How to Stage Manage a Show Trial
Michelle Shephard reports on an effort Omar Khadr’s military lawyers are making to win clemency for their client. (h/t JL) Much of it focuses on the role psychiatrist Michael Welner, who testified that his interview with Khadr proved he’d never give up violence, played. As Jeff Kaye showed at the time, Welner’s report on Khadr showed an anti-Muslim bias. Khadr’s lawyers were able to rip Welner’s testimony to some degree.
Thus far, the defense has shown Welner didn’t read one of the studies he relied on for his Khadr profile, shown his work was not peer reviewed, and challenged Welner on his research methods: “Your sample size was Omar Khadr?”
But they’re apparently arguing that they were told not to challenge Welner’s expertise more generally (presumably to exclude his testimony), because if they did it would endanger the plea deal they had negotiated for Khadr.
In a 40-page motion obtained by the Toronto Star, Khadr’s lawyers argue that testimony from Dr. Michael Welner was “unscientific” and “designed solely to inflame and mislead the jury.”
Lawyer Army Col. Jon Jackson and Air Force Maj. Matthew Schwartz also claim that prosecutors threatened to revoke Khadr’s plea deal if they challenged Welner’s credentials as an expert witness.
[snip]
At a time when Guantanamo’s military commissions are under renewed scrutiny concerning the upcoming trial of the alleged 9/11 conspirators, one of the most damning allegations is a claim that the prosecutors had the convening authority’s permission to rescind Khadr’s plea deal, if defence lawyers tried to get Welner’s testimony excluded as unreliable.
In a separate memo, obtained by the Star, the convening authority denies any discussions or agreements were made with the prosecution. “Please provide a response limited to this allegation of prosecutorial misconduct,” states the March 29 memo to Navy Capt. John Murphy, Guantanamo’s Chief Prosecutor, written by Michael Chapman, the legal advisor to the convening authority.
So here’s what this suggests: The government made a plea deal with Khadr’s lawyers (eight more years, but after one year he’d be transferred to Canada, if they’ll take him). Then it had a show trial featuring a frothing psychiatrist arguing that Khadr would never give up his allegedly Muslim aggression. Normally, defense attorneys could easily exclude such testimony from a trial based on key scientific issues like peer review. But Khadr’s lawyers, allegedly, were put in the position such that if they wanted to preserve Khadr’s 8 year deal, they would have to limit their complaints about Welner.
In other words, the government made a deal: it’d release Khadr to Canada after a year, if his lawyers would pretend to go along with the trial at which a psychiatrist could make claims about Khadr’s innate violence, leading jurors to give Khadr 40 years. It wasn’t just the fake sentence: much of the trial was all for show. It was the appearance of antagonistic sides and the credentials of the frothing psychologist.
Can you imagine what fantastic frothing witnesses we’ll get to see in the 9/11 trial?
Update: Welner’s spelling and credential fixed, per JTMinIA.
Why even bother with a silly show trial. No one could possibly refer to this as justice other than in irony. Just release him and let’s move on.
Marcy, the doctor’s name is Welner, with an “L”–sorry, just thought that was important. Will go back to reading now.
Two minor corrections, although the second makes a difference to me. His name is Welner, not Weiner, and he’s a psychiatrist (i.e., an MD), not a psychologist (with a PhD).
I agree that he froths.
Thanks to you and harpie.
I’m going to start instituting a 2-coffee requirement before I post, I think.
I already have that rule…but even that is not always the answer to my problems! ;-)
Well, it’s my best excuse this morning. That, plus I’m trying to pack for the move.
Both lousy excuses but luckily I have excellent readers to keep me honest.
So Roger Ailes runs the Putnam County News and Recorder and this too?! /s
Khadr’s was a Show Trial Par Execellance [or however you spell it]. We even had a widow pumping her fist in the air at sentencing. Disgusting.
As for the 9/11 trial, I’ve already got my Coliseum tickets, and know how I’ll vote:
Thumbs Down!!
[need I add: /s ]
[PS: the links in the first block quote aren’t working.]
