Detained AP Photographer Gets 1st Hearing
Iraqi Journalist Has Been Held By U.S. Military For 20 Months Without Charges
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An Iraqi family is searched near a U.S. checkpoint in Ramadi, Iraq in this Feb. 22, 2005 file photo taken by Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein (inset). Hussein was arrested and imprisoned without charges more than 20 months ago. The U.S. military now says it will seek a criminal case against him, but has continually refused to say on what grounds or what evidence it may have. (AP/Bilal Hussein, Jim MacMillan)
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Hussein detailed the aftermath of attacks and the daily lives of Iraqis in the war zone, as in this April 26, 2005 photo of an Iraqi woman with a child peering through the shattered windows of a destroyed car in Ramadi. (AP)
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Hussein began working for the AP in September 2004. His photos were recognized as part of the Associated Press's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Iraq war in 2005. (AP)
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An AP investigation found no credence to a previously-mentioned Pentagon accusation that Hussein's photos were timed with insurgent activity. This Oct. 3, 2005 picture shows suspected insurgents holding weapons in Ramadi following clashes between gunmen and Iraqi security forces. (AP)
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Photo Essay Hunting The Insurgency CBS News' Cami McCormick goes on patrol with U.S. troops in southern Baghdad
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Interactive History Of Press Freedom Follow the evolving struggles over press freedom in the United States.
Hussein was present for most of the nearly seven-hour, closed-door proceeding in the Central Criminal Court of Iraq before magistrate Dhia al-Kinani. It was the first time Hussein or his lawyers have seen any of the materials gathered by the U.S. military against him since his arrest in Ramadi on April 12, 2006.
Al-Kinani, however, issued an order that the proceedings and details of the material presented remain secret.
Hussein's defense attorney, Paul Gardephe, said no formal charges were lodged. Gardephe was permitted to see some material during the proceeding but was forbidden from taking any copies with him to aid in building his defense.
In the past, Pentagon spokesmen have alleged that Hussein was suspected in a range of terrorist-related activities.
"There is still no formal charge against Bilal, and The Associated Press continues to believe that Bilal Hussein was a photojournalist working in a war zone and that claims that he is involved with insurgent activities are false," said AP spokesman Paul Colford in a statement.
"Because the judge ordered that the proceedings today be kept secret, we are restricted from saying anything further."
In Baghdad, a U.S. military spokesman also declined to provide details beyond saying that the hearing was held by the Central Criminal Court of Iraq.
"We are referring all questions about the legal proceedings to the Iraqi representative judge," said Navy Capt. Vic Beck.
Under Iraqi law, al-Kinani will review the material and recommend whether the defendant should stand trial before a three-judge panel.
It was the first time Hussein or his lawyers have seen any of the materials gathered by the U.S. military against him since his arrest in April 2006. His attorney was forbidden to make copies.
Gardephe strongly protested the refusal of the U.S. military to allow him to meet with Hussein privately. Since the U.S. decided Nov. 19 to send the case to the criminal court, a U.S. soldier and a military interpreter have been in the room whenever Gardephe has seen Hussein, allowing no privacy to plan a defense.
"You cannot prepare a defendant for a criminal trial with the prosecutor in the room," said Gardephe, a former federal prosecutor now with the firm Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler.
Hussein, 36, was a member of an AP team that won a Pulitzer Prize for photography in 2005. He is being held in U.S. military detention at Camp Cropper, near the Baghdad International Airport, under a United Nations resolution that the military says permits it to hold any individuals deemed a security threat.
©MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- A journalist who is not showing an army censored and approved content is a threat to the security? Or is it telling the truth and showing the true face of war is not par of the official propaganda that the traditional news agencies fall to?
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- kaelinda - constitutional rights of whom?? i did not the know that the US Consitution covers every citizen in this planet. May I remind you that Atta was in this country as a student, and if he so inclined he could had been here as CBS reporter or a CNN reporter or he could host the tonight show or whatever "cover" he wanted.
Again, it is just tragic that most anti-war advocate has this irritating habit of comparing us to al queda..if this reporter WAS taken by Al Queda, his body would had been found in some dirt road..and his head a few miles down from it.
What the US is crying loud and long is for these radical islamic militants TO STOP IMPOSING THIER WILL ON THIER OWN RELIGIOUS BRETHRENS AND THE REST OF THIS PLANET. This was in unconventional..they are not coming to you as soldiers wearing army greens..they are coming to you as doctors, students, REPORTERS, etc etc..WITH ONE SIMPLE AGENDA...TO DO YOU HARM - Reply to this comment
- Another violation of constitutional rights. If a photographer from CNN (also an international news service) were to be detained by Al Quaida for 20 days with no charges being brought, wasn''t told what is he is accused of, couldn''t see the evidence against him so that he knows what it is he has to defend against, would the US government scream loudly and long? You bet it would.
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