Consider This from NPR - With plea deals canceled, what happens next with the Guantanamo 9/11 trials?
Episode Date: July 20, 2025Plea deals with the 9/11 defendants, including for the alleged ringleader, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, have been canceled. Families of those who died on September 11th are still calling for justice. What ...happens next in the most delayed criminal trial in US history? NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer speaks with Georgetown University Law professor Stephen Vladeck. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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On the morning of September 11, 2001, the United States was shaken.
An apparent terrorist attack, an aircraft crashed near the Pentagon,
just outside of Washington, D.C., in northern Virginia, about an hour after those attacks in New York.
That night, in a primetime Oval Office address, then-President George W. Bush promised retaliation.
The search is underway for those who are behind these evil acts.
Bush promised retaliation. The search is underway for those who are behind these evil acts.
I've directed the full resources of our intelligence and law enforcement communities to find those
responsible and to bring them to justice.
By 2006, the top suspects were in U.S. custody, and one place became synonymous with America's
quest for justice. So I'm announcing today that Khalaq Sheikh Mohammed, Abu Zubaydah, Ramzi bin al-Sheb,
and 11 other terrorists in CIA custody have been transferred to the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay.
Over the years, nearly 800 suspected terrorists have been held at Guantanamo.
Most were released without being criminally charged.
Now only 15 prisoners remain, including five men accused of helping orchestrate the 9-11
attacks. Among them is the alleged ringleader, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. The U.S. government
wants to try them and put them to death. But decades later, there's still been no trial. The fact of torture is at the heart of what's delaying these trials.
That's Terry Rockefeller, whose only sibling, her younger sister Laura, died in the 9-11 attacks.
For the people who think the torture is in the past, they don't realize that it's coming up
over and over and over again. They don't realize how alive the issue remains.
She's referring to the fact that the 9-11 defendants
were tortured in secret overseas CIA prisons
called black sites.
That's created huge legal problems
and fights over access to classified material.
So for Rockefeller, trying to take the 9-11 case to trial
feels like an exercise in futility.
This is pushing the boulder up a hill, just getting so close and then having to take so many steps backwards again.
So she was relieved, even elated, when she learned that the government had reached plea deals with three of the 9-11 defendants last summer.
Those deals would let them plead guilty and spend up to life in prison without parole
instead of facing a death penalty trial.
I thought it would put an end to the totally failed military commission system.
But former U.S. defense secretary Lloyd Austin opposed the plea deals and tried to cancel
them. And earlier this month, a federal appeals court sided with Secretary Austin and retracted
the deals. That was reason for celebration for another 9-11 family member, Brett Eagleson.
He lost his father, John, that day.
We want a trial. We want to put these individuals on a stand. We want the public to see it and
we want the media to see everything these individuals on a stand. We want the public to see it and we want the media to see everything these individuals
have to say.
But Karen Greenberg is less optimistic.
She's director of the Center on National Security at Fordham University Law School.
She wonders if Guantanamo's military prison will remain open indefinitely and whether
the saga of the 9-11 case will stay unresolved as the defendants begin dying of illness or old age.
I now cannot see a path forward for closure. And this is the first time I've really felt this kind
of, you know, it's not going to happen ever. Consider this. After years of legal back and forth,
the 9-11 case at Guantanamo was on the cusp of a resolution with those plea deals.
Now that they've been thrown out, what's next?
After the break, I put that question to a legal scholar who's been following the case
since it began.
From NPR, I'm Sasha Fiver.
This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things and other currencies. I'm Sasha Fiver.
There is so much happening in politics in any given week. You might need help putting it all in perspective. Cs and Cs apply. you all in under 30 minutes. Listen to the weekly roundup every Friday on the NPR Politics
Podcast.
It's Consider This from NPR. The September 11th, 2001 terror attacks happened almost
a quarter century ago, but the men charged with orchestrating them have still not gone
to trial. They've been held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba for more than two decades, and chances are
increasing that they may eventually die there without ever being convicted.
This month, a major new development happened in the case.
So we've asked Georgetown University law professor Steve Ladek to talk with us about
whether that can make a trial more or less likely.
He's been tracking the 9-11
case since its inception. Steve, welcome.
Steve Sassell, Chief Justice, National Security Council, New York State Department of Justice
Thanks, Sasha. Great to be with you.
The big development is that the plea deals reached with the 9-11 defendants last summer,
including the alleged ringleader Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, have been canceled. Those deals would
have let them avoid a death penalty trial by pleading guilty and serving up to life
in prison without parole. First, Steve, could you give us your thoughts on those plea deals being called off?
Sure.
I mean, I think, Sasha, it's an enormously important development, I think, in two different
respects.
