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Manning hearing: defence lawyer turns fire on military accusers | ||||||
2011-12-17 | ||||||
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His lawyer, David Coombs, demanded that the investigating officer, Lt Colonel Paul Almanza, recuse himself from the case on the grounds that he works as a prosecutor for the US department of justice. The DoJ is involved in a criminal pursuit of Julian Assange, founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, to which Manning is alleged to have transferred a huge trove of US embassy cables and other confidential materials. Almanza ruled that he would not remove himself from the case and that proceedings would continue on Saturday, Manning's 24th birthday. Almanza said that under the rules of military justice, a "reasonable person" would not conclude that he was incapable of conducting an impartial investigation into the charges against Manning. But the defence counter-offensive managed to dominate the opening of the hearing and set a tone that could be played out in days to come. Coombs presented a vigorous case to the court that Manning was being denied a fair hearing, decrying the fact that while the prosecution had been allowed all 10 of its requested witnesses, only two of the 48 defence witnesses that Coombs had asked for were being allowed (other than the 10 shared with the prosecution).
Manning spoke only to confirm to the investigating officer that he understood the charges against him. As the courtroom emptied at the end of the day's proceedings, a man shouted from the public gallery: "Bradley Manning, you're a hero"; the soldier made no reaction. The soldier faces a maximum sentence of life in military custody with no chance of parole. The most serious charge against him -- aiding the enemy -- carries the death penalty, but the prosecutors have indicated they will not seek the ultimate punishment.
A second charge accuses Manning of causing information to be published "having knowledge that intelligence published on the internet is accessible to the enemy". He is also charged with passing information from a secure database containing more than 250,000 records belonging to the US government -- a reference to the US embassy cables published by WikiLeaks through an international group of newspapers including the Guardian in November 2010. A vigil Nobody knows how long the hearing, called an Article 32, could go on -- judging from day one it could take several days.
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Posted by:Steve White |
#7 The defense lawyer is doing all of this to set up his inevitable appeals to the civilian courts. |
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia 2011-12-17 22:11 |
#6 Old Spook - Sir, I think you might be on the right track - I think his lawyer is showboating for the dinks who paid the bills, but only because he knows that that Manning's defense is Blackadder Dead: "As dead as a...great big dead thing." Most civilian lawyers, even the most left-wing liberal types, know that the military justice system is far more honest and straightforward than the civilian one, and that there are a lot of games that just don't fly. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2011-12-17 18:40 |
#5 Manning's lawyer seems to think he's in civilian court. Or else he's showboating for the lefty press and anti-Army bloggers who donated that money he is making. The case will be tried on what Manning did or didn't do, as shown by the evidence presented. Not on the character of the judge or prosecution, nor on how well he can point fingers everywhere in an effort to draw attention away from the fact that his client broke the oath he swore upon enlistment, and further breaking the bounds of his security clearance oath, as they will no doubt show that paperwork with Manning's signature and the UCMJ penalties cited quite clearly therein; there will be no denying that he knew he was violating the law and that he did so by planning beforehand, in full knowledge of the criminality of his acts - and that he did so repeatedly. Manning should go the way of John Walker and join him in lifetime prison without parole - preferably in USDB Leavenworth (or in Florence Colorado in the SuperMax there) |
Posted by: OldSpook 2011-12-17 17:17 |
#4 I would gladly volunteer to be called out of retirement to sit on Manning's court martial. Of course, since I would recommend the death penalty before any evidence was presented, the defense would probably not be very happy. |
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia 2011-12-17 16:05 |
#3 No bias in reporting, eh Grauniad? |
Posted by: Pappy 2011-12-17 12:08 |
#2 |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2011-12-17 08:31 |
#1 Oh boy. Trying lawyerly razzle-dazzle before an Article 32 hearing is just begging for the lawyer to be flogged. Military courts have zero respect for that b.s., and everybody appearing before them be they defendant, accuser or attorney, have about the same standing. Oddly enough, I wouldn't give Manning the death penalty for this. Instead a guaranteed life sentence at Leavenworth. That prison is almost unique, because all that can be seen are the trustees, who had been real violent and disruptive troublemakers, are wearing orange jumpsuits, and quietly and efficiently doing very humble work on post. But you never hear how they became that way. There are no stories about what life is like on the inside at Leavenworth. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2011-12-17 08:26 |