This is what comes of leaving almost all the Bush appointees in place. Not that Holder couldn’t have intervened at any time to put a stop to the travesty. Obama’s reluctance to root out the rot introduced by Cheney and Bush is a big reason why nothing has been done in the civil liberties area. These are people who have a vested interest in suppressing them.
Love this Welner response to Sageman’s criticism’s [from the Star article]:
Huh? He can’t express himself in English worth a damn either …
Is something like this a one-off, or does it acquire the force of precedent?
Isn’t this like the deal that was struck for David Hicks? (Although in his case I don’t recall any psychological justification.)
By the way, how does one get a copy of David Hicks’s book? It seems not only to be unavailable in this country, but also to be unavailable from Amazon’s outlets overseas.
Yes, the book is essentially blocked in this country, because there’s no publishing agreement here, or so I’m told.
It can be brought from Australian-based booksellers, as here (no endorsement implied, you should look online for more, as any buyer will pay a pretty penny for the book, especially the expensive shipping).
Yes to question one.
From Andy Worthington , earlier this year:
See also:
The Dark Heart of the Guantánamo Trials; Andy Worthington; 10/1/08
[scroll down to Who’s pulling the strings?]
“… the frothing psychologist.”
Well, who wants to eat all that cake we’ll be getting without frothing?
Bread and circuses. Oh, and drones to keep tabs on the “well-being” of hoi paloi when “government” concludes that “the people” ARE “the enemy”.
Empires do NOT end well.
Especially when embarked upon “endless war” … it affects reason, somehow, and such silly trifles as the rule of law, as an interest in actual “justice” … why it even affects the notion of humanity itself.
‘Tis appearance not substance that upholds the faith, that dresses the emperor and declares the nature of true wisdom … all that matters is …?
DW
Notice the venom with which Welner attacks his opponents, the threats to sue. He is quite the snapping guard dog for them, isn’t he. That showed in his op-ed in the Washington Post last December, answering an earlier article by another Khadr expert psychiatrist, retired Brigadier General Stephen Xenakis.
In my article discussing the dueling op-eds, I linked to a Jurist piece by Andrea Prasnow that speculated upon why the defense experts had not testified.
Though I didn’t give the exact quote it at the time, Prasnow was essentially right, and may hint to exactly what in the plea deal was so constraining:
Meanwhile, it’s worth remembering that Welner relied heavily in his testimony on the work of Danish psychologist Nicolai Sennels. Welner claimed that Sennels was “lauded” by the Danish Psychological Association. An email query I sent to the Danish Psych Assn was never answered. What I wrote at the time (link is above):
I hold out little hope that the Convening Authority for these kangaroo courts will rule for Khadr. But I am glad the defense has made this effort, throwing up a roadblock to the workings of this awful show trial machine.
Link for quotes from Sennels
FYI
Uggh. Show trials. Here in the good old US of A. I didn’t think it could happen here, but…
EW: Shephard sp. Back shortly.
Ah jeebus. I’m going back to bed.
OT – Speaking of show trials, via Ben Smith over at Politico:
Why P.J. Crowley went rogue
Just posted on it. Fascinating stuff.
Khadr is now studying with a nice lady teacher living in Canada, by correspondence. Some violent terrorist, huh.
The question does remain, I fear, if Harper is re-elected: will a Harper government bring Khadr back as per the plea deal? Don’t have the text in front of me right now, but as I recall, Harper’s response to it was ambiguous.
I agree with you. I’m guessing that, now that Khadr really doesn’t have access to the law, he’ll get the purportedly fake sentence rather than the one he thought he was getting.
Yup. It was definitely ambiguous. And remains so. He’ll drag his feet forever, I believe.
Harper has also resisted any attempts to discuss the modern tradition of responsibility to oversee the treatment of Canadians abroad. He has revived some sort of loophole about the prerogative of the throne in choosing whom to care about and whom to abandon.
Good news: I hear today that the polls are looking like Harper’s majority is slipping out of range. Maybe it’s his constant harping on this “unnecessary” election thrust upon him while his main message is give him a majority or y’all won’t get what I am promising. Canada held hostage!
Can’t stand to listen to or watch Harper anymore.
Do you have recent evidence that this is taking place now, while he’s serving his sentence?
