Friday, December 16, 2011

Bradley Manning Hearing

Bradley Manning will be seen in public for the first time since he was arrested in Iraq in May 2010 for allegedly leaking hundreds of thousands of secret US state documents to WikiLeaks.

Security will be exceptionally – some say bizarrely – tight at the opening on Friday of the pre-trial hearing of the WikiLeaks suspect at Fort Meade in Maryland. Though a small number of seats in the military courtroom have been reserved for members of the public, rigid reporting restrictions will be in place that will prevent any live coverage of the proceedings.

[...]

Among the stranger aspects of the pre-trial are that it begins on a Friday and will run throughout the weekend. The military authorities have indicated that each day's proceedings could be extended late into the night.

"To run the hearing through a weekend right before the Christmas vacation is clearly designed to minimise both media coverage and public protests," said Jeff Patterson of the Bradley Manning support network.

[...]

Under the military system, the proceedings will be led by an army official known as an investigating officer whose duty will be to recommend at the end of the hearing whether Manning should move on to a general court-martial or face a lesser punishment.

Manning's defence lawyer, David Coombs, has made official protestations that most of the witnesses he wanted to call have been declined by the military. Coombs had issued a list of 48 witnesses […but] only 10 of the listed individuals were accepted, all of whom were also on the prosecution's wish-list of witnesses.

  UK Guardian
...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

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