Two US federal agents today defended their interrogation of a Guantanamo Bay prisoner accused of providing assistance to the September 11 hijackers as a pretrial hearing resumed in the slowly unfolding war crimes proceedings for the five men charged in the attacks.
The agents, one from the FBI, the other from a Department of Defense task force, portrayed their questioning of Mustafa al-Hawsawi in 2007 as civil. They said the prisoner could understand them, even though the sessions were in English and the Saudi prisoner's first language is Arabic, and that he was aware that he didn't have to speak to them.
"He could stop the conversation at any time," Stephen McClain, an agent with the Criminal Investigative Task Force, said under defense questioning. Later, he added: "He could leave the room at any time."
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Lawyers for the five prisoners, who face charges that include murder and terrorism, are beginning to challenge the statements made to agents such as Fitzgerald and McClain.
In today's session, a lawyer for al-Hawsawi, Navy Cmdr. Walter Ruiz, focused largely on the language, questioning whether his client could adequately understand the agents. McClain and Fitzgerald said that though his English was accented he appeared to understand everything that was said in the multiple sessions and did not ask for a translator.
Under questioning, Fitzgerald, a veteran counter-terrorism agent with the FBI, said al-Hawsawi was not told he could have a lawyer present during the interrogations because he was not required to do so under the law.
The prisoner was cooperative and had a "friendly, reserved demeanor," he said. The sessions were apparently not recorded or videotaped and the only records of them are the agent's notes.
Al-Haswawi is accused of providing money, clothing and other support to the hijackers who crashed passenger planes into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania on September 11, 2001, in the worst terrorist attack on US soil.