THE HILL
 

Skelton not happy with 9/11 trials

By Eric Zimmermann - 11/20/09 04:50 PM ET

The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee expressed opposition today to Attorney General Eric Holder's decision to give civilian trials to the 9/11 plotters.

Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Mo.) penned a letter to Holder and Defense Secretary Robert Gates suggesting military trials would be a more appropriate venue for the accused terrorists. 

"As a former prosecutor, I am not yet convinced that the right decision was made in these cases, nor that the presumption in favor of federal criminal trials over military tribunals for these detainees should continue," Skelton wrote.

The Missouri Democrat argued that legislation passed in 2007 brought military commissions up to constitutional standards. He also invited Holder and Gates to testify about the administration's decision before the Armed Services Committee.

"The decision to terminate the prosecution of these self-confessed terrorists in military commissions, transfer them to the United States, and bring them into a federal courthouse for trial raises many serious questions which I would like you both to address in a full committee briefing on December 3, 2009, at 1:00 PM," Skelton requested.

Read the full letter after the jump.


November 20, 2009

The Honorable Robert M. Gates
Secretary of Defense
U.S. Department of Defense
Washington, D.C. 20301

The Honorable Eric H. Holder
Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Department of Justice
Washington, D.C. 20530
 
Dear Sirs:

One week ago today, you announced that the Attorney General, in consultation with Secretary Gates, had determined that the United States government will prosecute in the Southern District of New York five detainees who are currently detained at the U.S. Naval Station in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and are charged in military commissions with conspiring to commit the September 11, 2001 terror attacks.  These detainees are Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarak Bin 'Attash, Ramzi Binalshibh, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali and Mustafa Ahmed Adam al Hawsawi.  You also indicated your intention to withdraw pending military commission charges against these detainees, once federal charges are brought against them.

The decision to terminate the prosecution of these self-confessed terrorists in military commissions, transfer them to the United States, and bring them into a federal courthouse for trial raises many serious questions which I would like you both to address in a full committee briefing on December 3, 2009, at 1:00 PM.  We would be willing to accommodate a classified briefing, upon request, due to the nature of the information that may need to be discussed.
 
As you know, the recently enacted Military Commission Act of 2009, which my colleagues and I carefully drafted, is a vast improvement over the previous military commission system by curing many of the legal infirmities of the latter.  The new law ensures that hard fought convictions stick and are not overturned on appeal due to these structural deficiencies.  I and many others, including the President, have argued that strengthened military tribunals are an appropriate forum to try detainees for law of war violations, such as those perpetrated against us in this country eight years ago.  I am interested to know how the decision was made to take these detainees out of the military system and into federal court, how the July 20, 2009 protocol, “Determination of Guantanamo Cases Referred for Prosecution,” for making this decision was applied in these particular cases, the procedural status of the five detainees who will remain in the military commissions system, the location of future military tribunals, and the budgetary and other implications of these decisions.  As a former prosecutor, I am not yet convinced that the right decision was made in these cases, nor that the presumption in favor of federal criminal trials over military tribunals for these detainees should continue.

I look forward to engaging with you on this critical topic in the full committee briefing to ensure that justice is served and preserved.  I expect that the full committee briefing will also help define the scope of a subsequent full committee public hearing.
 
Should you have any questions concerning this request, please have your staff contact the committee at 202-225-4151.

Very truly yours,       


IKE SKELTON
Chairman





Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/68929-dem-chairman-not-happy-with-911-trials

Comments (13)

Thank you Ike for becoming the first Democrat in Washington to wake up to reality. Now, let's try voting "no" on cap and trade and that miserable healthcare disaster.BY Dem D. Brakes on 11/20/2009 at 17:33
Ike - where was your letter when we trialed the 20th hijacker in ferderal court in 2006? Where was your letter when we trialed the al qaeda shoe bomber in federal court? Why are people so ignorant to historical fact…we have convicted over 100 terrorists in federal court since 9/11. President Bush's former Deputy Attorney General is supporting this decision…when will people wake up? There really is no issue that is safe from political and media perversion. People are looking for political points and media ratings…sad. very sadBY dave13 on 11/20/2009 at 18:50
Obama and Holder and Pelosi and Reid want the Bush crowd that is what this is about!BY Williamq on 11/20/2009 at 20:58
IKE YOU'VE VOTED LIKE A MARXIST YOUR ENTIRE TIME IN CONGRESS. YOU VOTE WITH THE DEMS 97% OF THE TIME. DON'T TRY TO PLAY THE TOUGH GUY NOW. WE'RE ON TO YOU BUDDY. SAY GOODBYE TO WASHINGTON.BY JOKER IKE on 11/20/2009 at 21:24
Thankfully, it doesn't matter one bit that Skelton's "not happy" with civilian trials, the 9-11 attackers are NOT worth sacrificing our Constitution over.BY KingCranky on 11/20/2009 at 21:44
Um, Dave, did you notice the "20th Hijacker" was arrested in the US of A? The "Shoe Bomber" in Boston? Now who is igonorant of "historical fact"?????BY Bill on 11/20/2009 at 22:01
Glad to hear Skelton is opposed to having the trials here in civilian court. However, he's not the first Democrat to write a letter and raise objections. Jim Webb of Virginia expressed his serious reservations to this decision almost immediately after it was announced.BY Claire on 11/20/2009 at 22:03
We have been using military commissions since the time of Washington to FDR and Truman. One of the things which has changed recently, as pointed out in Ike Skelton's letter, was The Military commissions Act of 2009, and I would like to know who these 100 terrorists are we prosecuted in civilian courts. That aside, a terrorist is barbaric, he deliberately sets himself apart from civilized warfare, as spelled out in the Geneva Conventions. It is perverse and makes no sense to give such a combatant more rights than uniformed oficers and enlisted warriors who obey and do their war fighting IAW the conventions. They are illegal war fighters and need to be tried as such and not as civilians who flew in on the Trojan Horse civilian airplanes on 9/11. They were and are not entitled to civilian status. They are transnational jihadi combatants who committed a military attack against the United States. They can get a fair trial in the military venue and it will show we have compassion for the dead of 9/11 rather than the mass murder for Allah bigots. This is both a legal and a national security issue and they are best joined in the military tribunal setting. It will be enough to prove we are better than they are, as if we are going to convince those not already in the know, as they do not give any kind of a trial to anyone. If only the dead could speak.BY graham on 11/20/2009 at 22:49
Man, we done spent TENS of MILLIONS of gr33nbacks building ol' Gitmo ALREADY! Why do we need to spend $100,000,000.00 MORE while our gov't is ALREADY THROWING MONEY EVERYWHERE? And what about Jihad Joe? Marty Martyr? The rest of the 'caliphate crew'? All it takes is 1 copy-cat wannabe to detonate a truck bomb in New York's southern District courthouse! Then it will be - - Hey…Schumer, CHUCK YOU!BY silversurfer on 11/21/2009 at 01:21
For God's sake, KSM already HAD a trial. HE PLED GUILTY. Hang the son of a bitch and save the $75,000,000.Obama's a mad spending whore.BY Richard L. on 11/21/2009 at 09:32

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