A failed 'experiment'
Commissions’ unfair rules deliver a shaky verdict rather than justice.
Commissions’ unfair rules deliver a shaky verdict rather than justice.
Osama bin Laden's driver has been tried and convicted. But what's the verdict for the Bush administration's tactics in the war on terror?
Tribunal Handicaps the Defense
The "capture videos" the Pentagon aims to bury, late-night brutality pointing to the CIA – and even a surreal viewing of "The Dark Knight" here in Guantánamo.
How the 9/11 suspects are trying to exploit the major flaws in the military commissions implemented by the Bush administration
Ending Torture, Secret Detention, and the Prison at Guantanamo Bay
The Bush administration's treatment of juvenile prisoners shipped to Guantánamo Bay defies logic as well as international law.
The court's latest rebuke of Guantanamo Bay won't close the prison down. But it's a step toward curbing Bush's unilateral tactics.
Hearings for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others here were marred by intimidation, partial censorship and a ruling that left justice in doubt.
September 11 Defendants Should Be Prosecuted in Federal Court
Before the US Senate Judiciary Committee
After years spent here, one prisoner pins his hope on a single phone call from the outside world – if it ever comes.
A teenager captured in Afghanistan and shipped to the U.S. prison remained unknown to the world for five years. Now he's being tried as an adult.
A bruised-up detainee rejects the proceedings, and his lawyer discovers that military officials withheld records about his client's mental health.