German Court Criticizes U.S. for Withholding Evidence
Mounir al-Motassadeq, 31, was convicted yesterday in a German court of being a member of an al-Qaeda cell. He was acquitted on the charge he was involved in the 9-11 attacks. This was Motassedeq's second trial. At his first trial, he was found guilty of helping to prepare for 9-11 and sentenced to 16 years, but the conviction was reversed on appeal because the U.S. failed to provide potentially exculpatory information from alleged 9-11 participant Ramzi Binalshibh and others whom the U.S. has been holding in secret, foreign detention facilities for a few years.
For the re-trial, the U.S. said it would provide summaries of interviews with Binalshibh.
In a three-hour judgment, read out before a court in Hamburg, Judge Ernst-Rainer Schudt said that the US Justice Department had refused to co-operate fully with the German court. “How are we supposed to do justice to our task when important documents are withheld from us?” the judge asked.
Although Washington did send transcripts of interviews with two al-Qaeda members in American custody, Judge Schudt complained that the testimony was incomplete and that the two witnesses should have been interviewed in person.
In Motassedeq's case, the German paper Die Zeit reports that the little bit of information from Binalshibh exonerated him of participation in the 9/11 attacks. This is the same argument Zacarias Moussaoui has been making for years. How can he get a fair trial, particularly on the issue of the death penalty, when Ramzi Binalshibh, among others, reportedly has favorable evidence to provide that would show he was not involved in the 9-11 attacks?
< Strange Priorities | Confronting Prison Rape > |