Former Maryland man held at Guantanamo alleges CIA torture
Source: Associated Press
Former Maryland man held at Guantanamo alleges CIA torture
By BEN FOX, Associated Press | June 2, 2015 | Updated: June 2, 2015 6:17pm
MIAMI (AP) A former Maryland resident imprisoned at Guantanamo was subjected to mistreatment while in CIA custody far in excess of what has previously been disclosed, including being hung from a wooden beam for three days and kept in total darkness for nearly a year, a legal organization that represents him said Wednesday.
Some details about the treatment of Majid Khan in the clandestine CIA detention center emerged in December when the Senate intelligence committee released a summary of a classified report critical of the agency's treatment of prisoners suspected of involvement with al-Qaida following the Sept. 11 terrorist attack.
But the Center for Constitutional Rights, a New York-based organization representing Khan and others held at Guantanamo, said that the mistreatment was far more extensive and that it can be publicly released now for the first time because the government has determined some details are no longer considered classified.
Khan, 35, is awaiting sentencing at the U.S. base in Cuba on charges that include conspiracy, murder and attempted murder for aiding al-Qaida. He pleaded guilty before a military commission in a deal that calls for a sentence of between 19 and 25 years, instead of life in prison, in exchange for cooperating in the prosecution of other cases.
Read more: http://www.chron.com/news/crime/article/Former-Maryland-man-held-at-Guantanamo-alleges-6302289.php
24601
(3,962 posts)conspiracy with KSM regarding the 9/11/2001 attacks that killed about 3000? He is receiving a lessor sentence for assisting the prosecution of others? He isn't being put to death or spending life in prison - but will serve a maximum of 25 years?
Judi Lynn
(160,598 posts)through mind-numbing torture, and he's still going to be there a very, very long time, anyway.
Kept in total darkness for a year. How can that be possible, legally?