By Terri Moon Cronk
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
FORT MEADE, Md., Aug. 4, 2014 – The judge in the military
commission related to the USS Cole bombing has taken himself “off detail” in
the case, and the newly assigned judge took on three hours of questioning from
defense attorneys today.
The Office of Military Commissions convened a week of
hearings at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, today in the case of alleged
al-Qaida operative and Saudi-born Abd al Rahim Hussayn Muhammad al-Nashiri, the
suspected mastermind of the alleged 2000 Navy ship attack and other terrorist
acts. Reporters who did not travel to the hearing in Cuba viewed the
proceedings from a live satellite feed here.
Army Col. James L. Pohl “undetailed” himself recently and
named Air Force Chief Trial Judge Col. Vance H. Spath to hear the case as of
July 10.
Pohl made his decision to avoid schedule conflicts so he
could judge the case against Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four co-conspirators,
according to a statement made yesterday by Military Commissions Chief
Prosecutor Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins.
Mohammed is the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks against the United States. Pretrial hearings in that case resume Aug.
11.
As court commenced this morning, Spath voluntarily fielded
questions from defense attorneys in a voir dire process often used in juror
questioning. For three hours, Nashiri’s lawyers asked Spath questions ranging
from his knowledge of the case to his qualifications to become the judge.
“I will do my level best to hear both sides [objectively],”
Spath told the defense. “My job is to make sure [the case] is not only
perceived as fair, but is fair.”
In a motion filed with the court prior to today’s session,
defense attorneys called for Spath’s recusal, alleging prosecution wrongdoing
in a 10-year-old case in which Spath was the judge. Spath denied the motion to
recuse himself early this afternoon.
“There is no bias,” Spath said of the former case in his
decision to stay on the bench in the Nashiri case. “The motion is denied.”
The case’s docket includes defense motions to pay for
additional consultants and a government motion to admit photographs and videos
into evidence, chief prosecutor Martins said in his statement. He emphasized
that ongoing work has been “significant” in the case since Nashiri’s last pretrial
hearing in May. He cited the following advances:
-- More than 240,000 pages of material comprising the
government’s case have been disclosed to the defense as required by law.
-- The prosecution and defense briefed 332 written motions
and argued about 235 oral motions in pretrial proceedings.
-- Of those briefed motions, 31 were mooted, dismissed, or
withdrawn; the commission ruled on 207; and 91 others are pending decision.
-- The commission gathered testimony from 10 witnesses, all
of whom were subject to cross-examination to decide pretrial motions.
-- The prosecution and defense have filed 34 exhibits and 18
declarations alleging facts and providing references to the commission.
In addition to charges surrounding the attack on the USS
Cole, which killed 17 sailors and wounded 40 others, Nashiri faces charges from
an attempted attack on the USS The Sullivans in January 2000 and an attack on
the French-flagged oil tanker Limburg in October 2002.
The Cole was in Aden, Yemen, for a routine fuel stop when a
small watercraft approached the ship’s port side and exploded. U.S. officials
allege Nashiri was under the supervision of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and
that bin Laden personally approved the attacks.
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