The Biden administration succeeds in temporarily blocking a plea deal
for accused 9/11 mastermind
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[January 10, 2025]
By ELLEN KNICKMEYER and JENNIFER PELTZ
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration succeeded Thursday in
temporarily blocking accused 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed from
entering a guilty plea in a deal that would spare him the risk of
execution for al-Qaida’s Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
It is the latest development in a long struggle by the U.S. military and
successive administrations to bring to justice the man charged with
planning one of the deadliest attacks ever on the United States. It
stalls an attempt to wrap up more than two decades of military
prosecution beset by legal and logistical troubles.
A three-judge appeals panel agreed to put on hold Mohammed’s guilty plea
scheduled for Friday in a military commission courtroom at the U.S.
naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
In an unusual move, the Biden administration is pushing to throw out a
plea agreement that its own Defense Department had negotiated with
Mohammed and two 9/11 co-defendants.
Mohammed is accused of developing and directing the plot to crash
hijacked airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Another
of the hijacked planes flew into a field in Pennsylvania.
A small number of relatives of some of the nearly 3,000 victims already
had gathered in Guantanamo to hear Mohammed take responsibility in one
of the most painful chapters in American history.
“It’s very upsetting,” said Elizabeth Miller, who lost her firefighter
father, Douglas Miller, in the attacks and leads a group of 9/11
families supporting the plea agreements and opposing execution for the
defendants.
She sees the deals as “the best way for families to receive finality.”
“It’s unfortunate that the larger government isn’t recognizing it,” she
said by phone Thursday from Guantanamo.
But Gordon Haberman, whose daughter, Andrea, was killed at the World
Trade Center while on a business trip, took heart. “If this leads to a
full trial for these guys, then I’m in favor of that," he said.
The appeals panel stressed that its order would hold only as long as it
took to more fully consider arguments and that it should not be
considered a final ruling.
The court scheduled some of the next steps for Jan. 22, meaning the
fight would extend into the Trump administration.
Defense lawyers had worked to wrap up the pleas by President-elect
Donald Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration. It's not clear whether Trump would
seek to intervene in the military commission's work.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has led the fight to overturn the
politically divisive plea deals, saying a decision on the death penalty
in an attack as grave as Sept. 11 should only be made by the defense
secretary.
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This Monday, Dec. 8, 2008 courtroom drawing by artist Janet Hamlin
and reviewed by the U.S. military, shows Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
center, and co-defendant Walid Bin Attash, left, attending a
pre-trial session at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba. (AP
Photo/Janet Hamlin, Pool, File)
Defense lawyers said in filings that attempts to throw out the
agreement is the latest in the government’s two decades of “fitful”
and “negligent” mishandling of the case. They say the deal is
already in effect and that Austin has no legal authority to throw it
out after the fact.
The fight has put the Biden administration at odds with the U.S.
military officials it appointed to oversee justice in the attacks.
The deal, negotiated over two years and approved by military
prosecutors and the Pentagon's senior official for Guantanamo in
late July, stipulated life sentences without parole for Mohammed and
two co-defendants. It also obligates them to answer any lingering
questions that families of the victims have about the attacks.
Legal and logistical challenges have bogged down the 9/11 case in
the 17 years since charges were filed against Mohammed. The case
remains in pretrial hearings, with no trial date set.
The torture of Mohammed and other 9/11 defendants in CIA custody has
posed one of the biggest obstacles, potentially rendering their
later statements unusable in court.
With that in mind, military prosecutors notified families this
summer that the senior Pentagon official overseeing Guantanamo had
approved a plea deal. They called it “the best path to finality and
justice.”
Austin unexpectedly announced Aug. 2 that he was scrapping the
agreement. After the Guantanamo judge and a military review panel
rejected Austin’s intervention, the Biden administration went to the
District of Columbia federal appeals court this week.
Mohammed’s attorneys argued that Austin’s “extraordinary
intervention in this case is solely a product of his lack of
oversight over his own duly appointed delegate,” meaning the senior
Pentagon official overseeing Guantanamo.
The Justice Department said that if the guilty pleas were accepted,
the government would be denied a chance for a public trial and the
opportunity to “seek capital punishment against three men charged
with a heinous act of mass murder that caused the death of thousands
of people and shocked the nation and the world.”
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Peltz reported from New York. AP reporter Tara Copp contributed from
Ramstein Air Base, Germany.
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