Carol Rosenberg reported on Khadr’s “home-schooling” a couple of months ago: LINK
I have tears in my eyes, I am so happy.
Here’s a comment I made about Professor Arlette Zinck and Omar Khadr at one of Jeff’s posts in November.
edit error
Thanks very much for that. My worry is that the plea deal strangles other things Khadr can do, even when/if he is freed. I believe such conditions can be challenged in the courts in Canada, but we’re a lot of steps away from that right now.
The plea deal also required him to submit to US interrogation during this year and to testify for the US gov against others. I don’t know whether any of that has occurred.
I know…I know…but it must be a ray of sunshine for him.
Thanks so much for all of that. I am reading it with delight. The court has been told he’s a fine, intelligent, kind young man. But no matter. Racist psychiatrists are more *pursuasive.*
Khadr is not getting home schooling, but according to the article, attorneys and paralegals help him with the college professors curriculum when they visit. Of course, he remains under “punitive” detention, and the article makes clear that they are in solitary much of the time. And that’s only if we can believe the camp authorities. The attorneys are stating that conditions are much as they were in the early days of Guantanamo, with an emphasis on isolation.
I won’t believe anything the Pentagon says. Let the prisoners be interviewed by the press, then I might believe what’s going on. The attorneys are restricted in what they can say.
Thanks so much, Jeff. I think we are all trying to be so hopeful for him in spite of all contrary indications.
This continuing insistence on punishment, solitary confinement, and shackling is simply barbaric and horrifying.
I agree.
I’m so tired of it all.
Thanks for the great links on this, everybody!
I saw the story on the news as the trial was ending or after Khadr’s trial had ended. There was no implication it would stop.
Hrmm.. I knew this all seemed familiar…
“The president of the court often acted as prosecutor, denouncing defendants, then pronouncing his verdict and sentence without objection from defense counsel, who usually remained silent throughout. Unsurprisingly, it did not follow the laws and procedures of regular German trials, being easily characterized as a “kangaroo court”.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People%27s_Court_%28Germany%29
People asking about Hicks will want to read Jason Leopold’s interview with him if they haven’t already.
The very existence of this trial in this condition is proof positive that the government doesn’t make good on its deals. It violates its own laws, rules, and treaties with impunity.
This is a show trial, so your only opportunity to possibly save your client is to put on the better show. It must be really hard for people in the legal profession to let go and own up to the reality that the rule of law is dead in thus country. It’s all just formality and pageantry at this point.
Trying to protect some plea bargain is itself a complete failure to understand the situation you’re in.
@14 “Notice the venom with which Welner attacks his opponents”
It looks a lot like proof that he’ll never give up violent rhetoric. ;)
Silly. White people don’t use violent rhetoric. That’s called persuasion.
Beautiful comment!
More like, the US government proved it would never give up violence.
Now I ask ya, lsls, what WOULD the empire of the United States be if it couldn’t destroy the planet several times over?
The bluster, the organized mayhem, the human consequence for all who are too-small-to-matter which surrounds this question is all in good fun …
(and, dare I say it, hugely profitable for some … what DOES a frothing psychologist go for, these days? It can’t be for mere peanuts, we must imagine, and “patriotism” makes great PR but hardly rates an expense account … ah, well, I’ve no doubt that Cass Sunstein and his ilk will explain it all to their own satisfaction in The Official History of American Democracy, which we will all be absorbed in, soon enough …)
Violence.
It’s as American as apple pie and Thanksgiving.
Hard to imagine what this place would look like without it, might even be unrecognizable, in an un-exceptional kind of way, of course.
