots of tenor. As such, I have fusthand knowledge of the faots set forth below, I submit this declaration in support of Defendants' Opposition to