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Attorney General Eric Holder is sorting through the files of the nearly 200 detainees, deciding who can be brought to court and who should remain in a military commission system, where rules of evidence are more lax and prisoners have fewer rights. Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller said Hambali's fate remains undecided. "The attorney general has made no decision on forum for this case, let alone on where such a case would be tried if it were sent to federal courts," Miller said. The Washington courthouse has a courtroom shielded by bulletproof glass. Recently, U.S. marshals stepped up security for a terrorism trial involving Simon Trinidad, the Colombian rebel leader convicted of taking U.S. hostages. After announcing that Mohammed would face trial in New York, Obama drew criticism from Republicans who said it would make New York even more of a terrorist target, an argument that is certain to be repeated if Hambali is brought to Washington. Obama is one week away from his self-imposed deadline to close Guantanamo Bay, a deadline he acknowledges he will miss. In 2007, Hambali appeared before a preliminary military tribunal and denied any connection with al-Qaida.
[Associated
Press;
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