The first is, you know, I think for a long time, a lot of folks who are both skeptical
of the prosecutions and supportive of them had really viewed plea deals as the most expedient, the most efficient
way to actually try to bring some degree of closure to this long running, highly emotionally
charged case.
Obviously, that now puts the kibosh on that.
But second, the way in which the plea deals were called off with, you know, the convening authority, General
Susan Escalier agreeing to them only to be overruled by former General Lloyd Austin,
I think Sasha's going to create even more delay going forward because that's going to
provoke litigation all its own.
And we should note, by the way, briefly, the convening authority is the technical term
really for the person that oversees the military court down in Guantanamo.
That's right.
And so, you know, it's not just that the plea deals were called off, Sasha, it's that they
were called off in a way that is itself going to create more litigation both in the military
commissions themselves and before the federal appeals court, the DC circuit, potentially
even the Supreme Court.
As you mentioned, this case has been caught in a cycle of what are called pre-trial
hearings for years.
The case is widely viewed as extremely dysfunctional.
So if the plea deals remain canceled, what do you think happens next?
We really go back to pre-trial hearings and for a trial that seems doubtful may ever happen?
Dr. Kahn I think we do.
And you know, I think it's worth saying the quiet part out loud.
Part of why this whole
process has been so involved, Sasha, is because as you know, these are capital charges. And
the federal government from the start across administrations of both parties has been adamant
that it believes it should be able to obtain the death penalty. For the defendants in these cases,
the quick and dirty criminal procedure law is that capital cases have to check a lot more boxes than non-capital cases.
And so, you know, the longer that these cases remain capital cases, the longer that we're
going to have years of additional pretrial litigation, of evidentiary disputes, of fights
over who can testify and what can they
testify about.
And that's again, going back to part of why the plea deals I think were seen by many as
you know, such a positive step forward because the government was willing, at least in the
deals that General Escalier entered into to give up the death penalty in exchange for
the defendant's pleading
guilty that could have short-circuited this entire process.
Danielle Pletka Steve, I want to play you a piece of tape
from a 9-11 family member I spoke with last week. Her name is Liz Miller. Her dad died
on September 11th. She supports the plea deals. And Liz told me this.
Liz Miller I'm really feeling very frustrated. And I've
reached a point where like I'm losing my decorum
in a sense because the main theme is waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting.
And I'm really not sure how this is going to end if it's ever going to end.
Steve, how do you think this case ends?
Sasha, I wish I knew.
I mean, I think, you know, the plea deals were, gosh, going back 10 or 15 years now,
I think what a lot of folks
had thought would be the quickest way out of this case.
Without plea deals, without plea deals now, without plea deals in the future, the complication
that is just, I think, ultimately unavoidable, even if the defendants are ultimately convicted
in a trial that seems still several years away, they'll be entitled
to an appeal, an appeal that's going to raise a whole battery of messy questions that in
almost every case, Sasha, will be novel questions because we haven't had military commission
prosecutions in this context.
I spoke with another 9-11 family member last week who has a very different view than Liz
Miller who we heard from earlier. This one is Brett Eagleson. He also lost his father
on September 11th, but he opposes plea deals. And Brett told me this.
We absolutely need a trial. And a plea deal, a plea bargain, would have taken that right
away from us. As Americans, as humans, we have the right for justice. That's how we
get the truth.
He used the word justice. The court in its ruling last week also used the word justice
and indicated that only a trial would be true justice. What do you think justice should look
like in the 9-11 case? I think that's such a hard question to answer,
Sasha. Everyone's going to answer it differently. I guess what I'll just say is, I would think that
justice also includes at least a modicum
of closure.
And everyone's going to have strong opinions and strong views about what to do with the
9-11 defendants.
It seems like the worst case scenario for everybody is the possibility that five years
from now, 10 years from now, we still won't have a final outcome.
And so, yes, I think all things being equal, there are opportunities for a trial to establish
facts that a plea agreement might not.
But the reality here is that the government has had 15, 16, 17 years to get these cases
to trial.
And because of a series of both procedural and strategic and tactical decisions the government's
made, it has provoked all this litigation that slowed it down, litigation that's only
going to continue to slow it down.
So there comes a point where comparing a plea agreement to a trial is really comparing apples
to oranges because a trial is not anywhere on the horizon.
And it seems to me that some folks might want even more than a trial is some
closure on what really has been such a emotional and upsetting and traumatic chapter in American
jurisprudence.
That's Georgetown Law Professor Steve Vladek talking about the 9-11 case at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba. Steve, thank you.
Thank you.
This episode was produced by Gabriel Sanchez.
It was edited by Tinbeat Ermias.
Our executive producer is Sam Yenigen.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Sasha Pfeiffer.
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