Supreme Court declines appeal for Guant谩namo detainee once ordered free
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| Washington
A longtime detainee at the US terror prison camp at Guant谩namo Bay, Cuba, has lost his bid to reinstate a federal judge鈥檚 order that he be freed.
The US Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to hear an appeal on behalf of Mohammed al-Adahi, a Yemeni national who has been held without charge at Guant谩namo since 2002.
The high court鈥檚 action allows an appeals-court ruling to stand, authorizing the continued, open-ended detention of Mr. Adahi.
In 2009, US District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered the release of the Guant谩namo detainee after concluding that the US government had failed to prove that he was a part of Al Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces.
鈥淭here is no reliable evidence in the record that [Adahi] was a trainer at Al Farouq, that he ever fought for al-Qaida and/or the Taliban, or that he affirmatively provided any actual support to al-Qaida and/or the Taliban,鈥 Judge Kessler wrote.
鈥淭here is no reliable evidence in the record that [Adahi] was a member of al-Qaida and/or the Taliban,鈥 she said.
The judge added: 鈥淲hile it is tempting to be swayed by the fact that [Adahi] readily acknowledged having met [Osama] Bin Laden on two occasions and admitted that perhaps his relatives were bodyguards and enthusiastic followers of Bin Laden, such evidence 鈥 sensational and compelling as it may appear 鈥 does not constitute actual, reliable evidence that would justify the Government鈥檚 detention of this man.鈥
A three-judge panel of the US Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia reversed Kessler鈥檚 decision and her release order. Writing for the appeals-court panel, Judge A. Raymond Randolph said Kessler鈥檚 conclusions were 鈥渕anifestly incorrect 鈥 indeed startling.鈥
Judge Randolph stated: 鈥淸T]here can be no doubt that [Adahi] was more likely than not part of al-Qaida.鈥
Among the government鈥檚 evidence:
鈥 Adahi鈥檚 sister married a bin Laden associate, and Mr. bin Laden hosted a wedding celebration in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
鈥 He met personally with bin Laden a few days later.
鈥 He stayed in an Al Qaeda guesthouse that was used as a staging point for recruits headed to Al Qaeda鈥檚 Al Farouq training camp.
鈥 He admitted attending the Al Farouq training camp (but was expelled less than two weeks later for violating Al Qaeda rules against smoking).
鈥 He knew personally members of bin Laden鈥檚 security detail.
鈥 He remained in Afghanistan after US combat operations began in 2001, was wounded, and was later captured fleeing the country in a bus with Taliban fighters.
While Kessler found the evidence skimpy and unconvincing, the appeals court said judges may not consider and dismiss each piece of evidence in isolation. Instead, judges must weigh the evidence as part of a larger whole, the appeals court said.