Accused September 11 planner meets his U.S. lawyer
By Jane Sutton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Guantanamo prisoner accused of masterminding the September 11 attacks has met for the first time with the U.S. military lawyer assigned to defend him on war crimes charges that could lead to his execution, the attorney said on Friday.
At least for now, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed has accepted Navy Capt. Prescott Prince as his defense attorney, Prince said by telephone after returning from the remote U.S. naval base in Cuba where the United States holds foreign terrorism suspects.
"I advised him of his rights," Prince said, adding, "I cannot report anything my client told me."
Nor was he allowed to discuss the conditions under which Mohammed is held, he said. But he said he met with him on Thursday and planned to return to the Guantanamo base in two weeks to meet with him again.
"I'm not sure he knows where he wants to go with this," Prince said of Mohammed, al Qaeda's No. 3, who was arrested in a raid in Pakistan in March 2003.
Some prisoners facing charges in the Guantanamo war court have refused representation by U.S. military lawyers and declined to even meet with them.
Mohammed was one of six Guantanamo prisoners charged in February with direct involvement in the plot that killed nearly 3,000 people when hijackers crashed passenger planes into New York's World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania in 2001.
U.S. military prosecutors charged the prisoners with war crimes that include murder, conspiring with al Qaeda, and terrorism. Before a trial date can be set, a Pentagon appointee must approve the charges and accept or reject the prosecutors' request to execute the prisoners if they are convicted. Continued...



