World

Guantanamo Detainee Majid Khan Cuts Deal, Pleads Guilty to Murder, al Qaeda Terror Plot

Majid Khan

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (The Blaze/AP) — A former Maryland resident pleaded guilty Wednesday to helping al-Qaida plot attacks from his native Pakistan, reaching a plea deal with the U.S. government that spares him from a potential life sentence in exchange for helping to convict fellow prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

Majid Khan, making his first appearance in public since he was swept into secret government confinement in 2003, appeared calm and confident as he was questioned by the judge to make sure he understood the plea deal. His lawyers said that he teared up at times as the case against him was reviewed and that he regrets his actions.

“He is remorseful,” said Army Lt. Col. Jon Jackson, his Pentagon-appointed defense lawyer. “He wishes he had never been involved with al-Qaida, ever.”

Khan, 32, is the first of what the military calls its “high-value” detainees to plead guilty and his cooperation could provide significant help to the U.S. as it seeks to prosecute Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sept. 11 attack, and other accused terrorists held at the U.S. base in Cuba. Khan’s lawyers have alleged he was tortured while in CIA custody before he was transferred to Guantanamo in September 2006.

He faced up to life in prison if convicted at trial on charges of conspiracy, murder, attempted murder, spying and providing material support for terrorism. Prosecutors said Khan plotted with Mohammed to blow up fuel tanks in the U.S., to assassinate former Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and to provide other assistance to al-Qaida.

Under his plea agreement, the Convening Authority, the Pentagon legal official who oversees the Guantanamo tribunals, has agreed not to approve a sentence that exceeds 19 years as long as Khan fully cooperates with authorities. If prosecutors determine he has not fully cooperated, the sentence is capped at 25 years.

His sentencing has been postponed for four years, to give him time to cooperate, and he would get credit for time served until his sentencing but not for the nine years he already spent in custody.

The judge, Army Col. James Pohl, told him there was nothing in the agreement that specifically prevents the U.S. from continuing to detain him after he completes his sentence, though there are no indications that would happen.

Majid Khan Pleads Guilty to al Qaeda Plot Attacks From Pakistan“I am making a leap of faith here, sir,” Khan said. “That’s all I can do.”

Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, the chief prosecutor, said the sentence is appropriate since Khan was not a terrorist mastermind or leader and has shown remorse.

“When you put this into context, I think you see a very credible result that fits, that is justice, and that is an appropriate holding of accountability,” Martins said.

Khan is the seventh Guantanamo prisoner to be convicted of war crimes, the fifth by plea deal. The U.S. now holds 171 men at the base and officials have said about 35 could be prosecuted for war crimes.

Andrea Prasow, a Human Rights Watch lawyer who was at Wednesday’s hearing as an observer, said Khan’s plea bargain is a victory for the government, which gets a conviction without having to address allegations that he was tortured. She expects similar deals to come.

“There is a stronger incentive to plea bargain in Guantanamo if you have no idea how long you will be held or if you will ever be released or if you will ever get a fair trial,” Prasow said.

Khan moved to the U.S. with his family in 1996 and was granted political asylum. He graduated from Owings Mills High School in suburban Baltimore and worked at several office jobs as well as at his family’s gas station.

Military prosecutors say he traveled in 2002 to Pakistan, where he was introduced to Mohammed as someone who could help al-Qaida because of his fluent English and familiarity with the U.S. Prosecutors say that at one point, Khan discussed a plot to blow up underground fuel storage tanks in the United States.

Prosecutors say Khan later traveled with his wife, Rabia, to Bangkok, Thailand, where he delivered $50,000 to the Southeast Asian terror group Jemaah Islamiyah, an al-Qaida affiliate, to help fund the Aug. 5, 2003, suicide bombing of the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia. The attack killed 11 people and wounded at least 81.

An American woman who was injured in the attack, Pat Pond, was an observer at the hearing and said she was satisfied with the outcome.

Pond, a resident of Park City, Utah, who was on a business trip for GE at the time of the Jakarta attack, said she was burned and damaged her hand in the blast and contracted HIV from a contaminated needle while being treated for her wounds at a hospital in Singapore.

“I don’t feel any anger or any need for vengeance,” she said.

Comments (7)

  • Bill Rowland
    Posted on March 1, 2012 at 5:59am

    Rosie, you remind me of Mcdonald. The slimeball has already been treater better than his buddies would have treated an american captive. At least we don’t play by their rules if we did he would get a quick trial in a Kangaroo court and be beheaded.
    Remove your head from your anus and join the real world.

    OMG

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  • EchoHawk
    Posted on February 29, 2012 at 7:26pm

    It’s all just an elaborate illusion.

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  • s0ck_monkey
    Posted on February 29, 2012 at 6:22pm

    He should be slowly lowered head first into a huge vat of boiling oil. Put it on Pay-Per-View and use the money to help balance the budget…

    F’n traitor…

    Report Post »  
    • rose-ellen
      Posted on February 29, 2012 at 6:29pm

      he can be kept in prison even after he completes his sentence? That is tyranny.That the fact that he was tortured can not be used in his defense? That is tyranyThat his torturers will not be prosecuted? tyranny.What happened to universal human rights ,equal treatment,due process, no cruel punishment etc.? Tyranny .Your professed values are skin deep.My sympathies are with him as things stand now..

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    • s0ck_monkey
      Posted on February 29, 2012 at 6:54pm

      My values tell me that a anyone involved with, or gave aid to, a group of people that murdered over 3000 of my fellow countrymen (one of them was a former company commander I had, before he was promoted to Major and received an assignment at the Pentagon), should be dealt with quickly, harshly, and without remorse!

      If his universal rights, equal treatment, due process, and not being cruelly punished is that bug of an issue, he should have kept his grubby butt in his native Pakistan!

      Report Post »  
    • Lt_Scrounge
      Posted on February 29, 2012 at 7:47pm

      Rose, I have yet to read a post from you that wasn’t basically pro terrorist. I’ll call what was done to KSM and the other terrorists torture when they put them 100 stories in the air, make them breathe burning hot air filled with thick smoke and dust and then make them climb down the stairwell in the amount of time from when the first plane hit the WTC and the building collapsed. What was done to them doesn’t even count as a decent episode of “Fear Factor”. You can say that the competitors volunteered to be on “Fear Factor”, I would say that planning the destruction and murder of thousands of innocent people counts as volunteering for whatever the appropriate authorities decide to do to them. Under the Geneva Conventions, an unlawful enemy combatant has receives NONE of the protections afforded to a POW.

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  • SoundStride
    Posted on February 29, 2012 at 6:08pm

    We should build a water boarding park in Iran maybe call it Six Flags Over Tehran.

    Report Post » SoundStride  

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