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U.S. informs families: 9/11 defendants may avoid death penalty.

Khalid ​Shaikh Mohammad, the alleged Sept. 11 mastermind, shortly after his capture during⁤ a raid in Pakistan.⁢ The suspected architect ⁤of the Sept. 11, 2001, ⁢attacks⁢ and his⁤ fellow defendants may never face the death penalty under plea agreements now ‌under consideration to ​bring ⁤an end‌ to their more than decadelong prosecution, the Pentagon and FBI have advised families of some of ‌the thousands killed. (AP Photo)

OAN’s Abril Elfi

3:55 PM – Thursday, August 17,⁤ 2023

The Pentagon and⁢ FBI​ told⁤ the⁤ families of the victims of‍ the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack that the alleged defendants might⁣ not face the death‍ penalty.

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This week, families ‌affected by the 9/11 tragedy received‌ a letter⁢ from the government that the alleged mastermind of the incident, ​Khalid Shaikh Mohammad,⁣ and his‌ defendants might not face the​ death penalty.

Even ‍though the letters were ⁢received‌ this week, the documents were dated ​on August 1st, one and a half ‌years ⁢after ‍military prosecutors and defense attorneys first began exploring a negotiated resolution to the case.

“The Office of the Chief Prosecutor has been negotiating and is considering entering into pre-trial agreements,” the⁤ letter said. “While ⁢no plea agreement has been finalized, ⁢and may never be finalized, it ⁣is possible that a‌ PTA in‌ this case would remove the possibility of the ‍death penalty.”

Mohammad’s trial, along with that of ⁢four other men being held at the U.S. detention ​facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has been plagued by numerous delays and legal disputes,‌ particularly regarding the ‌legal implications of the men’s initial use⁣ of torture ‌during ⁤their interrogation ‍by the CIA.

The 9/11 Commission of the United States came to the conclusion that Mohammed was the responsible individual who first suggested a⁤ coordinated ‌attack⁤ on the United States to Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and who was ⁤given permission‍ by Bin Laden to ⁤plan what would become the 9/11 attacks.

The other four suspects are ‌accused of ⁣providing various forms of‌ support to the Islamic hijackers.

Other 9/11 family ⁣members, who‍ are a part ​of a network of families who have consistently pushed for answers⁣ and​ accountability over‌ the years, ⁣said they ​would insist on the right to ⁣interrogate ‌the defendants about⁣ the scope of any official Saudi participation in 9/11 as part of a plea deal.

Peter Brady, one of the individuals who received a⁢ letter ​and whose⁤ father was ​killed in the attacks, gave his ‍remarks to the ‌press.

“It’s about holding people responsible, ⁢and ⁣they’re taking‍ that away with this plea,”​ Brady said. “The case needs ‌to go through the legal process, not be ‍settled ‍in​ a plea deal.”

Defense attorneys and judges have⁣ shifted throughout the course of the ‌case, as they all struggled with the legality and practicalities of the military trial.

A significant portion ‍of the hearings have been bogged down in legal disputes over how much of the‌ testimony‌ should be⁤ disregarded⁤ due to the defendants’‍ use ⁣of torture while in early CIA custody

No trial date​ has reportedly been set yet.

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