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News, December 2003, www.aljazeerah.info |
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Army's prosecution
of Muslim chaplain falls apart: The case that
"began with a bang" may "end with a whimper
| csmonitor.com, 12/11/03
But the case against Yee has slowly fallen apart. In late November, Yee was suddenly released from the brig where he was held in South Carolina, and returned to active duty at Fort Bragg, Georgia. Additional charges, much less serious than the original charges were filed against him for storing pornography on a government computer, and committing adultery. The Seattle Times reports that his release from jail means that he is no longer being looked at as aiding terrorists.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports Tuesday that the "Article 32" hearing to determine if Yee would face a court-martial was put on hold for a month while the Army determined if the documents found in his briefcase were indeed classified ones. "Obviously, it's the position of both the trial counsel and the defense that the material be looked at properly and be treated properly," said Army Lt. Col. Bill Costello, spokesman for the Southern Command. The military did not explain why this process still had not been completed, three months after Yee's arrest. The New Jersey Star-Ledger reports that this disclosure caused Yee's civilian attorney, Eugene Fidell, to wonder outloud how Yee could have been locked in a brig for 76 days for mishandling classified documents when military officials had not reviewed the papers to find out if they contained information that could compromise security if released.
The month-long delay comes a week after the hearing's first pushback, which was ordered when the Army announced its prosecutors may have mistakenly mishandled classified documents (the same thing that Yee is supposed to have done wrong), and sent them to the defense. But Yee's lawyers are enraged at the Army's handling of the case, according to the Miami Herald. "I think they really shot first and asked questions later," said Matthew Freedus, another one of Yee's defense lawyers. The Boston Globe reports that the second delay was ordered only after Fidell clashed with Army Colonel Dan Trimble, the investigating officer who is to judge whether the charges against Yee merit a court martial. Fidell stormed into the courtroom Tuesday, complaining to observers that Mr. Trimble wanted to discuss the problem behind closed doors in violation of his client's right to a public hearing. Yee's defense team also said the Army withheld evidence, hid witnesses and conducted an unfair hearing. "This is the most incredible military justice proceeding that this defense counsel has ever been involved with," said Maj. Scot Sikes, a former prosecutor who is acting as Yee's military lawyer.
Sikes urged the Army to drop the charges and deal with the misconduct allegations administratively. "All we want is an even playing field. Our client is not a spy, and he has not aided and abetted the enemy, whoever the enemy is." Military prosecutors, however, made no apologies and appeared undeterred by the repeated objections raised by Yee's attorneys during Monday's hearings. Yee's lawyers were particularly upset that Monday the Army focused on the charges of porn and adultery – forcing Yee's wife to sit through the testimony of his alleged mistress – before admitting it wasn't sure if he had actually transported any classified documents out of the Cuban base. CNN reports that the defense, however, did get one of the prosecution's witness (the custom agent who seized his briefcase) to admit that none of the papers in the briefcase were marked classified or secret. The agent said he had received a tip from someone in "law enforcement" to search Yee, but he would not say it was. The San Jose Mercury notes that Muslim-American and Asian-America activists are also outraged about Yee's treatment, saying Yee was targeted because he was both a Muslim and an Asian-American. Others say Yee was imprisoned because he was about to criticize conditions at the camp. They also took a swipe at the national media, pointing out that Yee's arrest was national news, but his release last week was barely covered by the media.
Colin Campbell, writing Thursday in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, says it seems that Yee is being "court-martialed for treasonable horniness." Mr. Campbell muses what would happen if this policy was extended.
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