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Report: US weighs guilty pleas in some 9/11 cases
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-06 14:23

WASHINGTON -- A plan under consideration by the Obama administration would permit Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detainees facing the death penalty to plead guilty without a full trial, it has been reported.

This option would principally be aimed at a group of detainees accused of planning the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks, five people who have already indicated they prefer this resolution of the case, The New York Times said in a story posted late Friday on its Web site.

Report: US weighs guilty pleas in some 9/11 cases
In this photo of a sketch by courtroom artist Janet Hamlin, reviewed by the US military, a sketch of Canadian defendant Omar Khadr is pinned inside a hangar used by the media, following Khadr's hearing in the US war crimes commission at the Camp Justice compound, at Guantanamo Bay US Naval Base, Cuba, Monday, June 1, 2009. [Agencies]

The terrorism-era US military commission format has come under withering criticism from legal and human rights quarters, and American military prosecutions employing this structure and legal rules have for the most part been put on hold since January while the new administration considered other options.

President Barack Obama recently approved the continued use of these commissions. And the Times reported in its story that the possibility of permitting guilty pleas under some circumstances is among a series of options circulated within the administration by a special task force. The newspaper cited individuals who had been briefed on the proposal or had studied it.

Obama already has said that he wants to close Guantanamo by January 2010, declaring it has caused the United States more harm than good and has served as a recruitment tool for the al-Qaida terrorist network.

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One advantage of permitting guilty pleas by defendants in the Sept. 11 case would be that the government would not have to expose harsh interrogation techniques during full trials that would otherwise have to be carried out, the Times said.

It said the proposal to permit guilty pleas -- which are not allowed in the legal framework the US military uses in trials for its own personnel -- would in effect permit the Sept. 11 defendants to achieve a self-proclaimed desire for martyrdom.

The theory behind the ban on such pleas in trials for US military personnel is that prosecutors would have to prove their case in court against any individual facing such a serious charge.

The proposal is that Congress would take up a bill clarifying uncertainty that was built into the 2006 law that it passed authorizing the creation of the military commissions. That 2006 law left unclear the question of whether guilty pleas could be accepted in capital cases conducted via the military commission format.

These pleas under US law are allowed in federal civilian courts and in the courts of most states with capital punishment statutes.