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Defendants’ Lawyers Fear Loss of Potential Evidence at Guantanamo Bay

by Josh White

Lawyers representing military detainees at Guantanamo Bay have expressed concern that the government has violated a federal court order by losing or erasing several years’ worth of digital video recordings that could shed light on the legality of detainee treatment.

The concerns are based in part on a recent court filing by Guantanamo’s commander, Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, who said video surveillance recordings in several areas of the facility have been automatically overwritten and no longer exist.

“In January 2008, it was brought to my attention that such . . . [recording] systems may have been automatically overwriting video data contained on recording devices, at predetermined intervals,” Buzby wrote. “That is, only a specified number of days’ worth of recorded data could be retained on the recording devices at a time.”

Defense lawyers said the admission suggests that the military has not complied with a 2005 court order to preserve such evidence, even if the deletion of the recordings was inadvertent. They claim that the tapes were of potential use at forthcoming court hearings and trials, a view supported by a Seton Hall University report slated to be released today.

The report, “Captured on Tape,” asserts that officials at the facility recorded more than 20,000 interrogations at Guantanamo Bay. It cited FBI statements and military investigative reports as a basis for concluding that video cameras were in interrogation booths and tapes existed.

“All interrogations are videotaped,” said an April 13, 2005, report by the Office of the Army Surgeon General on operations at Guantanamo Bay, cited in the Seton Hall study. Pentagon officials declined to discuss the report or comment on the videotaping.

Military officials familiar with interrogations at the prison of a group of 14 high-value detainees over the past 16 months — including five of the six charged with criminal conspiracy on Monday — said those sessions were monitored through video cameras but not recorded. But they declined to comment on any taping of hundreds of others at the prison.

Noting that the CIA has admitted destroying videotapes of aggressive interrogations of two detainees, the authors of the Seton Hall report said the military and other government agencies present at Guantanamo have “identical motives to destroy taped investigations.” They added: “The taped interrogations recorded at Guantanamo Bay are equally important to evaluating the reliability of the evidence against a detainee.”

Buzby’s declaration, filed in federal cases Friday and yesterday, said the video recordings were part of a surveillance system used to monitor the camps and were mostly of mundane operations. But lawyers for the detainees said they worry that the overwriting could mask important evidence.

David H. Remes, a Washington lawyer who represents Guantanamo detainees, said the overwriting of video recordings is a clear violation of the court’s order.

“We’ll simply never know whether these videotapes recorded torture or other abuse of our clients, because the tapes no longer exist,” Remes said, referring to what he said could be considered evidence. “The government was under an affirmative obligation to preserve it. The fact that they were on automatic pilot with respect to these overrides doesn’t get them off the hook.”

Joshua Colangelo-Bryan, a New York lawyer who represents detainees at Guantanamo, said his clients reported seeing video cameras — some mounted, some hand-held — during their interrogations. “I don’t have any problem with them videotaping interrogations, as long as they aren’t discarded to protect wrongdoing,” Colangelo-Bryan said. “We just don’t know.”

© 2008 The Washington Post

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9 Comments so far

  1. mustbefree February 14th, 2008 1:21 pm

    What a big hole we have dug here for the peoples of this country.I would rather fight any one who attacks this country on the streets than act like a dictatorship where the only laws that count are the ones made by the dictator. Tony

  2. satr9prodxns February 14th, 2008 1:54 pm

    how many felonies does that make so far?

    …and how long until someone with great aim hits their target?

  3. gde February 14th, 2008 2:55 pm

    The purpose of holding trials at Gitmo as opposed to a real court is that it is easy to find judges (and in effect juries), prosecutors, and even many defense attorneys, who have:

    1) No sense of professional ethics;

    2) No respect for principles of modern law or the US Constitution;

    3) Willingly contributed to a campaign of war crimes, making their personal freedom dependent on a doctrine of “might makes right” keeping themselves out of prison.

    I note, sadly, that in other cases in “real” US courts, prosecutors and judges have found juries willing to overlook minor details like the Constitution. I can understand a majority of the jury, I just don’t understand how a jury can be packed that badly. Most likely, it is that people have too much respect for judges in general to stand up to the many bad ones out there.

  4. whatfools February 14th, 2008 4:57 pm

    What a shame. Tampering with the ‘evidance’ will void any trial. What a shame, George had the execuitions all set up to entertain us at election time. With his ’stimulus’ it would have been Bread and Circuses all over again.

  5. KEM PATRICK February 14th, 2008 5:52 pm

    “What evidence? __ We never had any tapes.”

  6. Golddogs February 14th, 2008 9:30 pm

    if they put them to death the “erasure” of the rest of the evidence will be complete.

  7. John F. Butterfield February 15th, 2008 6:26 am

    The evildoers erased the tapes of their evil deeds.

  8. AndyUK February 15th, 2008 4:02 pm

    The World is watching and waiting, to see how the US despatches justice. How can we in the West criticize other nations, if we dismantle the legal system whenever it pleases us.
    Why does this news never make the mainstream media? Does Murdoch really have that much influence in the workings of the US and UK?

  9. Tsunami February 15th, 2008 6:00 pm

    It is a real shame that it’s taking so long for some US citizens to wake up. When Bush declared before his terrorist attack on Iraq and claimed “Saddam Hussein was a threat to world peace and his nuclear weapon could reach the US in 45 minutes,” I DECLARED THAT bUSH WAS THE BIGGEST THREAT TO WORLD PEACE. I was scorned and branded a unpatriotic, a Bush hater, and being on the side of the terrorists.

    Five years later, many of them are starting to see what was obvious to me back then.

    Now, the courts have been tainted, the CIA lawless, the US military has become an international terroeist organization, the presidency has become a bullying tyrant, and the Congress/Senate whom job is to prevent this, or investigate, seem null and void.

    And the FBI? Its roll now is covering up crimes, not to mention those it to has committed. And it all started with not one, but two stolen elections.

    Does everyone understand how we got where we are now?

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