Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Court Won't Toss Omar Khadr Appeal Judge But Says Serious Issues At Stake

The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2016 11:31 AM
  • Court Won't Toss Omar Khadr Appeal Judge But Says Serious Issues At Stake
TORONTO — An attempt by Canada's Omar Khadr to have a judge thrown off his appeal panel has raised important legal questions that U.S. President Barack Obama and Congress should deal with quickly, a court in Washington has ruled.
 
Nevertheless, the D.C. Circuit said it was not prepared at this time to grant the former Guantanamo Bay inmate's request.
 
"Although we deny the writ, we cannot deny that Khadr has raised some significant questions," the D.C. Circuit said.
 
"We encourage Congress and the executive branch to promptly attend to those issues."
 
At issue is Khadr's call to have the court toss presiding Judge William (Bill) Pollard from the panel hearing his appeal of his war crimes conviction. Khadr and his lawyers argue that Pollard's position on the panel is illegal based on federal statutes that prohibit a judge from continuing to work as a lawyer.
 
Pollard, a partner in a Wall Street law firm, is one of two civilian appointees on the U.S. Court of Military Commission Review, which acts as an appeal court for matters related to military commissions.
 
The presidential appointee has refused to step down, arguing the rules do not apply to his situation. He maintains he's a "special government employee" of the Department of Defence and is allowed to work as a judge on the military review court while maintaining his law practice.
 
 
In its decision, the D.C. Circuit said the law does not afford Khadr a "clear and indisputable" right to the "drastic and extraordinary remedy" of having Pollard bumped. At the same time, the court said, if the Court of Military Commission Review denies Khadr's war crimes appeal, he can raise the Pollard issue again.
 
"Our denial...does not preclude Khadr from advancing these same arguments in a future appeal where the standard of review will not be so daunting," the court said.
 
In the interim, the court said the U.S. government and Congress must make clear whether civilians who serve as judges on the Court of Military Commission Review can also practise law part time and, if so, the "circumstances under which they may do so."
 
The appeal over which Pollard resides relates to Khadr's conviction by a widely condemned military commission in Guantanamo Bay in October 2010. Khadr pleaded guilty to five war crimes he was accused of committing as a 15-year-old in Afghanistan in 2002.
 
The commission sentenced him to a further eight years in prison. He was transferred to Canada to serve out his sentence in 2012 and has been on bail in Alberta for a year pending the outcome of his U.S. appeal, which remains in limbo.
 
 
His appeal to the Court of Military Commission Review argues in part those offences were not war crimes under either U.S. domestic or international law at the time they were committed. The review court presided over by Pollard has so far refused to deal with the merits of the appeal.
 
An analysis in the Lawfare Blog argues the Pollard issue — unlikely to be fixed any time soon given the "highly politicized, dysfunctional context" in which the top levels of the U.S. government operate — is just a "symptom of a broader problem" with the military commissions.
 
"At nearly every turn, the hastily crafted military commission system shows that being novel and untested comes at a great cost in time, resources and ultimately credibility," authors Robert Loeb and Helen Klein note.

MORE National ARTICLES

'Text And Drive' Billboards On Toronto Highway Deliver Grim Message

'Text And Drive' Billboards On Toronto Highway Deliver Grim Message
TORONTO — Drivers on one Toronto highway are seeing a counterintuitive message this week: "Text and Drive."

'Text And Drive' Billboards On Toronto Highway Deliver Grim Message

Stable Rebuilds As Owners, Trainers Grieve Deaths Of 43 Horses In Barn Fire

Stable Rebuilds As Owners, Trainers Grieve Deaths Of 43 Horses In Barn Fire
It's the only thing that helps ease the pain for Barb and Jamie Millier, who are still struggling with feelings of guilt and regret for the deaths of 43 horses in a horrific barn fire earlier this year.

Stable Rebuilds As Owners, Trainers Grieve Deaths Of 43 Horses In Barn Fire

Canada's Most Notorious Prison, Kingston Penitentiary, Opens Its Doors To Public Again This Summer

Canada's Most Notorious Prison, Kingston Penitentiary, Opens Its Doors To Public Again This Summer
Visitors will be able to tour the historic Kingston Penitentiary — which has held serial killers, rapists and bank robbers — from June 14 to Oct. 29 as part of a new arrangement between the eastern Ontario city and the provincial and federal governments.

Canada's Most Notorious Prison, Kingston Penitentiary, Opens Its Doors To Public Again This Summer

Kitchener, Ont. Woman Follows Car's GPS Directions Into Lake Huron, Swims To Shore

Kitchener, Ont. Woman Follows Car's GPS Directions Into Lake Huron, Swims To Shore
Ontario Provincial Police say the 23-year-old woman from Kitchener, Ont., was following a route on her car's GPS while driving in the dark on Thursday night in Tobermory, Ont.

Kitchener, Ont. Woman Follows Car's GPS Directions Into Lake Huron, Swims To Shore

Swimming Mishap Off Cancun, Mexico Claims Life Of Ontario Man

Swimming Mishap Off Cancun, Mexico Claims Life Of Ontario Man
Zoltan Zadori was in the water with his wife, Cindy McPherson, on Wednesday when the couple was swept out to sea.

Swimming Mishap Off Cancun, Mexico Claims Life Of Ontario Man

Billions Change Hands As April Home Sales Set Record In British Columbia

Billions Change Hands As April Home Sales Set Record In British Columbia
Sales also eclipsed the record of 12,560 units set in March.

Billions Change Hands As April Home Sales Set Record In British Columbia