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Blonde sagacity (Free subscription) | yesterday
"A former Marine sergeant facing the first federal civilian prosecution of a military member accused of a war crime says there is much more at stake than his claim of innocence on charges that he killed unarmed detainees in Fallujah, Iraq. In the view of Jose Luis Nazario Jr. , U.S. troops may begin to question whether they will be prosecuted by civilians for doing what their military superiors...
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JURIST (Free subscription) | 08/19/2008
[JURIST] Former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic has moved to replace the judges at his upcoming war crimes trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), according to documents released on Tuesday. Karadzic argues that presiding Judge Alphons Orie is biased against him because he has overseen ICTY cases brought against various other former Bosnian...
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Different River (Free subscription) | yesterday
From Byron York at “The Corner”: The Left and Plans for “Nuremberg-Style” Tribunals for Bush Administration Officials One thing that hasn’t received much attention in conservative and Republicans circles is the ongoing conversation on the left about the possibility of Nuremberg-style war-crimes trials for members of the Bush administration should a Democratic president take office. I’m...
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Tampa Bay Online (Free subscription) | 08/18/2008
A former Marine sergeant facing the first federal civilian prosecution of a military member accused of a war crime says there is more at stake than his claim of innocence on charges that he killed unarmed detainees in Fallujah, Iraq.
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The Post Chronicle (Free subscription) | 08/18/2008
An alleged al-Qaida filmmaker held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, says he will sit out his war crime trial until he is sentenced....
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News: Moldova.org: Politics (Free subscription) | 08/18/2008
An alleged al-Qaida filmmaker held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, says he will sit out his war crime trial until he is sentenced.Ali Hamza al Bahlul, 39, of Yemen is accused of serving as terrorist leader Osama bin Laden's media secretary and producing all ''propaganda products" for the al-Qaida network, The Miami Herald reported Sunday.Bahlul told military judge Air Force Col. Ronald Gregory...
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OTB News (Free subscription) | 08/16/2008
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) — An alleged al-Qaida recruiter said Friday he wants nothing to do with his trial at Guantanamo Bay, calling it a “legal farce” and telling his Pentagon-appointed lawyer not to defend him….
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MSNBC.com (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
An alleged al-Qaida recruiter said Friday he wants nothing to do with his trial at Guantanamo Bay, calling it a "legal farce" and telling his Pentagon-appointed lawyer not to defend him.
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
An alleged al-Qaida recruiter said Friday he wants nothing to do with his trial at Guantanamo Bay, calling it a "legal farce" and telling his Pentagon-appointed lawyer not to defend him.
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News & Observer (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
An alleged al-Qaida recruiter said Friday he wants nothing to do with his trial at Guantanamo Bay, calling it a "legal farce" and telling his Pentagon-appointed lawyer not to defend him.
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Denver Post (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
A military judge Thursday barred a Pentagon official from taking part in a second war-crimes trial at Guantanamo Bay.
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Boston Globe (Free subscription) | 08/14/2008
A Pentagon official who oversees war-crimes trials at Guantanamo Bay has been barred for the second time from participating in a case because of alleged interference.
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Florida Sun Sentinel (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
Ruling will fuel challenges to other trials at Guantanamo A military judge on Thursday barred a Pentagon official from taking part in a second war crimes trial at Guantanamo Bay, providing more ammunition for detainee lawyers who say political interference taints the proceedings.
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Mission & Justice (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
15/8/08 A military judge barred a US general yesterday from further involvement in the war crimes trial of a young Afghan prisoner at Guantanamo Bay, the second time the legal adviser has been blocked from a case. The judge also ordered that the attempted murder charges against defendant Mohammed Jawad, 23, be sent back to the [...]
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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
An alleged al-Qaida recruiter said Friday he wants nothing to do with his trial at Guantanamo Bay, calling it a "legal farce" and telling his Pentagon-appointed lawyer not to defend him.