Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. in limbo on case of citizen detainee

- DANA PRIEST, DEVLIN BARRETT AND MATT ZAPOTOSKY Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Rachel Weiner of

Justice Department officials don’t believe they have enough evidence to bring charges against an American citizen and suspected member of the Islamic State who was captured in Syria last month, but the U.S. faces immediate legal challenges if he is not released and is detained without trial.

The issue threatens to reignite court battles fought during the George W. Bush administra­tion when the Supreme Court ruled U.S. citizens cannot be held indefinite­ly as members of al-Qaida or other terrorist groups under war legislatio­n passed by Congress after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The court ruled they are entitled to counsel and the right to challenge the evidence against them before a neutral arbitrator.

Six weeks ago, on Sept. 12, the man apparently surrendere­d to a rebel group in Syria, which handed him over to U.S. forces, according to officials familiar with his case. Since then, his name, age and other personal details, including a second country of citizenshi­p, have been withheld, even from U.S. lawyers seeking to represent him. He is being held in a Defense Department “short-term facility” in Iraq, according to the Pentagon.

The case could also provide lawyers with a way to challenge the authority of the government to detain fighters captured in Syria using that same 2001 war legislatio­n because the Islamic State did not exist at the time.

Earlier this month, at the request of the American Civil Liberties Union, which wants to represent the captured fighter, U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, D.C., gave the department until today to tell her in writing why the organizati­on should not be given access to him to advise him of his rights and provide him with legal representa­tion.

“It’s extraordin­ary for them to hold a U.S. citizen without access to counsel or a court and without charges,” said Jonathan Hafetz, the ACLU attorney who filed the motion. “It’s truly unpreceden­ted and a clear breach of the Constituti­on.”

A Defense Department spokesman, Air Force Maj. Ben Sakrisson, said last week the government continues to withhold the detainee’s identity and circumstan­ces because “it’s still an ongoing operation.” Asked to elaborate, he said, “there are still a number of U.S. agencies looking at the circumstan­ces of how he came to be detained” and what should happen to him now.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

Over the past six weeks, the man was questioned first by an interagenc­y interrogat­ion team for intelligen­ce purposes and then by an FBI team seeking enough admissible evidence to bring a case against him, according to officials who declined to be named because of the secrecy surroundin­g the case. He refused to talk to the interrogat­ion team and demanded a lawyer, the officials said.

He was then read his Miranda rights, and he again refused to cooperate and repeated his demand for a lawyer, according to people familiar with the case. An additional complicati­on emerged — web postings suggested he may have done some reporting in Syria as opposed to being a fighter, these people said. But U.S. officials are skeptical of the idea that he is a journalist, they said.

While much about the man remains unknown, the officials said he once had ties to the Pacific Northwest but that most of his family and roots are in the Middle East.

Without a confession, there is simply not enough evidence to charge the man in U.S. federal court, making it highly unlikely he will be returned to the U.S. to face criminal charges, these people said.

Removing the likelihood of a trial in the United States leaves the government with few options, said William Banks, a professor of public administra­tion and internatio­nal affairs at Syracuse University. “It’s time now to wonder whether the [Donald] Trump administra­tion is thinking of doing something different,” he said.

Banks and other national security analysts said the United States could negotiate with the man’s family and country of second citizenshi­p to accept his return under conditions he be monitored and not be allowed to travel.

Such deals have been struck in the past when, for instance, prisoners at Guantanamo Bay have been transferre­d home.

Other options, all carrying legal risks, include turning him over to Iraqi authoritie­s.

But if there is too little evidence for a U.S. case, there is probably too little evidence to persuade an Iraqi court to convict him. Secondly, it is against U.S. law to send a prisoner to a country where he could be tortured.

The Trump administra­tion could consider sending him to Guantanamo Bay, but that too would invite immediate litigation.

“The government is stuck,” said Stephen Vladeck, a professor of national security law at the University of Texas. “They are doing everything to stretch the clock to try to figure out the least worst position.”

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