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August 1, 2024

Federal prosecutors finalizes plea deals with three 9/11 defendants for LWOP sentences

In this post last year, I noted that families of 9/11 victims had been notified that military prosecutors and defense lawyers were exploring plea deals for certain defendants that would take the death penalty off the table.  Last night, as reported in this New York Times article, it seemingly became official that the "man accused of plotting the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and two of his accomplices have agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy and murder charges in exchange for a life sentence rather than a death-penalty trial at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba."  Here is more:

Prosecutors said the deal was meant to bring some “finality and justice” to the case, particularly for the families of nearly 3,000 people who were killed in the attacks in New York City, at the Pentagon and in a Pennsylvania field.

The defendants Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi reached the deal in talks with prosecutors across 27 months at Guantánamo and approved on Wednesday by a senior Pentagon official overseeing the war court.

The men have been in U.S. custody since 2003. But the case had become mired in more than a decade of pretrial proceedings that focused on the question of whether their torture in secret C.I.A. prisons had contaminated the evidence against them.

Word of the deal emerged in a letter from war court prosecutors to Sept. 11 family members. “In exchange for the removal of the death penalty as a possible punishment, these three accused have agreed to plead guilty to all of the charged offenses, including the murder of the 2,976 people listed in the charge sheet,” said the letter, which was signed by Rear Adm. Aaron C. Rugh, the chief prosecutor for military commissions, and three lawyers on his team. The letter said the men could submit their pleas in open court as early as next week.

The plea averted what was envisioned as an eventual 12- to 18-month trial, or, alternatively, the possibility of the military judge throwing out confessions that were key to the government’s case. Col. Matthew N. McCall, the judge, had been hearing testimony this week and had more hearings scheduled for later this year to decide that and other key pretrial issues....

The three men will still face a mini trial of sorts, but probably not before next year. At the military commissions, where they were charged, a judge accepts the plea, but a military jury must be empaneled to hear evidence, including testimony from victims of the attacks, and deliver a sentence. By that point, the judge has typically resolved litigation over what evidence can be used at the sentencing proceeding.

The deal stirred both anger and relief among the thousands of relatives of those killed on Sept. 11. Some family members had been fearful that the case would never reach a resolution, and that the defendants would die in U.S. custody without a conviction. Others, wanting a death penalty, had pushed the government to get the case to trial, even at the risk of the sentence being later overturned....

Two of the original five defendants were not a party to the deal. Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who was accused of helping to organize a cell of the hijackers in Hamburg, Germany, was found incompetent to stand trial because of mental illness, and his case was severed. The fifth defendant, known as Ammar al-Baluchi, 46, also was not included in the plea agreement and could face trial alone. He is the nephew of Mr. Mohammed and is charged, like Mr. Hawsawi, with helping the hijackers with finances and travel arrangements while working in the Persian Gulf.

August 1, 2024 at 08:09 AM | Permalink

Comments

The logic here is that because th C.I.A. has tortured these men at secret locations around the world, the Government could never obtain the death penalty against these defendants in a wzy that would survive the inevitable appeals. 9/11 was now a long time ago, and it's just time to put these cases to rest and close the door.

Posted by: Jim Gormley | Aug 1, 2024 9:31:20 AM

Good thing we have the death penalty--no LWOP deal without it.

Posted by: federalist | Aug 1, 2024 10:26:15 AM

If these defendants were so guilty, why didn't the government press charges against them and have a court of law with a jury of their peers to decide the verdict and penalty, if found guilty? These military tribunals have more in common with Stalin's show-case trials than they do with a U.S. trial following Constitutional procedures. We're supposed to be a nation of laws, not of vigilantes. If they are innocent, free them!

Posted by: william delzell | Aug 1, 2024 10:40:52 AM

Mr. Delzell --

What an inept comment. They are pleading GUILTY (saying "We did it"). So how could they be "innocent"? And to the extent your complaint about a lack of a charge and trial in the U.S. criminal justice system means you think the Govt lacked traditional proof beyond a reasonable doubt, that doesn't make them "innocent." OJ was found "not guilty," but I can guarantee you he wasn't "innocent."

Posted by: Anon | Aug 1, 2024 11:02:01 AM

"What an inept comment." Meanie.

Posted by: rloquitur | Aug 1, 2024 11:45:31 AM

Kudos, federalist, for your on-topic, productive and polite (and efficient) comment. More broadly, I think the potential value of the death penalty as means to encourage efficient resolution of cases involving horrible murders is a huge blindspot in research and commentary about capital punishment. I know Kent Scheidegger has sometimes raised this important issue in some of his advocacy, but I continue to wish there was a lot more academic research on this issue.

Posted by: Doug B | Aug 1, 2024 12:45:41 PM

At least the comment was on-topic.

Posted by: Meanie | Aug 1, 2024 1:50:10 PM

Honestly, no. The indictment should have been dismissed, and the prisoners sent home. As a strong prophylactic. There is no question that the crimes they are accused of are monstrous, and merit very harsh punishment. There is also no question that it is precisely in these cases where the temptation for the government to engage in torture is at its strongest, and needs to be harshly deterred. This requires freeing of undoubted murderers and is the only way to ensure the government doesn't go out of bounds in giving into the zeal of the moment. See In Re Medley, one of the finest SCOTUS cases in history. If the government knows ex ante that any torture found to have happened on a preponderance of the evidence will mean they will lose the whole case, then it is at its strongest motive not to engage in it. Trouble is that that encourages moving from Bush era torture policies to Obama era extrajudicial killing policies especially with full civil and criminal immunity now likely in the wake of the Trump decision. But that decision needs to be revised as well.

Posted by: Respondent | Aug 1, 2024 1:50:33 PM

Today in Supreme Court History: August 1, 1942
JOSH BLACKMAN | 8.1.2024 7:00 AM

8/1/1942: Military commissions conclude for eight nazi saboteurs. The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of these trials in Ex Parte Quirin.

Posted by: Anon | Aug 1, 2024 1:54:35 PM

9/11 was so horrendous that the whole legal system just fails, quite frankly. Even if the Government is guilty of torture, one has to remember in the context of the time that we didn't know if another attack was imminent. As a personal gut reaction, I would see no problem with summary execution. I do think Anon's comment immediately above is an appropriate precedent, if one wants to demand such.

Posted by: William Jockusch | Aug 1, 2024 2:59:30 PM

Waterboarding ain't torture!!

Posted by: MAGA2024 | Aug 1, 2024 3:56:10 PM

You can blame this travesty on Justice Kennedy and four Dem-appointed justices.

Posted by: MAGA2024 | Aug 2, 2024 10:14:24 AM

Actually, at the time of the Guantanamo Bay cases, there were only two Democratic appointees on the Supreme Court.

Posted by: tmm | Aug 2, 2024 10:25:41 AM

Yeah tmm, that's true. Man oh man were Stevens and Souter bad choices. But the fact remains that Ginsburg and Breyer signed off on that utter joke of a decision. Stevens dissent in Citizens United was one of the biggest jokes ever.

Posted by: MAGA2024 | Aug 2, 2024 2:22:15 PM

You are suddenly starting to sound a lot like federalist, MAGA2024. Are you afraid to use your real (fake) name? You need not be a double chicken, as substance, not the name, will drive any future deletions. I am pretty sure you are trying out your fourth name now, but I will always be supportive of the trans-moniker community as long as comments are on-topic, productive and polite.

Posted by: Doug B | Aug 2, 2024 2:51:05 PM

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