Osama bin Laden's driver sentenced to less than six years
07/08/2008 20h27
©AFP/POOL/File - Janet Hamlin
US NAVAL BASE AT GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba (AFP) - A military jury on Thursday sentenced terrorist chief Osama bin Laden's ex-driver, Salim Hamdan, to 66 months in prison, far less than the 30 years prosecutors sought.
Taking into account time Hamdan has already served, the sentence for his conviction on charges of supporting terrorism only added an additional five months -- although the Pentagon has indicated it has no plans to free him.
"It is my duty as president (of the jury) to inform you that this military commission sentences you to be confined for 66 months," one of the six military jurors told the court.
The judge had earlier ruled that Hamdan would be given credit for five years and about one month spent at the Guantanamo prison since 2003, when he was initially charged under the tribunal system.
The Yemen native did not receive credit for time spent behind bars before he was charged in 2003 and under US detention.
Shortly before the sentence, Hamdan expressed sorrow and apologized over innocents killed -- an apparent reference to the September 11, 2001 terrorist strikes by bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network -- and appealed for leniency.
"It was a sorry or sad thing to see innocent people killed," Salim Hamdan said in Arabic, translated by an interpreter. "I personally present my apologies to them if anything what I did have caused them pain."
Prosecutors had insisted that he remained a dangerous man and said he should get at least 30 years behind bars for his work for bin Laden, who remains at large nearly seven years after the worst terrorist strikes on US soil.
"Do justice for all the victims of material support for terrorism in this case," prosecutor John Murphy told the court.
Defense lawyers had suggested Hamdan should not be sentenced for more than three years and nine months after their client was found guilty on one charge of providing material support to Al-Qaeda.
The six military jurors began their deliberations on a sentence shortly after 2 pm (1800 GMT) in the first full trial before the controversial tribunals in Guantanamo set up to try suspects in the "war on terror."
©AFP/HO/File
The Navy officer presiding over the case, Keith Allred, advised the jurors that despite photos shown by prosecutors of Al-Qaeda terror attacks, they should keep in mind that Hamdan was not found responsible for those attacks and was found guilty only for having provided assistance to the terror group.
Before the jury began to confer, defense lawyers said Hamdan posed no danger as a former driver, regretted his links to bin Laden and suggested he should be sentenced for no more than 45 months.
"He made a series of bad decisions," defense attorney Charles Swift said. "Looking back they are terrible decisions."
Swift argued that due to his client's alleged work with interrogators the United States had benefited more than Al-Qaeda had, stressing: "When we weigh his culpability, we must consider cooperation."
The sentencing hearing came after Hamdan was convicted Wednesday of providing support to Al-Qaeda, in the first US war crimes trial since World War II.
Wearing a white turban and tan coat as he stood at a table next to his defense lawyers, Hamdan appeared calm as he spoke. He said he had worked for bin Laden because he needed to support his family but had serious misgivings over time about his employer.
Hamdan and his lawyers sought leniency after he was cleared on more serious charges that he conspired and plotted attacks for Al-Qaeda, and pointed to the case of Australian David Hicks.
Hicks pleaded guilty last year in Guantanamo to a similar charge in a plea deal. He was given seven years, which was then suspended to nine months for time already served.
"And they have sentenced him (Hicks) to nine months and the term of his prison is over within his own country, and he is free with his family right now, with his children," Hamdan said.
But the judge later told the jurors to disregard any other case as they weigh a sentence.
Hamdan, aged around 40 and with a 4th-grade education, was captured in Afghanistan in November 2001 and eventually moved to Guantanamo in 2002.
The US Defense Department has made clear that whatever his sentence, US authorities retain the right to keep him in prison for an indefinite period as an "unlawful enemy combatant."
Defense lawyers and rights advocates say the US government would come under intense international pressure to release Hamdan once he serves his sentence.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Guantanamo judge allows disputed interrogationBy MIKE MELIA Associated Press Writer In a heavily redacted ruling, Judge Keith Allred, a Navy captain, rejected defense claims that Salim Hamdan made the May 2003 statement under the influence of sleep deprivation or other coercive programs at the detention center on this U.S. Navy base. The ruling cleared the way for Robert McFadden, an agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, to describe the interrogation to jurors as the final prosecution witness. Hamdan, a Yemeni, faces up to life in prison if convicted of conspiracy and aiding terrorism. McFadden, one of nearly a dozen interrogators to testify at the trial, said Hamdan swore an Islamic oath, or "bayat," to bin Laden. Although Hamdan supported the killing of Jews and Christians on the Arabian peninsula, he told bin Laden he would withdraw from the oath if "the jihad became Muslim on Muslim or political violence," McFadden said. "Mr. Hamdan said he was convinced by the need for seeking jihad," he said. In the nine-hour interrogation, McFadden said Hamdan also provided extensive details about bin Laden's security convoys in Afghanistan. The reliability of the testimony was fiercely contested by defense lawyers, who say Hamdan was a low-level bin Laden employee who never joined his terrorist network. Hamdan took the witness stand Wednesday and denied telling McFadden that he pledged allegiance to bin Laden. Defense lawyers have said Hamdan made the statements to McFadden under the effects of abuse including sleep deprivation, solitary confinement and sexual humiliation. Allred said confinement at Guantanamo is "undoubtedly an unpleasant, highly regimented experience, with instant rewards or loss of privileges for infractions." But the ruling, more than half of which was blacked out, said the discipline imposed on Hamdan did not have any bearing on the interrogation. Earlier in the trial, Allred dismissed other Hamdan statements that he determined were made under "coercive" conditions in Afghanistan. He previously threatened to dismiss the Guantanamo interrogation as a penalty against prosecutors for failing to turn over hundreds of pages of documents to the defense until the start of the trial. McFadden, who provided Hamdan tea, raisins and dates during the interrogation, said Hamdan never complained of abuse to him and appeared to enjoy their conversation. 2008-07-31Military show trial of Hamdan opens at Guantánamo BayBy Tom Eley |
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