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JUDGE ORDERS RELEASE OF MOHAMMED JAWAD
Posted on July 31st, 2009
zshapiro
United States District Court Judge Ellen Huvelle granted Mohammed Jawad’s writ of habeas corpus. She ordered the government to release him from Guantanamo and return him to Afghanistan. But she gave the government until August 21 to return him to Afghanistan.
Jawad is the youngest detainee at Guantanamo. It is believed that he was only 12 years old when he was arrested by Afghan police and turned over to the US military.
Under Federal law the president must give Congress 14 days notice before releasing someone from Guantanamo. The judge gave the government until August 6 to give Congress notice.
The government will probably use the next three weeks to develop a case against Jawad and attempt to charge him in Federal Court. But to convict him in Federal Court they have to show that he is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, a much stricter standard than was necessary in the habeas proceedings and if they were unable to meet the habeas standard it is doubtful that they can meet the beyond reasonable doubt standard. The problem with the government’s evidence against Jawad, who they believe threw a grenade into a vehicle carrying two US soldiers and an Afghan interpreter, is that it was obtained by torturing Jawad and it is therefore inadmissible in Federal courts.
Jawad’s former military prosecutor, Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, has stated that there is ‘no credible evidence or legal basis’ to justify Jawad’s detention and prosecution, and that his release presents no risk.”
As the judge said, “Enough has been imposed on this young man,”
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