by Laura Pitter
Brig. Gen. Mark Martins,
chief prosecutor for the Office of Military Commissions, has lately appeared at
bar association conferences promoting “reformed military commissions” at Guantanamo . Speaking to
the New York City
bar association on January 11, Martins said the military commissions were
“comparable to federal courts in their incorporation of all of the fundamental
guarantees of a fair and just trial demanded by our values.” Indeed, a new
masthead on the military commission website, put up after Martins took over,
reads: “Fairness, Transparency, Justice.”
Yet this week, behind thick
bulletproof glass in a secure hangar-like courtroom at Guantanamo , I saw vast differences between
the two systems. One notices first the physical – the few observers permitted
to visit the isolated island base reach the courthouse through a maze of
walkways secured by high dark-mesh fences, guards and double barbed wire on
both sides. Instead of sitting in the courtroom, observers sit in an adjoining
room, behind glass, and hear voices on 40-second delay to allow court security
officers to cut off the audio should any classified information be uttered. In
the dock this week was Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, a Saudi of Yemeni descent
accused of planning and participating in the bombing of the destroyer, the USS Cole,
on October 12, 2000. The attack killed 17 US servicemen and injured many
more. With US
service members killed a federal court clearly would have jurisdiction over the
case, so the government must have some other reason for choosing a military
commission.
Nashiri’s is the first death penalty case to move forward in the military commissions. The fact that it is just being heard now, nine years after he was apprehended, demonstrates one of the starkest differences between the military commissions and federal courts – the absence of any real right to a speedy trial. This type of delay would never occur in federal court and greatly prejudices both sides, as memories fade and witnesses disappear.
Further, nearly every
substantive issue litigated in Guantanamo
this week would never have arisen in civilian court. For example, the defense
asked the judge to order the military to stop reading mail marked
attorney-client privileged. In a federal prison, while mail might be inspected
for physical contraband, a warden wouldn’t read clearly marked legal mail to
determine if it was truly a privileged communication.
The defense also sought
permission from the judge alone to request funds for expert witnesses, a
routine motion in federal court. But in the military commissions, the defense normally
shares its request with the prosecution, potentially revealing its case theory
and litigation strategy. Observers and reporters dozed during the hours of
debate about whether defense email could be encrypted –- a seemingly dry issue
until one realizes that request was being made because the Defense Department
has been reading all the defense attorneys’ email.
The defense has still not
received roughly 70,000 pages of documents deemed relevant and material to the
defense. Much of the evidence in the case is classified. After his capture,
Nashiri was held in a secret CIA “black site” for four years, and waterboarded
— a form of mock execution by inducing near suffocation long considered torture
under US and international law. He was also threatened with a gun and, later,
with a revving power drill near his head while he was hooded but otherwise
naked. Details of his torture, while available in the public domain, are
largely treated as classified.
The classified nature of the
evidence means the defense only gets summaries of parts the prosecution deems
relevant and that the judge approves. A request by the defense to challenge the
accuracy of the summaries was denied. But civilian judges recognize that the
parties should be able to challenge summaries, and may do so with a motion to
reconsider.
Despite the volume of
documents, the prosecution pressed for trial to begin on March 3. That type of
timeline is unheard of in federal court, especially in a death penalty case.
The federal court case against 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui took more
than four years. Richard Kammen, one of Nashiri’s defense
attorneys, called the prosecution’s proposed schedule “a time line for secret
justice, for expedient justice, for under-resourced defense justice, and for justice
that is fundamentally unfair.” He asked for ten months to two years depending
upon whether he gets the resources and access to documents he needs. Ultimately
the judge did not fix a trial date but gave the defense only two months to read
all the documents and file any motions to challenge their adequacy.
Even in the presentation of
evidence, the military commissions have vastly different rules of evidence.
Statements from the accused obtained by torture are prohibited. But evidence
derived from other types of coercion may be admitted. In federal court, any
evidence derived from coercion would be barred, absent a showing that it would
have been discovered in another lawful way. Also, unlike in federal court or
the US
courts martial system, multiple levels of hearsay are admissible (like a memo
reporting on a conversation), denying a defendant any genuine right to confront
witnesses against him.
Given the stark differences
on display this week, it was startling to hear Martins say after the
proceedings that military commissions “like federal court and courts martial”
provide a fair system of justice. The US does not need to use this
fundamentally flawed military commission system. As Martins himself admits, and
the Obama administration has acknowledged, detainees can be prosecuted in
either system for virtually the same offenses.
Whether one agrees with the
use of military commissions or not, Martins and the Obama administration should
at least be honest about the differences: as demonstrated by the proceedings
this week, fundamental procedural protections afforded defendants in federal
courts simply do not exist in military commissions. And without comparable
fairness and transparency, the promise of justice remains a big question mark.
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