Bin Laden driver lawyers can interview witnesses

Fri Jul 18, 2008 6:40pm EDT
 
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By Jim Loney

GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE, Cuba (Reuters) - On the eve of the first Guantanamo war crimes trial, defense lawyers on Friday won long-sought permission to question potential witnesses including the alleged September 11 mastermind after a military judge threatened to delay the trial.

The chief prosecutor of the war crimes tribunals said a lawyer for Osama bin Laden's former driver, Salim Hamdan, would get access to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other "high-value" detainees at the high-security prison camp in Cuba.

"We've come to the point where the government needs to move," Judge Keith Allred, a Navy captain, said after prosecutors warned that security concerns might hamper efforts to arrange for a lawyer to question Mohammed before the start of trial on Monday.

"I'll continue (postpone) the trial. You can send your witnesses home," Allred warned sternly. "It'll cost you an awful lot of money."

"We'll solve it. We will be in trial," the chief prosecutor, Col. Lawrence Morris, said. "We will comply with the judge's direction."

Hamdan's lawyers said they had been asking to question the prisoners for seven months and criticized the delay that prosecutors have blamed on national security concerns.

The apparent resolution to a long-running standoff came less than three days before Hamdan is scheduled to become the first prisoner tried in the war crimes court set up by the Bush administration for terrorism suspects after the September 11 attacks.

Hamdan, a Yemeni in his late 30s, is charged with conspiracy and providing material support to terrorists. He faces life in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors say he was a member of al Qaeda's inner circle while defense lawyers argue he was just a driver and mechanic in bin Laden's motor pool.

ON A MISSION FOR MOHAMMED

The defense plans to call Mohammed, the alleged architect of the hijacked airliner attacks on the United States, as a witness to elaborate on a claim made by prosecutors that Hamdan was on a mission for Mohammed in Afghanistan when the driver was captured in November 2001.

Defense lawyers say the "mission" was the evacuation of women and children, including Hamdan's own wife and daughter, from Kandahar, a Taliban and al Qaeda stronghold.

Prosecutors have alleged Hamdan had two surface-to-air missiles in his car and was en route to a battlefield when he was caught.

In addition to Mohammed, the defense wants to question fellow September 11 suspect Walid bin Attash and six other detainees at the Guantanamo prison.

Allred made clear in a previous hearing that he believed Mohammed and others could have evidence that would favor Hamdan and should testify. He told lawyers for the two sides to work out the logistics.  Continued...

 
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