[Mb-civic] Another Blown Case? - Washington Post Editorial
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Mar 20 04:05:47 PST 2006
Another Blown Case?
Washington Post Editorial
Monday, March 20, 2006; A14
THE DEATH penalty case against accused Sept. 11 conspirator Zacharias
Moussaoui has barely survived the government's latest bout of
incompetence. In a blatant violation of a court order, a Federal
Aviation Administration lawyer working on the case sent key aviation
witnesses a transcript of the government's opening statement, along with
her comments on it. This led U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema to
exclude those witnesses -- potentially crippling the prosecutors' case
for execution of the only person to face trial for the attacks on the
Pentagon and the World Trade Center. On Friday, Judge Brinkema revised
her order, allowing the testimony of aviation witnesses untainted by the
misconduct. So the case will now limp forward.
Americans opposed to capital punishment, as we are, have little reason
to regret this development. Mr. Moussaoui already has pleaded guilty and
faces life in prison, which is the sentence he should get. While he is
by his own admission an al-Qaeda operative sent here to do America harm,
his links to the attacks -- which took place after he was in custody --
are weak.
This case nevertheless joins a line of big terrorism prosecutions marred
by government misconduct, overzealousness, hyping of charges or just
plain ineffectiveness. A conviction in Detroit had to be set aside
because of prosecutorial misconduct. The government brought spectacular
charges against accused Islamic Jihad activist Sami al-Arian, only to
see a jury reject many of them -- and convict on none -- after a lengthy
trial. Then-Attorney General John D. Ashcroft announced the arrest of
Jose Padilla with great fanfare as the foiling of a plot to detonate a
radiological "dirty" bomb; after holding him for years as an enemy
combatant, the government indicted him for far lesser matters. Mohamed
Qahtani, the Guantanamo Bay inmate the government has labeled the 20th
hijacker -- when it wasn't busy making the same claim about Mr.
Moussaoui -- was subjected to such abusive interrogation that he
probably cannot face trial at all.
More generally, the military still hasn't managed to try a single person
at Guantanamo before its much-vaunted commissions, whose main selling
point was their efficiency. More than four years after the Sept. 11
attacks, the United States lacks a stable, predictable system for trying
accused terrorists.
Prosecuting terrorists isn't easy, as Mr. Moussaoui's trial has
repeatedly illustrated, but much of this is the Bush administration's
fault. The administration failed to work with Congress to create viable
legal structures to handle these cases, proceeding in whatever way
seemed most convenient in any given situation. The results are abysmal.
And, ironically, they undermine the case for the more secretive military
trial procedures the government is trying to create. If authorities fail
so often to play by the rules in the relatively open federal court
system, it's hard to believe their behavior will be better when the
spotlight is turned off.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/19/AR2006031900763.html
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