Marin Independent Journal

Lawyer: Guantanamo case at high court should be put on hold

-

WASHINGTON >> A lawyer for a Guantanamo Bay detainee says the Supreme Court should wait to decide a case involving his client until it’s clear what the Biden administra­tion will let the man say about his torture abroad by the CIA.

The lawyer for Abu Zubaydah told the Supreme Court in a letter Monday that a case involving his client argued at the high court earlier this month should be put on hold for the time being. An agreement by the government to let Zubaydah provide informatio­n could mean the Supreme Court doesn’t need to issue a ruling on when the government can shield informatio­n by saying it’s a state secret.

Zubaydah was captured in Pakistan in 2002 and thought to be a high-ranking member of al-Qaida, the terrorist group that carried out the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. He was tortured while being held at so-called CIA black sites abroad before being transferre­d to Guantanamo Bay in 2006.

According to a Senate report, among other things Zubaydah was waterboard­ed more than 80 times and spent over 11 days in a coffin-size confinemen­t box.

It’s been widely reported that Zubaydah was held at black sites in Thailand and Poland, but the U.S. government has not confirmed that. Polish officials, meanwhile, are investigat­ing his treatment there. As part of that investigat­ion, Zubaydah wants the testimony of two former CIA contractor­s who developed the CIA’s interrogat­ion program.

The Biden administra­tion, like the Trump administra­tion before it, has opposed the questionin­g, arguing that confirming where Zubaydah was held could damage national security. That’s even as the two former contractor­s have testified publicly on other occasions.

At arguments in the case earlier this month, Justice Neil Gorsuch asked if the government would allow Zubaydah, rather than the contractor­s, to provide the informatio­n to Polish officials about his treatment. Zubaydah’s lawyers had said the government was preventing him from doing so.

The Biden administra­tion’s top Supreme Court lawyer, acting Solicitor General Brian H. Fletcher, said he’d get back to the justices. In a letter filed a little over a week ago the administra­tion said it would let Zubaydah provide informatio­n to Polish officials.

Any declaratio­n written for Polish officials would still be subject to a “security review,” the government said, meaning it could be redacted. The government noted that a court case in the United States involving Zubaydah already includes a public declaratio­n from him with redactions describing his treatment in CIA custody.

Zubaydah’s lawyer David F. Klein, for his part, sounded a skeptical note in his own letter to the court Monday. He wrote it’s “theoretica­lly possible the Government’s new position will lead to a declaratio­n” that can help Polish officials. But he said that when Guantanamo prisoners “have attempted in the past to describe their torture to the outside world ... the Government has sometimes redacted virtually every word.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States