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Charges dropped in USS Cole terror
trial
Man accused in 2000 bombing; Obama to meet with victims'
families
WASHINGTON
- The Pentagon's senior judge overseeing terror trials at
Guantanamo Bay dropped charges Thursday against an
al-Qaida suspect in the 2000 USS Cole bombing, upholding
President Barak Obama's order to freeze military
tribunals there. The charges against suspected al-Qaida
bomber Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri marked the last active
Guantanamo war crimes case.
The legal move by Susan J. Crawford, the top legal
authority for military trials at Guantanamo, brings all
cases into compliance with Obama's Jan. 22 executive
order to halt terrorist court proceedings at the U.S.
Navy base in Cuba.
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said Crawford dismissed
the charges against al-Nashiri without prejudice. That
means new charges can be brought again later. He will
remain in prison for the time being.
"It was her decision, but it reflects the fact that the
president has issued an executive order which mandates
that the military commissions be halted, pending the
outcome of several reviews of our operations down at
Guantanamo," Morrell said late Thursday night.
More time to review cases The ruling
also gives the White House time to review the legal cases
of all 245 terror suspects held there and decide whether
they should be prosecuted in the U.S. or released to
other nations.
Obama was expected to meet with families of Cole and 9/11
victims at the White House on Friday afternoon to
announce the move.
Seventeen U.S. sailors died on Oct. 12, 2000, when
al-Qaida suicide bombers steered an explosives-laden boat
into the Cole, a guided-missile destroyer, as it sat in a
Yemen port.
The Pentagon last summer charged al-Nashiri, a Saudi
Arabian, with "organizing and directing" the bombing and
planned to seek the death penalty in the case.
In his Jan. 22 order, Obama promised to shut down the
Guantanamo prison within a year. The order also froze all
Guantanamo detainee legal cases pending a three-month
review as the Obama administration decides where — or
whether — to prosecute the suspects who have been held
there for years, most without charges.
Two military judges granted Obama's request for a delay
in other cases.
But a third military judge, Army Col. James Pohl, defied
Obama's order by scheduling a Feb. 9 arraignment for al-Nashiri
at Guantanamo. That left the decision on whether to
continue to Crawford, whose delay on announcing what she
would do prompted widespread concern at the Pentagon that
she would refuse to follow orders and allow the court
process to continue.
Some angered by Obama's order Retired
Navy Cmdr. Kirk S. Lippold, the commanding officer of the
Cole when it was bombed in Yemen in October 2000, said he
will be among family members of Cole and 9/11 victims who
are meeting with Obama at the White House on Friday
afternoon.
Groups representing victims' families were angered by
Obama's order, charging they had waited too long already
to see the alleged attackers brought to court.
"I was certainly disappointed with the decision to delay
the military commissions process," Lippold, now a defense
adviser to Military Families United, said in an interview
Thursday night. "We have already waited eight years.
Justice delayed is justice denied. We must allow the
military commission process to go forward."
Original at: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29042139
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