The defense lawyers representing five Blackwater security guards on manslaughter charges are not entitled to a government security escort to travel in and around Iraq to investigate the criminal allegations, a federal judge in Washington ruled yesterday.
The lawyers, including Steptoe & Johnson partner Mark Hulkower, were unwilling to rely on private companies for the escort, arguing that the attorneys should be given the same level of security given to the FBI and federal prosecutors. The defense lawyers, who asked for a military escort, said a private contractor would not receive cooperation from the government. The lawyers said the defense would pay for government security.
Judge Ricardo Urbina of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia called the concerns of the defense lawyers speculative. “Here, the defendants have made no showing that the government’s unwillingness to provide security to the defense team would effectively deny them access to witnesses and evidence in Iraq,” Urbina wrote in an opinion published Monday evening. Click here for a copy of the opinion.
Urbina said he “fully expects” that a licensed private security company will receive the full cooperation of the federal government “in conducting threat assessments, coordinating the defense team’s movements, locating a safe location to conduct witness interviews and otherwise ensuring the safety of the defense team during its pretrial investigation.”
The judge declined to speculate on whether there may come a time when “fundamental fairness and due process require the government to take a more direct role in providing security measures to defense counsel conducting a pretrial investigation in a hostile foreign war zone. Justice Department lawyers urged Urbina to reject the defense request. Government attorneys said Urbina had no authority to compel the military to provide a security detail for civilian attorneys traveling in Iraq.
In a win for the defense, Urbina ordered the government to turn over updated contact information for the more than 100 Iraqi witnesses to the Sept. 2007 shooting in Nisour Square that is the centerpiece of the criminal prosecution of the five guards. Prosecutors allege the men were unprovoked when they opened fire, killing 17 unarmed civilians.
Now that's what I call justice! The Guantanamo terrorists will have more government protection than those to whom our system of laws is entrusred. Defense lawyers, work at your own risk. Terrorists, we will care for you. What a country we have become!
Posted by: accetta | November 17, 2009 at 06:57 PM
Ironic.. Perhaps the lawyers should hire Blackwater (or don't they trust their client).
Posted by: Leonard Grossman | November 17, 2009 at 05:32 PM