;~DW
LOL
Speaking of show trials things aren’t much better in federal court these days. In my remaining gitmo client’s habeas hearing in December the government’s position was that my guy should be held forever because he was arrested at the same guesthouse as Abu Zubaydah. In Abu Zubaydah’s case the government has admitted that after waterboarding him 100 or so times it seems he wasn’t who they thought he was….sorry about that Mr. Z….but anyway the judge announced that just being in the house was enough for him to deny the writ but the government put on a show trial trying to show that my client went by a nickname and that the nicknamed belonged to a known bad guy. They had two “detainee” statements linking the nickname to my client. After four days of hearing and just before the judge was set to rule the government pulled the statement from detainee witness number 1-because they had not given me certain documents that went to that detainees reliability. That left one detainee witness, a man the government claimed never complained of torture or mistreatment. I had nothing to rebut their characterization of this man as being what could have been the only man at Guantanamo not to have complained of torture. I asked for a new trial because of the evidence pulled and the judge said no and denied the writ for my client because the remaining detainee witness was reliable. Lo and behold that star witness-the only man at Guantanamo never to complain of being tortured- took a plea in the commission last month and the military released a bunch of court documents from his case onto their website-seems the government was not exactly being truthful about this guy not complaining-he alleged that he was subjected to enhanced techniques right at the same time he said the nickname belonged to my client. MY MY. I filed another motion for new hearing- government says I should quit whining as it doesn’t matter anyway. Sad part is that it probably won’t matter….but I am whining anyway.
It does matter. It’s not whining; it’s the rule of law. Calling you a whiner is beneath contempt and should be way beyond the pale. They are disgraceful.
Thank you for your most dilligent service.
If the world were not turned completely upside down you would win this debate easily and government officials would be sacked and charged.
Candace, thank you so much for your work. I don’t know how you stay calm and keep going, but you are one of the heroes, and a lot of us will try to keep the record.
Please keep on ‘whining,’ Candace. Damn well keep on whining until those self-serving, self-important usurping abusers of government power hear you in their dreams. I’m counting on it. Especially while powerful, independent federal judges like Stephen Breyer, with every reason and responsibility to know better, remain inexcusably indifferent to the profound and dangerous consequences of their failure to act to end the Guantanamo-born presidential justice system in this nation.
That new presidential justice system of indefinite detention and occasional show trials is an ad hoc, arbitrary system in which the lawyers for the President’s prisoners – if and when such volunteer attorneys can be found, and are deemed acceptable by the presidential jailer – are all muzzled by the presidential branch of government, even when those prisoners through their lawyers are finally – years late – granted a brief audience before a federal judge in one district of our independent Judicial Branch of government.
That one brief audience before a single district judge now takes place under constraints, imposed since 2008 by the sole appellate court overseeing that district, which have basically reached the point of absurdity – no government proof of fighting by the prisoner needed, no government proof of enemy, or “associated,” group membership by the prisoner needed, no government proof of command-ordered activity by the prisoner needed, etc., etc., for these non-uniformed “wartime” captives.
And that one habeas corpus merits hearing allots the long-abused, foreign, (asserted, but unproven) “armed conflict combatant” prisoners of the American president – “combatants” never given, nor lawfully relieved of, their default POW status under the international law of armed conflict and the Senate-ratified treaty law of the land – their one and only opportunity for an American hearing (though a hearing now evidently unaccompanied by a remedy, with Justice Breyer’s concurrence) that might belatedly – if the judge has integrity and isn’t overturned – impartially assess the merits of their “armed conflict”-justified, presidentially-ordered detention.
While the years pass for the presidential prisoners, the muzzling of their volunteer attorneys and the oppressive detention conditions of the prisoners themselves both ensure that people like Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer can continue to live in blissful, irresponsible ignorance in their ivory towers, with no unpleasant reports from said detainee lawyers, not to mention the non-English-speaking detainees themselves, to disturb them in their perusal of the daily newspapers.
Another of the many unsung lawyers for our presidential prisoners – laboring, like Candace Gorman, Sabin Willett, and Omar Khadr’s many military and civilian attorneys, in thankless obscurity in lonely defense of the principles which founded this nation – is Michel Paradis, an attorney employed by the Pentagon’s Office of Military Commissions to defend one of the handful of charged “war criminals” among the Guantanamo presidential prisoner population.
I applaud and admire Michel Paradis and his team for producing this excellent March 15th reply in the CMCR Oral Argument Round Two briefing for the case of their Guantanamo Commission-convicted client Ali Al Bahlul. A reply that the en banc Court of Military Commission Review made no provision for, and which Paradis pulled together in the five days between the government’s response on March 11th – which included its specious Seminole War defense, and for which the CMCR gave the government almost three weeks longer than Paradis to file a brief replying to the two questions the CMCR asked in January – and the oral argument held on March 17th.
