Why is the Obama administration allowing a terrorist who was involved in 9/11 be brought to USA soil
Obamanism
Join Date: 2009-11-20 Member: 69442Banned
I heard that, that person has once said he would agree to pleed guilty in a military tribunal and be excuted. If that is so, why bring him to New York and conduct a trial in civilian court and seek the death penalty? Why not just have him pleed guilty in a military tribunal and executed him? Your thoughts?
Comments
Probably in a world where definitions mean something.
Anyway, there's somewhat of a statement made when trying a criminal in the region he/she committed the crime in. That's why we'd rather hold the trial in New York. If all this is true anyway. I haven't been watching the "news" lately...
When judge warned Mohammed that he faces execution if convicted of organizing the attacks on America, Mohammed said he welcomes the death penalty. "Yes, this is what I wish, to be a martyr for a long time," Mohammed declared. "I will, God willing, have this, by you."
-Wikipedia
Its politics, in the end it doesn't matter. They will get death or life in prison.
When judge warned Mohammed that he faces execution if convicted of organizing the attacks on America, Mohammed said he welcomes the death penalty. "Yes, this is what I wish, to be a martyr for a long time," Mohammed declared. "I will, God willing, have this, by you."
-Wikipedia
Its politics, in the end it doesn't matter. They will get death or life in prison.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
So don't you think that it is a bad idea to try this in New York in civilian court where there is media coverage? Does the Attorney General think it is ok to allow these individuals to be allowed a platform where they can talk all they want and perhaps make a mockery of what they did to those that died and what horrible things transpired over it? In a military tribunal, wouldn't it be less out there and give less opportunity for those individuals to use the legal process as a platform for whatever they want?
If you don't support freedom of expression for the people you disagree with then you don't agree with freedom of expression at all.
There are many reasons to not prosecute these guys in a civilian court, but fear of what they /might/ say is certainly not one of them.
If these guys are enemy combatants then they were entitled to treatment under the Geneva conventions.
If they are non-combatants then they need to be tried in a civilian court.
What the W.Bush administration tried to do was to treat them as both and neither simultaneously. This hypocrisy needs to be corrected in order to help restore the reputation of the US around the world.
I do think these people should have been held as combatants and given their rights as prisoners of war. Given that they weren't treated as prisoners of war, I think they should be tried in civilian courts - more importantly, I think the US public has a right to hear their cases in public to hopefully understand when, if and how Bush etc. broke the system.
So I was basically saying that of all the spurious reasoning I've heard for trying them in a military court, the "fear of what they'll say" is about the most bogus reason I've heard.
<ul><li>The court, because it is made up of military personnel, can hear classified evidence easily without compromising the intelligence or whoever provided it.</li><li>The court has lower evidentiary standards, which befits trials like this where we shouldn't have to provide things like a full accounting of the exact location of all of our evidence from the moment we acquired it, like we would have to do in a civilian trial.</li><li>The military tribunal can be conducted outside of the US or at least in relative privacy, avoiding a public spectacle and the air of a show trial.</li><li>The detainees are suspects in the war on terror, and because it is a war, we should use military tribunals.</li></ul>
There are other justifications but they are, like puzl noted, pretty much nonsense. There are of course counterarguments as to why they should be tried in civilian courts, which in this case have clearly prevailed because that's what we're doing.
NYS Doesn't have a death penalty currently (well, we have the law, but it is unconstitutional, and thus can't be used). His trial can ONLY end in life in prison.
Thoughts?
a Military trial would have executed him, by moving the trial to NYS that is no longer an option. I am honestly unsure of what to make of this.