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Ex-General to Oversee Guantanamo Trials
AP ^ | Dec 30, 3:02 PM (ET) | By ROBERT BURNS

Posted on 12/30/2003 12:23:40 PM PST by Dog

Ex-General to Oversee Guantanamo Trials

Dec 30, 3:02 PM (ET)

By ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON (AP) - A retired Army general will oversee military tribunals for suspected terrorists held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, including approving charges, the Pentagon said Tuesday.

Chosen for the job was John D. Altenburg, Jr., who retired as a two-star general in 2002. His last military assignment was assistant judge advocate general for the Department of the Army.

None of the 660 suspected terrorists held at Guantanamo Bay has been charged, and although the Pentagon has not said when it expects to begin military trials, the first is expected soon. It would be the United States' first use of military tribunals since World War II.

Human rights organizations have called on the United States to put on trial or release all the prisoners - or at least say what is planned for them. The groups complain that the open-ended, indefinite detentions have led to a deterioration in mental health, and dozens of suicide attempts, at the prison set up shortly after the start of the war in Afghanistan in October 2001.

The Pentagon on Tuesday also named four members of a review panel that would hear appeals of cases decided by military tribunals, and said they will be commissioned as Army major generals for their two-year term on the panel.

The four are:

- Griffin B. Bell, the former U.S. attorney general in the Carter administration and former U.S. circuit judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

- Edward G. Biester, a Court of Common Pleas judge in Bucks County, Pa. He also is a former Pennsylvania attorney general and former member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

- William T. Coleman, Jr., a former secretary of transportation.

- Frank Williams, chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court.

One or more additional review panel members may be named later, officials said.

In a related move, the Defense Department's top lawyer, William J. Haynes II, issued Military Commission Instruction No. 9, spelling out the procedures for appeals of tribunal decisions.

Altenburg, who served for 28 years as an Army lawyer, will serve as "appointing authority" for the military tribunals in a civilian capacity. He takes over for Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense, who had been overseeing the tribunal process.

The Pentagon also announced that Air Force Brig. Gen. Thomas L. Hemingway will be Altenburg's legal adviser. Hemingway retired from the Air Force in 1996 and was recalled to active duty last summer. He has served as a staff judge advocate at several levels in the Air Force and was a senior judge on the Air Force Court of Military Review as well as director of the Air Force Judiciary.

The steps announced by the Pentagon on Tuesday were the last major procedural steps planned before one or more of the terror suspects held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station is charged and brought to trial.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania; US: Rhode Island; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: billcoleman; detainees; edwardbiester; frankwilliams; gitmo; griffinbell; gtmo; johnaltenberg; johnaltenburg; militarytribunals; paulwolfowitz; terrortrials; thomashemingway; williamcoleman; wolfowitz

1 posted on 12/30/2003 12:23:40 PM PST by Dog
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To: Dog
I see a JAG script here...
2 posted on 12/30/2003 12:32:19 PM PST by larryjohnson ( USAF(Ret))
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To: Dog
It's about time ... unless we start to have some executions from this batch of terrorists, the world will not take the US serious in it's "war on terror".

However, for some reason I am hesitant to believe that "logic" will win out over political correctness and the above desired results will occur. Watch us give these guys all a handslap and release them under the fear of not getting any 'bad press' from the demoncrats in an election year.
3 posted on 12/30/2003 12:42:38 PM PST by AgThorn (Go go Bush!!)
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To: Dog
Anybody have ideological profiles on these guys? Bell is a Carterite, but a decent one as I recall. How about the others? Will the RATs be shocked if the tribunal doesn't "look like America"?
4 posted on 12/30/2003 1:00:34 PM PST by clintonh8r (You know that KoolAid the RATs have been drinking? Well, I'm the guy who's been pissing in it.)
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To: Dog
Good pick for jurists, but how about a good supply of well stretched Kentucky hemp rope. Perhaps the lesser offenders could be assigned to be Hillary's pool boys.
5 posted on 12/30/2003 1:07:52 PM PST by The Great RJ
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: Dog
This is a war. The primary purpose of a "trial" should be to determine if the person in question is a danger to the US. If he is determined to be a danger, then the question is if he is a short term danger, requiring that he be held for the life of the conflict, or a long term danger, requiring that he be executed.

If the "trial" determines that he is not a danger, he can be released back to his country of origin.

Legal guilt or innocence should not be an issue in a case like this.
7 posted on 12/30/2003 2:20:04 PM PST by marron
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