Because the role of our federal legislature has essentially been outsourced, by the representatives of “we, the people,” to the operators of two national political fundraising machines – specifically, to the incumbent-appointed (as opposed to citizen-elected) leadership of two Congressional fundraising groups known as “Parties,” accountable only to their wealthy funders – there are vanishingly few quotes from modern representatives of the people which explain, honor, or passionately invoke our democratic Republic and its revolutionary design for the balance of government power.
But back when Members of Congress still joined Parties, when they joined at all, because of the policy outcomes the Party both pledged to pursue and actually pursued (without, as is now the case, also ceding the power of their office to the Party machine, in order to retain, above all, their personal prestige and government salary), some of those American legislators publicly said a thing or two, about another notorious example of presidential/military abuse of power, that puts the buck-passing Stephen Breyers and Carl Levins of the nation to shame.
A thing or two like the excerpts that follow, taken from reports of the three-week-long 1819 House debate on the highly-controversial 1818 “Seminole War” actions – including a court martial held in the field (in Spanish territory) that’s being used today by President Obama before the CMCR as ‘precedent’ for his private presidential justice system at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba – of Major General Andrew Jackson in the Florida territory of Spain, in which neither the words nor the concept of a “military commission” were ever uttered by either friend or foe of General Jackson:
The House debate began after a report had been issued in January, 1819 by a committee asked by the House to study the matter. The committee report (approved by a majority apparently not including its pro-Jackson chairman) was delivered to the House and its conclusions later summarized by committee member Representative Thomas Maduit (T.M.) Nelson of Virginia – who said this of the majority report, on behalf of the seven-member House Committee on Military Affairs [select Image 615, and subsequent images, in the Annals of Congress for the Second House Session of the 15th Congress]:
On January 26, 1819, Representative Charles Fenton Mercer of Virginia spoke [select Image 815, and subsequent images, in the Annals of Congress for the Second House Session of the 15th Congress]:
The experienced Representative William Henry Harrison of Ohio said, in part [select Image 1019, and subsequent images, in the Annals of Congress for the Second House Session of the 15th Congress]:
On February 5th and 6th, 1819, Revolutionary War infantry Captain (and War of 1812 veteran) Representative Philip Reed of Virginia, a committee member, said [select Image 1065 & Image 1069, and subsequent images, in the Annals of Congress for the Second House Session of the 15th Congress (for Reed’s personal account of his own dramatic actions in the deliberate execution of a deserter during the Revolutionary War, at George Washington’s direction, select Image 1063)]:
And on February 6, 1819, Representative Thomas Scott Williams of Connecticut said [select Image 1083, and subsequent images, in the Annals of Congress for the Second House Session of the 15th Congress]:
Alexander Hamiliton, writing in The Federalist No. 81:
“There is no position which depends on clearer principles, than that every act of a delegated authority, contrary to the tenor of the commission under which it is exercised, is void. No legislative act, therefore, contrary to the Constitution, can be valid. To deny this, would be to affirm, that the deputy is greater than his principal; that the servant is above his master; that the representatives of the people are superior to the people themselves; that men acting by virtue of powers, may do not only what their powers do not authorize, but what they forbid.“
I just couldn’t let another informative comment like this go by without thanking you, powwow. Your knowledge of these matters is mind boggling!
Speaking of show trials, I’ve been incensed for awhile over the propaganda of constructing a Potemkin Village at Gitmo at Camp Iguana, where three teens were held in 2003-04. Now, taking advantage of the news around the licensing controversy over Colonel Larry James, I’ve finally written up the story (a bit lengthy) at Truthout (just went up):
Guantanamo Psychologist Led Rendition and Imprisonment of Afghan Boys, Complaint Charges
A peek:
As you say, in the Washington-based scheme of things, the Omar Khadr trial was a sideshow. He was one child, mistakenly and wrongly picked up in the wrong place at the wrong time along with hundreds of adults.
The big show, the center ring, is to establish the legitimacy of its replacement, ad hoc, inherently conflicted, corrupt “system of justice”. That’s how we rely on to establish facts and impose legal consequences on them. Coming soon to a theater near you. Did you get your drone de-coder ring yet?