September 11 suspect asks that US judge step down, cites evidence destruction

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The outside of the "Camp Five" detention facility is seen at U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay December 10, 2008 in this pool image reviewed by the U.S. military. REUTERS/Mandel Ngan/Pool/File Photo

The US military judge overseeing the trial of the accused mastermind of the September 11 attacks should step down and the case should be scrapped because he effectively conspired with prosecutors to destroy evidence, defence lawyers said in a court filing.

The motion said Judge James Pohl, an Army colonel, and prosecutors had tainted the case against Pakistan-born Khalid Sheikh Mohammed by keeping defence lawyers from learning that the evidence had been destroyed.

The motion was filed on May 10 and recently cleared for release. It raises a potential hurdle in the slow-moving capital case against Mohammed and four others charged in the hijacked airliner attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, in which 3,000 people died.

Pohl, along with prosecutors, “manipulated secret proceedings and the use of secret orders to mislead the defence and unfairly deprive Mohammed” of ways to keep the evidence from being destroyed, the motion said.

Commission’s spokeswoman Lieutenant Colonel Valerie Henderson referred questions to the prosecutor’s response, which is expected to be made public in a few days.

Pohl presided over a pretrial hearing on Tuesday in the case at the US Navy prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The filing alleges that Pohl authorised prosecutors to destroy evidence six months after he agreed to a defence request that it be preserved.

Defence lawyers were kept in the dark about the authorization and the contact between Pohl and prosecutors, it said.

Pohl’s order had included a provision that prosecutors give a redacted version of it to the defence. But he did not tell them to do so until 18 months after the order was issued, long after the evidence was destroyed, the filing said.

The motion does not detail what the evidence was, and classified annexes are sealed. A prosecution response filed last week has not been cleared for release.

The motion asks that Pohl recuse himself and that Army Brigadier General Mark Martins, the military commissions’ chief prosecutor, and the prosecution team be disqualified. It also asks that Mohammed’s trial be scrapped and/or the death penalty be dropped.

Martins had no immediate comment.

During Tuesday’s hearing, prosecutors asked Pohl to let 10 relatives of Sept. 11 victims testify in open court. The case is among a half dozen against Guantanamo inmates.