Guantanamo judge nixes Sept. 11 suspect's
bid for new lawyers
Send a link to a friend
[July 21, 2016]
By Lacey Johnson
FORT MEADE, Md. (Reuters) - A Yemeni man
facing charges relating to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States had his bid to fire his court-appointed lawyers denied again by a
judge on Wednesday at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Suspected al Qaeda training camp leader Walid bin Attash, who could face
the death penalty if convicted, has been fighting to replace his lead
attorneys in the case since October. The judge, U.S. Army Colonel James
Pohl, denied the request for a third time, saying bin Attash failed to
show good cause for the move.
"Any attorney that approaches me ... I might lose control over myself,"
bin Attash said through an interpreter at the military tribunal. He said
he had not met with his legal team in five months.
"They begin feeling so powerful that they can do whatever they want,"
said bin Attash, who has been held at the Guantanamo prison for almost
10 years.
His lead defense attorneys, Cheryl Bormann and Michael Schwartz, kept
their distance by opting to sit at the back of the courtroom.

Bormann, a Chicago lawyer who has represented bin Attash since 2011,
said in February that years of isolated detention and torture had turned
him into "a damaged human being" who no longer trusted her.
She blamed the breakdown in attorney-client trust largely on the U.S.
government, which she accused of secretly recording their meetings and
seizing legal documents from bin Attash's cell. She also cited an
18-month delay caused by an FBI investigation of defense attorneys.
Pohl said that bin Attash may choose to represent himself. Bin Attash is
expected to make a decision on Thursday on representing himself.
[to top of second column] |

Walid Bin Attash, also spelled Waleed bin Attash, appears at his
arraignment as an accused 9/11 co-conspirator in this courtroom
sketch reviewed and approved for release by a U.S. military security
official, at Guantanamo Bay Navy Base, Cuba, in this May 5, 2012
file photo. REUTERS/Janet Hamlin/Pool

Bin Attash and his four co-defendants are charged with hijacking,
terrorism, war crimes and conspiring with militants who slammed
hijacked airliners into New York's World Trade Center, the Pentagon
outside Washington and a Pennsylvania field. Almost 3,000 people
were killed in the 2001 attacks.
Nearly 60 motions are scheduled for the two-week hearing. They
include questions about prisoner communications and what evidence
the prosecution will provide about the years the men spent at secret
Central Intelligence Agency prisons.
The hearing was monitored over closed-circuit television at a press
room at Fort Meade, outside Washington.
(Editing by Ian Simpson and Will Dunham)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |