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{{Infobox War on Terror detainee
'''Mohamed Jawad''' (born c. 1985) is a citizen of ], held in ] in the ] ]s, in ].<ref name=DoDList2>, '']'', ] ]</ref>
| name = Mohamed Jawad
His Guantanamo ] is 900.
| image = Mohamed Jawad -- three months before capture.jpg
The ] estimated that Jawad was born in 1985, in ], ].
| image_size =
{{main|minors detained in the global war on terror}}
| caption = Three months before capture.<ref name=AlJazeera2009-05-26/>

| birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1985}}<ref> Department of Defense. Retrieved 4 December 2022</ref>
==Identity==
| birth_place = ], ], ]
Captive 900 was spelled inconsistently on various official documents.
| date_of_arrest = December 2002
* Captive 900 was named '''Mohammed Jawad''' on the ] prepared for his ] on ] ].<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceMohammedJawad>
| place_of_arrest = Afghanistan
{{cite web
| arresting_authority = Afghan police
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000600-000699.pdf#52
| date_of_release = August 24, 2009
| title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Jawad, Mohammed
| place_of_release =
| publisher=]
| death_date = <!-- {{Death-date and age| death date | birth date }} -->
| author=]
| death_place =
| date=] ]
| citizenship = Afghan
| page=52
| detained_at = Bagram, Guantanamo
| accessdate=2007-10-13
| id_number = 900
}}</ref>
| group =
* Captive 900 was named '''Mohamed Jawad''' on the ] prepared for his first annual ] on ] ].<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceMohamedJawad>
| alias = Amir Khan, Mir Jan, Sakheb Badsha<ref name="chargeSheet">], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090530071642/http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Oct2007/Jawad%20Charge%20Sheet.pdf |date=2009-05-30 }}, October 2007</ref>
{{cite web
| charge = Attempted murder in violation of the law of war
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000694-000793.pdf#29
| penalty =
| title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Jawad, Mohamed
| status =
| publisher=]
| csrt_summary =
| author=]
| csrt_transcript =
| date=] ]
| occupation =
| pages=pages 28-30
| spouse =
| accessdate=
| parents =
}}</ref> This is the spelling used on various official lists.<ref name=DoDList2/><ref name=DoDList>, '']'', ] ]</ref><ref name=OardecCsrtSummaryOfEvidence20070717>
| children =
{{cite web
}}
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_CSRT_unclassified_summaries.pdf
'''Mohamed Jawad''', an Afghan refugee born in 1985 in ], was accused of attempted murder before a ] on charges that he threw a grenade at a passing American convoy on December 17, 2002. Jawad's family says that he was 12 years old at the time of his detention in 2002. The ] maintains that a bone scan showed he was about 17 when taken into custody.<ref name=BBC27August2009>{{cite news
| title=Index for Combatant Status Review Board unclassified summaries of evidence
| author=] | work=]
| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8224357.stm
| publisher=]
| title=Young Guantanamo Afghan to sue US
| date=] ]
| date=August 27, 2009
| accessdate=2007-09-29
| accessdate=November 8, 2011
}}</ref><ref name=OardecCsrtTranscripts20070904>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_CSRT_detainees_testimony.pdf
| title=Index for testimony
| author=]
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-09-29
}}</ref><ref name=OardecArb1Factors>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_ARB_Round_1_Detention_Transfer_Factors.pdf
| title=Index to Summaries of Detention-Release Factors for ARB Round One
| author=]
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-09-29
}}</ref><ref name=OardecArb1Transcripts20070809>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_ARB_Round_1_transcripts_documents.pdf
| title=Index of Transcripts and Certain Documents from ARB Round One
| author=]
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-09-29
}}</ref><ref name=OardecArb2Factors20070717>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_ARB_Round_2_Detention_Transfer_Factors.pdf
| title=Index of Summaries of Detention-Release Factors for ARB Round Two
| author=]
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-09-29
}}</ref>
* Captive 900 was named '''Amir Khan''' on the ] prepared for his second annual Administrative Review Board on ] ].<ref name=Arb2SummaryOfEvidenceAmirKhan>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_2_Factors_799-899.pdf#73
| title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Khan, Amir
| publisher=]
| author=]
| date=] ]
| pages=pages 73-75
| accessdate=2007-10-13
}}</ref> }}</ref>


Jawad insists that he had been hired to help remove ]s from the war-torn region, and that a colleague had thrown the grenade.{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}} He was held in ] first at the ] in Afghanistan and then at the ], Cuba, from 2003 until 2009.<ref name=DoDList2>, '']'', May 15, 2006</ref><ref name="CNN"/> His ] was 900.<ref>{{cite news
==Background==
| url=http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/900-mohamed-jawad
| work=New York Times
| title=Mohamed Jawad - The Guantánamo Docket
| accessdate=November 8, 2011}}</ref>


The military commission presiding judge ruled that Jawad's confession to throwing a grenade was inadmissible since it had been obtained through coercion after Afghan authorities threatened to kill him and his family.<ref name="huffingtonpost.com">
Captive 900 was captured in December 2002, in the vicinity of a grenade attack, with a grenade in his possession. Two American soldiers, and their Afghan translator, were injured in the grenade attack.
According to the estimates of ] analysts he was a minor, when captured. Captive 900 says
he was still in primary school.

Captive 900 was charged on Thursday ] ], making him the eleventh captive to face charges before a ].<ref name=InternationalHeraldTribune>
{{cite news {{cite news
| url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/11/america/gitmo.php | url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/24/mohammed-jawad-guantanamo_n_267280.html
| title=Mohammed Jawad, Guantanamo Detainee Held As Teen, Back In Afghanistan
| title=Charges filed against guantánamo detainee
| newspaper=]
| publisher=]
| date=August 24, 2009
| author=]
| agency=AP
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-10-12 | accessdate=November 8, 2011
}}</ref> He was ordered released after a successful petition for a writ of '']'' before Judge ] of the ] in Washington, D.C., on July 30, 2009.<ref name=WashingtonIndependent-2009-07-30>
}}</ref><ref name=Afp20071013>
{{cite news {{cite news
|url = http://washingtonindependent.com/53264/jawad-could-be-on-his-way-home-in-three-weeks
| url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jTZHlBQGbKZQHEGGWKuA52n9lXlw
|title = Jawad Could Be on His Way Home in Three Weeks
| title=US to charge Guantanamo detainee with attempted murder
|newspaper = ]
| publisher=]
|date = July 30, 2009
| date=] ]
|first = Daphne
| accessdate=2007-10-13
|last = Eviatar
}}</ref><ref name=TheInternationalNews20071013>
|accessdate = November 8, 2011
({{cite news
|url-status = dead
| url=http://www.thenews.com.pk/updates.asp?id=30576
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110818141946/http://washingtonindependent.com/53264/jawad-could-be-on-his-way-home-in-three-weeks/
| title=US to charge Guantanamo detainee with attempted murder
|archivedate = August 18, 2011
| publisher=]
}}</ref> On August 24, 2009, he was transported from Guantanamo Bay to Afghanistan.<ref name="huffingtonpost.com"/>
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-10-13
}}</ref>


==Age==
==Combatant Status Review Tribunal==
{{See also|Juveniles held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp}}
]s were held in a trailer the size of a large ]. The captive sat on a plastic garden chair, with his hands and feet shackled to a bolt in the floor.<ref name=Nytimes041109>, '']'', ] ] - </ref><ref name=FinancialTimes041211>, '']'', ] ]</ref> Three chairs were reserved for members of the press, but only 37 of the 574 Tribunals were observed.<ref name=DoDCsrtBriefing20070306>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3902
| title=Annual Administrative Review Boards for Enemy Combatants Held at Guantanamo Attributable to Senior Defense Officials
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-09-22
}}</ref>{{npov-section}}]]


Like many Afghans, Mohamed Jawad has no official record of his birth, and does not know his exact age.<ref name=Reuters2009-05-27>
Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the ] to captives from ]. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA could not evade its obligation to conduct ]s to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of ] status.
{{Cite news
| url=https://www.reuters.com/article/gc05/idUSTRE54P6A420090527
| title=Afghan was taken to Guantanamo aged 12: rights group
| date=May 27, 2009
| first=Sayed
| last=Salahuddin
| work=]
| accessdate=November 8, 2011
}}</ref> Human rights workers trying to establish a reliable estimate of his birth date consulted with his mother; she said that he was born six months after his father was killed during a battle near ] in 1991.<ref name=Reuters2009-05-27/> In an English-language ] broadcast, one of his uncles said he was born four months after the battle where his father was killed, which he said occurred in 1990.<ref name=AlJazeera2009-05-26>
{{Cite web
|url = http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/05/2009528113311684683.html
|title = Lawyers move to free jailed Afghan 'juvenile'
|date = May 26, 2009
|work = ]
|accessdate = November 8, 2011
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20121025212133/http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/05/2009528113311684683.html
|archivedate = October 25, 2012
}}</ref>


] spokesman ] disputed these claims, saying that bone scans performed when Jawad arrived at Guantanamo established that the youth was about eighteen at the time.<ref name=Reuters2009-05-27/> A report by the University of California at Davis, about juveniles held at Guantanamo, stated that military records show Jawad to have been either 17 or 18 at the time of his arrival.<ref name=report>{{cite web
Subsequently the ] instituted the ]s. The Tribunals, however, were not authorized to determine whether the captives were ''lawful combatants'' -- rather they were merely empowered to make a recommendation as to whether the captive had previously been correctly determined to match the Bush administration's definition of an ].
| url=http://humanrights.ucdavis.edu/reports/guantanamos-children-the-wikileaked-testimonies/guantanamos-children-the-wikileaked-testimonies

| title=Guantanamo's Children: The Wikileaked Testimonies
===Allegations===
| work=UC Davis Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas

| accessdate=November 11, 2011
A ] was prepared for his Combatant Status Review Tribunal ] ].<ref name=FoiEvidenceMemoMohamedJawad>
, from ]'s '']''
] ] - page 149</ref><ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceMohammedJawad>
{{cite web
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000600-000699.pdf#52
| title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Jawad, Mohammed
| publisher=]
| author=]
| date=] ]
| page=52
| accessdate=2007-10-13
}}</ref> }}</ref>
The [[Department of Defense released two versions of this memo, in March 2005 and September 2007. The version released in March 2005 contained redactions.


==Background==
The memo contained the following allegations:
Jawad's father was killed in a battle in ], Afghanistan called, Battle for Hill 3234, in January 1988 during the ]. Relatives say Jawad was born six months later in an Afghan refugee camp in ], where they continued to live.{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}}


Jawad was studying at a sixth or seventh-grade level at a school which United States agents later described as "]".<ref name=FoiEvidenceMemoMohamedJawad>, from Mohamed Jawad's '']'' October 19, 2004 - page 149 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060722033232/http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_mar05.pdf#149 |date=July 22, 2006 }}</ref><ref name=ArbMohamedJawad/> Several years later, he was approached by four or six men at Qari Mosque in his hometown. They asked if he would be willing to take a lucrative job in ] where the government intended to remove ].<ref>Hanley, Charles J. "", Ban Mines USA, 28 July 2002 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080724204210/http://www.banminesusa.org/urg_act/974_kabul.html |date=July 24, 2008 }}</ref> He was promised 12,000 Pakistani rupees to help clear Soviet-era mines from the region.<ref name=FoiEvidenceMemoMohamedJawad/>
:'''''a. The detainee is associated with forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners:
:#''Originally from ], ] the detainee was recruited by six men while attending the local ].<ref>Mohammed Shah's place of birth was redacted in the version released in March 2005.</ref>
:#''The detainee was recruited to clear Russian {{sic}} mines in ], ].
:#''The detainee was affiliated with the ] {{sic}} organization.
:#''The Hezb-E-Islami ''{{sic}}'' organization is a terrorist organization with long-established ties to ].
:#''The detainee attended a ] ]s {{sic}} where he prepared to fight on the front lines.
:#''The detainee attended a training camp in late 2002 and received instruction on the ], shoulder-held rocket launchers, and grenades.
:#''The detainee admits to telling a terrorist organization associate that he would kill ] and American forces.
:#''The detainee was captured approximately 17 December 2002, in ], Afgahnistan while fleeing from the scene of a grenade attack targeting American soldiers.


Jawad agreed, but said he needed to gain his mother's permission to travel. The men told him to tell his family he had found a job across the border, but not to mention the details lest they worry about his safety. Some of his relatives tried to discourage him, saying Jawad was too young for a job. His mother was not around and he decided to accompany the men.<ref name=FoiEvidenceMemoMohamedJawad/>
=== Testimony ===


==Attack and capture==
Captive 900 chose to participate in his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.<ref name=CsrtMohamedJawad> , from ]'s '']'' - pages 33-38</ref>
] Michael Lyons was driving a white Soviet ] jeep,<ref name="CNN"/> with Sergeant first class Christopher Martin in the passenger seat and the Afghan interpreter Assadullah Khan Omerk<ref name="chargeSheet"/> in the rear. They had just finished an operation in the marketplace and were stopped in traffic, when somebody tossed a homemade grenade through the jeep's missing rear window.


Both soldiers from the ] were wounded, Lyons in the eye, eardrum, and both feet; while Martin had less serious injuries to his right knee, and the Afghan interpreter suffered only minor injuries.<ref name="CNN">], , CNN, December 17, 2002 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080308233527/http://archives.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/central/12/17/kabul.attack/index.html |date=March 8, 2008 }}</ref><ref name="state">], , 2002</ref>
=== Confusion ===


Four American ]s cordoned off the site of the attack, and Afghan police near the area arrested three men; they held Jawad and Ghulam Saki, while releasing a third suspect. A police officer said that he had seen one throw the grenade, and the other was tackled by a fruit vendor as he prepared to throw a second.<ref name="Fox">], , December 17, 2002</ref>
Captive 900 was confused about the purpose of the Tribunal. When his Tribunal's President asked him if he understood the Tribunal procedure he responded that it was supposed to determine if he was a criminal. His Tribunal's President tried to explain that the Tribunal was not concerned with whether he was a criminal, but rather was supposed to determine whether he was an "enemy combatant".


Jawad would later tell his ] at Guantanamo that the men he was with gave him devices he didn't recognise. They told him to put them in his pocket and wait for their return. When he went into his pocket for coins to purchase raisins from a shopkeeper, he was asked why he had a "bomb" in his pocket; the shopkeeper advised him to run and throw the two grenades in the river. It was while running toward the river, yelling at people to move aside because he had a bomb, that Jawad alleges he was "caught".<ref name=ArbMohamedJawad>, from Mohamed Jawad's ''] hearing'' - page 131 {{Dead link|date=November 2011}}</ref>
In spite of this explanation Captive 900 continued to try to explain, throughout his Tribunal, that he was not a criminal.


In an October 2009 interview, Jawad asserted that his nose was broken during his first interrogation at an Afghan police station.<ref name=TheNational2009-10-15>{{Cite news
=== Captive 900's statement ===
|url = http://www.thenational.ae/news/worldwide/prisons-legacy-haunts-afghanistan
|title = Prisons' legacy haunts Afghanistan
|newspaper = ]
|date = October 15, 2009
|first = Chris
|last = Sands
|accessdate = November 9, 2011
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110813021634/http://www.thenational.ae/news/worldwide/prisons-legacy-haunts-afghanistan
|archive-date = 2011-08-13
|url-status = dead
}}</ref>


==Imprisonment at Bagram==
Captive 900 described being approached by a man at the mosque who invited him to take a job clearing mines. Captive 900 told his Tribunal that he told the man he wanted his mother's permission before he took the job. The man told him to tell his family he had accepted a job in Afghanistan, but not to worry them by telling them he was going to be clearing mines. Various family members told him he was too young to take a job. His mother had left to visit relatives, so he left for Afghanistan without her permission. Captive 900 testified that when he arrived in Afghanistan he was given a Hezb-e-Islami ID card. He testified that he was made to take pills that left him sleepy and disoriented. He also testified: ''"The men gave me injections in the leg and I hallucinated about many things, like my nose coming off and giving my ear to people."
Jawad was held at ] and interrogated from December 2002 until February 2003.<ref name=worthington14Jan2009>{{cite web
| url=http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/01/14/former-guantanamo-prosecutor-condemns-chaotic-trials-in-case-of-teenage-torture-victim/
| title=Former Guantánamo Prosecutor Condemns "Chaotic" Trials in Case of Teenage Torture Victim
| first=Andy | last=Worthington | author-link=Andy Worthington
| date=January 14, 2009 | accessdate=November 16, 2011
}}</ref>


==Imprisonment at Guantanamo==
Captive 900 testified that he was taught how to throw grenades, that a mine went off near him, but he wasn't injured.
Jawad was transported to Guantanamo Bay detention camp in February 2003. Military records show Jawad tried to kill himself on December 25, 2003, by repeatedly banging his head against a cell wall.<ref name=vandeveldhabeasdeclaration>{{cite web
| url=https://www.aclu.org/files/pdfs/safefree/vandeveld_declaration.pdf
| title=Declaration of Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld in Habeas Corpus Case of Mohammed Jawad
| date=January 12, 2009 | accessdate=November 18, 2011
| publisher=ACLU
}}</ref><ref name=ap19June2008>{{cite news
| url=http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/06/ap_guantanamo_sleepdeprivation_061908/
| title=Detainee says troops deprived him of sleep
| newspaper=Army Times | agency=Associated Press
| date=June 19, 2008 | accessdate=November 15, 2011
| first=Ben | last=Fox
}}</ref> Jawad said that guards had subjected him to ].<ref name=jurist4June2008>{{cite web
|url = http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/hotline/2008/06/report-from-guantnamo-suicidal-teen.php
|title = suicidal teen subjected to sleep deprivation
|date = June 4, 2008
|accessdate = November 9, 2011
|first = Sahr
|last = MuhammedAlly
|work = JURIST
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110604161407/http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/hotline/2008/06/report-from-guantnamo-suicidal-teen.php
|archivedate = June 4, 2011
}}</ref><ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11/>


===Medical records===
According to Captive 900 that staff at the camp where he was trained were known by numbers, not names.
The ] published heights and weights for the detainees on March 16, 2007.<ref name=OfficialGuantanamoWeights>{{Cite web
|url = http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/measurements/ISN_839-ISN_1011.pdf#26
|title = Measurements of Heights and Weights of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
|publisher = ]
|accessdate = November 17, 2011
|page = 26
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111127142541/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/measurements/ISN_839-ISN_1011.pdf#26
|archive-date = 2011-11-27
|url-status = dead
}} </ref> At the time of his capture in Afghanistan in December 2002, Jawad was weighed at 130 pounds. Jawad is one of the detainees whose inprocess date at Guantánamo is missing. His inprocess weight is recorded as 119 pounds. His inprocess height is recorded as 64&nbsp;inches tall (5'4"). His weight was recorded 23 times between August 2003 and November 2006. No record of his weight was made for six months during the longest and most widespread ] from October 2005 through March 2006.
*In 2004 his weight ranged from 118 to 143 pounds.
*In 2005 his weight ranged from 140 to 150 pounds.
*In 2006 his weight ranged from 142 to 160 pounds.


On November 11, 2012, Santiago Wills wrote in the '']'' that health professionals had taken part in Jawad's interrogation. His article discussed the question of ethics of health professionals supporting severe interrogation techniques and treatment in Guantanamo.<ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11>
Captive 900 told his Tribunal that the staff members gave him orange gum, chocolate candy, and a tablet that made him go out of his mind.
{{cite news
|url = https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/11/the-role-of-health-professionals-in-detainee-interrogation/263812/?single_page=true
|title = The Role of Health Professionals in Detainee Interrogation
|work = ]
|author = Santiago Wills
|date = 2012-11-11
|accessdate = 2012-11-11
|archivedate = 2014-01-11
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20140111174016/http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/11/the-role-of-health-professionals-in-detainee-interrogation/263812/?single_page=true
|url-status = live
|quote = "On May 7 of that year, a guard interrupted Jawad's sleep a few hours after Vice-Admiral Church visited Guantanamo as part of an investigation into detainee abuse. Jawad was shackled and moved to cell L48, where he went back to sleep. Three hours and 16 minutes later, he was awake once again, walking in chains towards cell L40. Two hours and 59 minutes after that, a guard came, put on his shackles and led him back to cell L48. Just after he arrived in his original cell, he was taken back to L40; two minutes later, he was shackled and returned to L48. The sleepless pattern continued for 309 hours and 53 minutes. In total, according to a log uncovered by Jawad's attorneys in 2008, he was transferred 120 times from cell to cell during 14 days, once every two hours and 50 minutes on average."
}}</ref>


Wills quoted from a ], in which a member of the ] team wrote:
Captive 900's Personal Representative tried to repeat to his Tribunal the account he recorded of Captive 900, "number thirty-nine", "number forty-two"
another trainee named Nadir and himself traveling to ]. Captive 900's Personal Representative's account included Captive 900 being given some bombs. Then "something happened", everyone was running. Then he got arrested, taken to Bagram, and finally to Guantanamo.


:{| class="wikitable"
While the Personal Representative tried to repeat the account he recorded Captive 900 kept interrupting him with corrections.
|
<blockquote>He appears to be rather frightened, and it looks as if he could break easily if he were isolated from his support network and made to rely solely on the interrogator... Make him as uncomfortable as possible. Work him as hard as possible.<ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11/></blockquote>
|}


Wills described how Jawad was moved to cell blocks where he didn't speak any of the languages of the captives, in order to increase his feelings of loneliness and isolation.<ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11/> He said the youth was punished for trying to speak to his fellow captives. In addition, his "]" were repeatedly removed—leaving him naked, and without the toiletry required for the ritual cleanliness observant Muslims are supposed to observe prior to their prayers.
Captive 900 said he didn't know whether Nadir, "number 38" and "number 42" were arrested at the same time he was. He was told they were. He was told they weren't. And he was told they were killed.


], a psychologist from the Survivors of Torture Program at ] was allowed to treat Jawad in the last years of his detention.<ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11/>
Captive 900's transcript does not record the Tribunal members asking him any questions.


===Experienced the "frequent flyer" program===
== Administrative Review Board hearings ==
Although the practice was officially banned in March 2004, in May 2004, Jawad was subjected to the "]" program of ] by being forced to move to a new cell on average every 2 hours and 55 minutes.<ref name=Atlantic2012-11-11/><ref name=WashingtonPost20080807>
] | pages= 1 | author=Spc ] | date=Friday ] ] | accessdate=2007-10-12 }}</ref>]]
{{Cite news
| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/07/AR2008080703004_pf.html
| title=Tactic Used After It Was Banned: Detainees at Guantanamo Were Moved Often, Documents Say
| newspaper=]
| first=Josh | last=White
| date=August 8, 2008
| accessdate=November 15, 2011
| author-link=Josh White (journalist)
}}</ref> These transfers happened 112 times over two weeks.<ref name=jurist4June2008 /><ref name=salon24June2008>{{Cite web
| url=http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/06/24/juveniles_at_gitmo/
| title=The war on teen terror
| work=Salon.com
| author-link=Jo Becker
| first=Jo
| last=Becker
| date=June 24, 2008
| accessdate=November 9, 2011
| archive-date=June 27, 2008
| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080627154214/http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/06/24/juveniles_at_gitmo/
| url-status=dead
}}</ref> Jawad testified that during these weeks, he was also subjected to blaring loud music and bright lights at all times.<ref name=ap19June2008 /> Military records indicated that Jawad lost 10% of his body weight over this period and told doctors he was urinating blood.<ref name=ap11July2008>{{cite news
| url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/topstories/2008-07-11-3793055093_x.htm
| title=Guantanamo abuse blamed for weight loss
| first=Mike | last=Melia
| newspaper=USA Today | agency=Associated Press
| date=July 11, 2008 | accessdate=November 15, 2011
}}</ref>


===Combatant Status Review===
Detainees who were determined to have been properly classified as "enemy combatants" were scheduled to have their dossier reviewed at annual ] hearings. The Administrative Review Boards weren't authorized to review whether a detainee qualified for POW status, and they weren't authorized to review whether a detainee should have been classified as an "enemy combatant".
A summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 19, 2004, for Jawad's ]. The memo stated that Jawad was from Miran Shah, Pakistan and was recruited by six men in the local mosque to clear Russian mines in Kabul, Afghanistan. The memo alleged that Jawad:
* was affiliated with ], a terrorist organization with ties to ]
* attended "Jihad ]s" that prepared him to fight on the front lines
* attended a training camp in late 2002 and received instruction on the ], ] and grenades
* told an associate that he would kill ] and American forces.
* was captured fleeing the scene of a grenade attack targeting Americans on December 17, 2002.<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceMohammedJawad>{{Cite web
|url = http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/000600-000699.pdf
|title = Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal - JAWAD, Mohammed
|publisher = ]
|author = OARDEC
|author-link = OARDEC
|date = October 19, 2004
|page = 52
|accessdate = November 17, 2011
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111127143027/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/000600-000699.pdf
|archive-date = 2011-11-27
|url-status = dead
}}</ref>


Jawad had his Personal Representative read from notes from a previous interview at his CSRT hearing. Jawad added verbal testimony for clarification.<ref name=CsrtTestimony>{{cite web
They were authorized to consider whether a detainee should continue to be detained by the United States, because they continued to pose a threat -- or whether they could safely be repatriated to the custody of their home country, or whether they could be set free.
|url = http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/Set_44_2922-3064.pdf
|title = Testimony of Detainees Before the Combatant Status Review Tribunal
|publisher = ]
|author = OARDEC
|author-link = OARDEC
|pages = 33–38
|accessdate = November 17, 2011
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111127150517/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/Set_44_2922-3064.pdf
|archive-date = 2011-11-27
|url-status = dead
}}</ref>


===First annual Administrative Review Board hearing=== ===First annual Administrative Review Board===
An unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on November 7, 2005, for Jawad's first annual ].<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceMohamedJawad>{{Cite web

|url = http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000694-000793.pdf
A ] was prepared for his first annual Administrative Review Board on ] ].<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceMohamedJawad>
|title = Summaries of Detention-Release Factors for ARB Round One held at Guantanamo
{{cite web
|publisher = ]
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000694-000793.pdf#29
|author = OARDEC
| title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Jawad, Mohamed
|author-link = OARDEC
| publisher=]
|date = November 7, 2005
| author=]
|pages = 29–30
| date=] ]
|accessdate = November 17, 2011
| pages=pages 28-30
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111127153328/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000694-000793.pdf
| accessdate=
|archive-date = 2011-11-27
|url-status = dead
}}</ref> }}</ref>
It listed several factors favoring continued detention, including that Jawad:
* met with an individual in Khost Province, Afghanistan in October 2002. The individual offered Jawad a job that involved killing Americans,
* met four people at Qurey Mosque in Miran Shah, Pakistan in December 2002. They offered him 12,000 Pakistan Rupees to clear mines, and
* trained for one and a half days in Khost. Jawad was given one or two injections that caused confusion and incoherence. On December 17, 2002, Jawad was given two oral pills that caused the same effects.<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceMohamedJawad />


The ARB memo repeated claims about training from the CSRT memo, summarized Jawad's statements from his interrogation in Afghanistan immediately after the attack, and registered Jawad's contention that although he was at the scene of the attack, he did not throw the grenade and that he never received any military or terrorist training.<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceMohamedJawad /> There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.
==== ''The following factors favor continued detention: ====
:'''''a. Commitment
:#''The detainee met an individual at the detainee's shop in the Khowst Province around October 2002. This individual initially approached the detainee with an opportunity make extra money. The job would involve killing Americans.
:#''The detainee attended ] in ], Pakistan in early December 2002, where he met four people. The detainee was asked if he would would be interested in helping them clear mines. The detainee would be paid at least 12,000 Pakistani Rupees for his labor.


===Second annual Administrative Review Board===
:'''''b. Training
An unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 26, 2006, for Jawad's second annual ARB. The memo lists Jawad's name as Amir Khan. The allegations and denials listed in the memo are mostly similar to earlier memos and mostly summarize alleged statements from Jawad. There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.<ref name=Arb2SummaryOfEvidenceAmirKhan>{{Cite web
:#''The detainee trained for approximately one and a half days in the Khowst Province of Afghanistan. Upon arrival, the detainee was given one or two injections in his right leg that caused confusion and incoherence. Additionally, on the day of the mission, the detainee was given two oral pills that caused the same effect .
|url = http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_2_Factors_799-899.pdf
:#''The detainee was trained to use ]s, rocket launchers, machine guns, and hand grenades.
|title = Summaries of Detention-Release Factors for Administrative Review Boards (ARB) Round Two
:#''The detainee was identified as being at ] before the Americans came to Afghanistan. The detainee was attending training on how to throw grenades. The detainee was seen with a fake plastic grenade in his hand.
|publisher = ]
:#''The detainee trained with the Hezb-I-Islami Gulbuddin.
|author = OARDEC
|author-link = OARDEC
|date = October 26, 2006
|pages = 73–75
|accessdate = November 17, 2011
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111127154306/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/operation_and_plans/Detainee/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_2_Factors_799-899.pdf
|archive-date = 2011-11-27
|url-status = dead
}}</ref>


==Guantanamo military commission charges==
:'''''c. Detainee Actions and Statements
]
:#''On 17 December 2002, two people ordered the detainee and a second individual to position themselves near the mosque and to wait for an American target to pass. As an American vehicle passed, the second individual ordered the detainee to throw a grenade into the vehicle.
In October 2007 Jawad was charged before a ] for attempted murder for allegedly throwing a grenade into a U.S. military vehicle in Kabul, Afghanistan on December 17, 2002. He was the fourth detainee to face charges under commissions authorized by the ].<ref name=nyt12Oct2007>{{Cite news
:#''The detainee stated originally he was not the person who was supposed to throw the grenade, but that the grenades were passed to him at the last minute. He and others were waiting in the market for United States' vehicles to pass. The other individual told the detainee to throw the grenade, so he did.
| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/12/washington/12gitmo.html
:#''As the detainee threw the grenade, the second individual fled the scene. The detainee was caught by a local police officer at the site of the explosion.
| title=Guantánamo Detainee Is Charged in '02 Attack
:#''The detainee made a written confession to this attack, signed it, and marked it with his fingerprints.
| newspaper=New York Times
:#''The detainee told a senior Afghani police officer that he was proud of what he had done, and if he were let go, he would do it again.
| first=William | last=Glaberson
| date=October 12, 2007 | accessdate=November 8, 2011
}}</ref><ref name=afp12Oct2007>{{Cite web
|url = http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jTZHlBQGbKZQHEGGWKuA52n9lXlw
|title = US to charge Guantanamo detainee with attempted murder
|work = ]
|date = October 12, 2007
|accessdate = November 8, 2011
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110520134354/http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jTZHlBQGbKZQHEGGWKuA52n9lXlw
|archivedate = May 20, 2011
}}</ref> On October 17, 2007, Jawad was charged with three counts of attempted murder in violation of the law of war and three counts of intentionally causing bodily injury in violation of the law of war.<ref name="chargeSheet"/>


Jawad refused to appear at his arraignment in March 2008. He was forcibly removed from his cell and brought to the commission hearing room. He appeared without incident at the next hearing in May.<ref name=salon27May2008>{{cite web
:'''''Other Relevant Data''' A senior Afghani official stated he heard the detainee admit to throwing the grenade at the two United States soldiers.
|url = http://www.salon.com/2008/05/27/gitmo_jawad/singleton/
|archive-url = https://archive.today/20130201223739/http://www.salon.com/2008/05/27/gitmo_jawad/singleton/
|url-status = dead
|archive-date = February 1, 2013
|title = The forgotten kid of Guant
|first = Stacy
|last = Sullivan
|work = Salon.com
|date = May 27, 2008
|accessdate = November 9, 2011
}}</ref>


Jawad's military defense attorney, Major ], who was assigned by the government, filed motions seeking the dismissal of charges based on the fact that Jawad was captured as a teenager, treated brutally in U.S. custody and was not a member of a terrorist organization.<ref name=seattletimes15Aug2008>{{cite news
==== ''The following primary factors favor release or transfer: ====
| url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2008115207_guantanamo15.html
::'''''a.''' The detainee maintains his innocence stating someone else threw the grenade. He stated he was at the scene when this other individual threw the grenade, however he was not involved.
| title=Judge bans U.S. general from legal-adviser role
::'''''b.''' The detainee said he has not served in any military army and never received any military training or terrorist training.
| first=Carol | last=Rosenberg | author-link=Carol Rosenberg
::'''''c.''' The detainee said he had no knowledge of the 11 September 2001, attacks on the United States prior to the event nor does he have any knowledg of future attacks against United States citizens.
| newspaper=Seattle Times
| date=August 15, 2008 | accessdate=November 8, 2011
}}</ref>


In another motion, Frakt complained about the inappropriate involvement by the legal adviser to the commissions, Brigadier General ], who had withheld exculpatory evidence in recommending charges.<ref name=jurist4June2008 /> Hartmann had been suspended from participating in another commission following similar complaints. He had intervened to move Jawad's case forward in the military commission priorities because wounded victims were available for possible testimony from California.<ref name=MiamiHerald2009-08-24/> On August 14, 2008, judge Colonel ] barred Hartmann from future participation in Jawad's case.<ref name=usatoday14Aug2008>
====Transcript====
{{Cite news
Captive 900 chose to participate in his Administrative Review Board hearing.<ref name=ArbMohamedJawad> , from ]'s ''] hearing'' - page 131</ref>
|url = https://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2008-08-14-gitmo-trial_N.htm
|title = Pentagon official removed from second Gitmo trial
|newspaper = USA Today
|agency = ]
|first = Mike
|last = Melia
|date = August 14, 2008
|accessdate = November 8, 2011
}}
</ref>


On September 25, 2008, Jawad's military prosecutor, ], resigned in protest from the ], saying it was not providing due process for defendants.<ref name=latimes25Sept2008>{{cite news
====Enemy Combatant election form====
| url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-sep-25-na-gitmo25-story.html
| title=Guantanamo prosecutor quits
| date=September 25, 2008 | access-date=November 16, 2011
| newspaper=Los Angeles Times
| first=Josh | last=Meyer
}}</ref> He filed a four-page declaration with the court that stated "potentially exculpatory evidence has not been provided" to the defense in the Jawad case.<ref name=vandevelddeclaration1>{{cite web
| url=http://s3.amazonaws.com/propublica/assets/docs/vandeveld_declaration_080922.pdf
| title=Declaration of Lt. Col. Darrel J. Vandeveld
| date=September 22, 2008 | accessdate=November 16, 2011 }}</ref> The evidence included the possibility that Jawad may have been drugged prior to the attack, and that the Afghan Interior Ministry said two other men had confessed to throwing the grenade into the U.S. jeep.<ref name=latimes25Sept2008 /> Frakt intended to call Vandeveld as a defense witness about due process issues. In addition, Vandeveld said he had hoped to arrange a plea deal for Jawad. Vandeveld's superiors banned him from testifying for the defense and said they would do no plea deal. Vandeveld resigned and later testified about the due process issues in court. He was the fourth military prosecutor to resign because of problems with the system of military tribunals.<ref name=usatoday26Sept2008>{{cite news
| url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/topstories/2008-09-26-2627224296_x.htm
| title=Former Gitmo prosecutor blasts tribunals
| first=Mike | last=Melia
| newspaper=USA Today | agency=Associated Press
| date=September 26, 2008 | accessdate=November 16, 2011
}}</ref>


In October 2008, judge Col. Henley determined that the two confessions Jawad made to Afghan and U.S. officials on December 17, 2002, were both inadmissible due to being obtained as a result of ] and intimidation. Afghan policemen had threatened to kill him and his family unless he confessed.<ref name=guardian29Oct2008>{{cite news
Captiveve 900's ] met with him on ] ] for 45 minutes for a pre-hearing interview.
| url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/oct/29/guantanamo-constitutionandcivilliberties
His Assisting Military Officer reported that he was "very cordial, attentive, and was well informed about the ARB's purpose and procedures.
| title=Afghan detainee's confession excluded on torture grounds at Guantánamo trial
| date=October 29, 2008 | accessdate=November 16, 2011
| newspaper=Guardian | agency=McClatchy
| location=London
| first=McClatchy
| last=Newspapers
}}</ref> Col. Henley ruled that Jawad's confession in U.S. custody was also inadmissible because of the earlier torture; in addition the U.S. interrogator had blindfolded and hooded Jawad in order to frighten him.<ref name=usatoday13Jan2009>{{cite news
| url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2009-01-13-torture-hearings_N.htm
| title=Court hears arguments over detainee's confession
| newspaper=USA Today | agency=Associated Press
| date=January 13, 2009 | accessdate=November 16, 2011
}}</ref>


In '']'' (2008), the Supreme Court ruled that detainees could have direct access to federal courts for '']'' cases. By the time of his military commission, Mohamed Jawad also had a habeas case pending in the US District Court for the District of Columbia.
====Response to the factors====


Following ] ]'s ruling in Jawad's '']'' case in federal court that he was a noncombatant, Maj. Frakt filed a motion on July 28, 2009, with his military commission asking for dismissal of his charges and release to freedom.<ref name=MiamiHerald2009-08-02>
* Captive 900 was confused by the allegation that he met his recruiter at his shop, as he never owned a shop.
{{Cite news
*Captive 900 acknowledged attending the Qurey {{sic}} Mosque in Miran Shah, Pakistakn, where he was recruited -- to help clear ]s.
|url = http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking-news/story/1161350.html
**Captive 900 admitted that he didn't have any training in mine clearing.
|title = Young Afghan in Camp Iguana, playing the Wii
*Captive 900 denied receiving any training in how to use military weapons.
|date = July 28, 2009
*Captive 900 denied attedning the Jihadi Madrassa, or any other religious school
|accessdate = November 16, 2011
*Captive 900 specifically denied learning how to throw grenades.
|first = Carol
*Captive 900 specifically denied being trained by the Hizb-I Islami. He specifically denied ever meeting anyone in the Hizb-I Islami.
|last = Rosenberg
*Captive 900 denied ever stating that he threw a grenade. He testified that he had specifically told his interrogators that '''I was the person ''who did not throw the grenade.
|author-link = Carol Rosenberg
*Captive 900 said that local Afghan police tortured him, and threatened to kill him, if he didn't confess.
|newspaper = Miami Herald
**Captive 900's Assisting Military Officer denied being aware that captive 900 reported being tortured.
|archiveurl = https://archive.today/20090802160411/http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking-news/story/1161350.html?storylink=mirelated
**Captive 900's Baord's ] first asked the Assisting Military Officer whether captive 900's statement of abuse '''''"...triggers the mandatory aspect of the ] (OARDEC) Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) ?
|archivedate = 2009-08-02
**When the Assisting Military Officer agreed the Presiding Offier ordered the Assisting Military Officer to comply with the reporting procedure.
|url-status = dead
**Captive 900 confirmed that he was tortured by Afghani forces, not American forces.
}}</ref>
*Captive 900 denied putting his signature and fingerprint to a confession. He said he didn't have a signature.
*Captive 900 denied ever stating that if he were released he would attack American soldiers.
*Captive 900 confirmed that he may have been overheard confessing to throwing the grenaade -- when he was being tortured.
*Captive 900 confirmed that he was in the vicinity of the grenade attack, but that someone else threw the grenade, and that he was uninvolved.
*Captive 900 said he didn't know the man who threw the grenade, but he would recognize him if he saw him again.
*Captive 900 testified that he was unaware that the attack was going to take place.
*Captive 900 testified he had no prior knowledge of al Qaeda's attacks on the USA on September 11, 2001. He testified he had no knowledge of any rumors of any other attacks.


==Release order and possible trial in a civilian court==
====Captive 900's oral statement====
Judge Huvelle was assigned Jawad's '']'' petition.<ref name=Kansas2009-07-24>
{{Cite news
| url=http://www.kansascity.com/444/story/1344905.html
| title=Justice Department case unravels against teen held at Guantanamo
| date=2009-07-24
| author=Marisa Taylor
| publisher=]
| accessdate=2009-07-25
}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref><ref name=Reuters2009-07-24>
{{Cite news
| url=https://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN24486114
| title=US drops case to detain young Guantanamo prisoner
| date=2009-07-24
| author=James Vicini
| publisher=]
| accessdate=2009-07-25
}}</ref><ref name=NYTimes2009-07-24>
{{Cite news
| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/25/us/25gitmo.html?hp
| title=Government Might Allow U.S. Trial for Detainee
| date=2009-07-24
| first=William
| last=Glaberson
| work=]
| accessdate=2009-07-25
}}</ref><ref name=Afp2009-07-24>
{{Cite news
| url=https://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jKK-Co2la9xyYk3tmDBXLni4sZWA
| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130125002017/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jKK-Co2la9xyYk3tmDBXLni4sZWA
| url-status=dead
| archive-date=January 25, 2013
| title=US may transfer second Guantanamo detainee for US trial
| date=2009-07-24
| author=
| publisher=]
| accessdate=2009-07-24
}}</ref> He was represented by Joshua Haifetz of the ] (ACLU).<ref name=NYTimes2009-07-24/> On July 17, 2009, Judge Huvelle ruled that the Jawad's confessions were coerced, and thus inadmissible.


She gave the ] a deadline of July 24, 2009, to produce another justification for holding Jawad as an enemy combatant. On July 24, the Department of Justice acknowledged it lacked the evidence necessary to justify holding Jawad as an enemy combatant.
Captive 900's Presiding Officer had interrupted him when he was responding to the allegation that he was recruited in a mosque, telling him he was going off topic.
When captive 900 tried to take the opportunity of his oral statement to describe the circumstances of his recruitment, his Presiding Officer interrupted him again:
{|
| '''Presiding Officer:''' ||
Let's stop for just a minute.
] The Review Board heard this same story in a statement you made earlier in the session.
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
What kind of a statement do you want?
Do you wnat me to make a statement about my jail tiem and how it has been an injustive?
Do you want a statement about my torture ?
Do you want me to make a statement about my time here ?
|-
|
|-
| '''Presiding Officer:''' ||
You may stat anything that you would like in your personal statement.
However, the Review Board has already heard this portion of your statement and we do not need to hear it again.
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
These people want me to cooperate with them?
|-
|
|-
| '''Translator:''' ||
I told the detainee, "Yes, the Review Board would like your cooperation."
|}


According to ], the Department of Defense announced it was "taking steps to house" Jawad at an "appropriate facility" in Guantanamo.
After the Presiding Officer's interruption captive 900 did not return to making an oral statement.


] ] has said that he has ordered a new criminal investigation.<ref name=Reuters2009-07-24/><ref name=Philadelphia2009-07-25>{{Cite news|url=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/world_us/20090725_2d_Guantanamo_detainee_might_be_tried_in_the_U_S_.html |title=2d Guantanamo detainee might be tried in the U.S. |date=2009-07-25 |author=Devlin Barrett |publisher=] |accessdate=2009-07-25 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091002051141/http://www.philly.com/inquirer/world_us/20090725_2d_Guantanamo_detainee_might_be_tried_in_the_U_S_.html |archivedate=October 2, 2009 }}</ref> The Justice Department said the new investigation is examining videotapes of eyewitness testimony that was not previously available. The investigation could result in new criminal charges in a civilian court on US soil.
====Response to Board questions====


On July 28, 2009, Judge Huvelle gave the Department of Justice 24 hours to justify continuing to hold Jawad so it could conduct an "expedited criminal investigation," and scheduled a hearing for July 30, 2009.<ref>
{|
{{Cite news
| '''Board Member:''' ||
|url = http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2009/07/jawad-lawyers-call-for-release-citing.php
Mr. Jawad, you mentioned that you were at the scene of the attack.
|title = Jawad lawyers call for release citing Afghanistan support for repatriation
Why were you there at the time?
|date = 2009-07-29
|-
|author = Devin Montgomery
|
|publisher = ]
|-
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20090729215536/http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2009/07/jawad-lawyers-call-for-release-citing.php
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
|archivedate = 2009-07-29
Yes, I was there.
|accessdate = 2009-07-29
A person gave me something, but I did not know what the object was that the person gave me .
|url-status = dead
One of those guys gave me one of those to put in my pocket to keep.
}}</ref> On July 29, 2009, BBC News reported that Jawad would be released because "there was no military case for Mr Jawad's continued detention."<ref name=Bbc2009-07-29>
|-
{{Cite news
|
| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8175644.stm
|-
| title=Guantanamo inmate to be released
| '''Board Member:''' ||
| date=2009-07-29
That gave you one of what?
| publisher=]
What was it the individual gave you?
| accessdate=2009-07-29
|-
}}</ref>
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
His name was Madar.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
No, I am not asking the individuals {{sic}} name.
I am asking you, what is the object he gave to you to put into your pocket?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
I will tell you now.
They gave '''''it''''' to me and then said they would take it back from me later.
They told me to stay here .
The man told me that he would come back.
The man did not come back.
Beside me there was a sack of raison.
I wanted to buy some raison.
When I went ot pay for the raison , I took the thing the person gave me out of my pocket and placed it on top of the sack of raisons.
The shopkeeper saw the '''''thing''''' and asked me what it was.
I told the shopkeeper I did not know what it was, but someone had give it to me.
The shopkeeper told me that it was a bomb and that I should go and throw it in the river.
I put the thing back in my pocket and I was running and shouting to stay away, it's a bomb!
When I got close to the river, people caught me.
I the only thing I remember now, I was in the custody of the police.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
So someone was going to hire you to clear mines.
You were then given a grenade, but you had no idea that the item they gave you was a grenade?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
Before that time, I had never seen a grenade nor did I know what a grenade was.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
Do you admit now that the item you had was in fact a grenade?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
Well, the shopkeeper told me it was a bomb.
When I got caught they told me it was a bomb.
I guess it is possible tht the item I had was a bomb.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
You were there when the attack occurred, correct?
You also know the person who threw the grenades at the American vehicle, Correct?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
It's a possibility that they {{sic}} guy who gave me the grenade, maybe he thrwe it.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
Did you hear an explosion?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
Yes. I didn't know it was a bomb, but I could hear people shouting.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
The name you mentioned earlier, is that the name of hte person who threw the bomb/grenade?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
I did not see it with my own eyes. I think he is the one, but I did not see him with my own eyes.
He shoudl be the one because he cheated me.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
What is your relationship with the person who threw the grenade?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
I have no relationship with him and I don't know him.
|-
|
|-
| '''Board Member:''' ||
You have no relationship with this man, but he just happened to give you a grenade?
|-
|
|-
| '''Captive 900:''' ||
That man, I came to Afghanistan to work for him.
|}
*When captive 900 was asked whether he considered the USA to be a liberator or an invader -- he testified that everyone knew that the Americans would bring peace and stability, and that they would help build up Afghanistan.
*Captive 900 testified he had completed sixth or seventh grade.
*Captive 900 confirmed his new employers injected him with mand-altering drugs. He was told the injections were routine for mine clearance workers.


], writing in the '']'', reported on July 28, 2009 that Jawad has been transferred to ] at Guantanamo.<ref name="MiamiHerald2009-08-02"/> His defense attorney David Frakt told Rosenberg that one of Jawad's co-counsels had recently visited Jawad in Camp Iguana. Frakt said, "He's adjusting to his new environment, learning to play the ] and getting caught up on Afghan cricket and soccer scores. He's pleased but bewildered by the legal developments. Yet again he's won, but he's still there."<ref name="MiamiHerald2009-08-02"/>
===Second annual Administrative Review Board hearing===


==Repatriation==
A ] was prepared for his second annual Administrative Review Board on ] ].<ref name=Arb2SummaryOfEvidenceAmirKhan>
], writing in the '']'', reports that Jawad was repatriated on August 24, 2009.<ref name=MiamiHerald2009-08-24>
{{cite web
{{Cite news
| url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_2_Factors_799-899.pdf#73
|url = http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/breaking-news/story/1199863.html
| title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Khan, Amir
|title = Young Afghan sent home from Guantánamo
| publisher=]
|date = 2009-08-24
| author=]
|author = Carol Rosenberg
| date=] ]
|author-link = Carol Rosenberg
| pages=pages 73-75
|publisher = ]
| accessdate=2007-10-13
|quote = His case gained prominence when the Pentagon's legal adviser for military commissions, Air Force ] ], found his file among those being considered for war crimes prosecution and propelled it to the top of the pile, in part because there were victims who could testify -- former, wounded reserve soldiers back in California.
}}</ref>
|archiveurl = https://archive.today/20090824153907/http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/breaking-news/story/1199863.html
|archivedate = 2009-08-24
|url-status = dead
}}</ref> He was first sent for questioning to the ], a former Soviet facility. The United States built an American wing in 2007.


] ], a former military defense counsel, said that Jawad was scheduled to meet with President ]. He was to be released into the custody of an uncle, ] Gul Naik.<ref name=MiamiHerald2009-08-24/> Montalvo, who had flown to Afghanistan at his own expense because the Department of Defense would not authorize him to help aid Jawad's arrival, said: "It's still not over until he can walk free, but he is almost there. I don't trust anything until I see him in his house with his family."<ref name=MiamiHerald2009-08-24/>
====The following primary factors favor continued detention:====
{|
|
:'''a.'''
|| '''Commitment
|-
|
|-
| ||
{|
| '''1.''' ||
The detainee stated he trained with the ] for approximately one and a half days in ], Afghanistan.
The detainee trained with grenades.
|-
|
|-
| '''2.''' ||
The Hizb-I Islami Gulbuddin has long-established ties with ]. The Hizb-I Islami Gulbuddin has staged small attacks in its attempt to force
United States troops to withdraw from Afghanistan, overthrow the ] and to establish a fundamentalist state.
|-
|
|-
| '''3.''' ||
A source stated he saw the detainee in a jihad Madrassas {{sic}} preparing to fight on the front lines.
|-
|
|-
| '''4.''' ||
The detainee stated he and an associated were ordered to position themselves near a mosques and wait for an American target to pass by.
According to the detainee, as an American vehicle passed, the associate ordered the detainee to throw a grenade into the vehicle.
The detainee further stated as he threw a grenade which exploded at the front passenger's feet, the associate fled the scene; while the detainee was caught by a local police officer.
|-
|
|-
| '''5.''' ||
The detainee stated he and an associated left a mosque and while on the street, the associate threw two grenades into a car.
|-
|
|-
| '''6.''' ||
The detainee stated although he was at the scene when an associate threw the grenade, he was innocent and not involved.
|-
|
|-
| '''7.''' ||
The detainee stated originally he was not supposed to be the one to throw the grenade; the grenades were passed to him at the last minute.
|-
|
|-
| '''8.''' ||
According to the Afghanistan police who witnessed the attack, there was only one suspect involved.
|-
|
|-
| '''9.''' ||
According to a membe of the Afghanistan National Security Council the detainee stated none of the people who trained him were around and he acted alone in the grenade incident.
The detainee also stated he was trained to target Americans and the Afghanistan government.
During the Afghanistan police interrogation, the detainee admitted to throwing the grenade at the two United States soldiers.
The detainee spoke English and had approximately four grenades in his possession when he was arrested.
|}
|-
|
|-
|
:'''b.'''
|| '''Training
|-
|
|-
| ||
{|
| '''1.''' ||
The detainee claimed he did not serve in any military army and never received any military or terrorist training.
|-
|
|-
| '''2.''' ||
The detainee claimed while he was in the casves of Afghanistan, he was trained on how to use ]'s {{sic}}, rocket launchers, ]s and ]s.
|}
|-
|
|-
|
:'''c.'''
|| '''Intent
|-
|
|-
| ||
{|
| '''1.''' ||
The detainee stated an associate asked him if he would be willing to kill anyone, and the detainee said yes.
|-
|
|-
| '''2.''' ||
The detainee stated an associate approached him with an opportunity to make extra money in a job that would involve killing Americans.
|-
|
|-
| '''3.''' ||
When questioned by the police regarding the detainee's greanade attack against United States soldiers, the detainee stated he was proud of what he did and if he were let go
he would do it again.
|-
|
|-
| '''4.''' ||
The detainee made a written confession to this attack, signed it and marked it with his fingerprint.
|}
|-
|
|-
|
:'''d.'''
|| '''Other Relevant Data
|-
|
|-
| ||
The detainee claiemd to have some knowledge of the attacks in the United States prior to their execution on 11 September 2001 but denied knowledge of any
rumors or plans of future attacks on the United States or United States interests.
|}


An article published in '']'' on October 15, 2009, covered Jawad's return to Afghanistan:
====The following primary factors favor release or transfer:====
{|
|
:'''a.'''
||
The detainee stated that he had no prior knowledge of the attacks on 11 September 2001 in the United States and he has no knowledge of future attacks against the United
States citizens.
|-
|
|-
|
:'''b.'''
||
The detainee stated he never with the Taliban.
|-
|
|-
|
:'''c.'''
||
The detainee was asked how he went from a job clearing mines to involvement in a grenade attack on United States military soldiers, the detainee said he was tricked.
|-
|
|-
|
:'''d.'''
||
The detainee claims that he could not recall any specifics regarding his involvement during the grenade attack.
The detainee claims that he vaguely remembers what actually happened during the grenade attack because he claims he was drugged.
|}


<blockquote>A photograph of before his ordeal shows a boy virtually unrecognisable from the 19-year-old man who, after his release in the summer, described being stripped naked, choked, slammed against walls and often held in isolation during this time. 'The people who are in jails are all Muslims. The Americans are not respecting their religion and they are not respecting them as humans,' he said.<ref name=TheNational2009-10-15/></blockquote>
====Transcript====


''The National'' described Jawad as now present for a war that has grown noticeably fiercer in the years he has been away. "The situation will get worse because it's impossible to finish fighting with fighting," he said. "It's impossible to clean blood with blood."<ref name=TheNational2009-10-15/>
There is no record that Mohamed Jawsd chose ot participate in his second annual Administrative Veview Board hearing.


== See also ==
==Faces charges before a Guantanamo military commission==
* ]
* ]
* ]


==References==
On Thursday ] ] a captive named Mohammed Jawad because the eleventh Guantanamo charges before a ].<ref name=InternationalHeraldTribune>
{{refbegin}}
{{cite news
{{Reflist|2}}
| url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/11/america/gitmo.php
{{refend}}
| title=Charges filed against guantánamo detainee
| publisher=]
| author=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-10-12
}}</ref><ref name=Afp20071013>
{{cite news
| url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jTZHlBQGbKZQHEGGWKuA52n9lXlw
| title=US to charge Guantanamo detainee with attempted murder
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-10-13
}}</ref><ref name=TheInternationalNews20071013>
({{cite news
| url=http://www.thenews.com.pk/updates.asp?id=30576
| title=US to charge Guantanamo detainee with attempted murder
| publisher=]
| date=] ]
| accessdate=2007-10-13
}}</ref>


==External links==
Ten men faced charges before versions of the military commission authorized by ] ].
* {{cite news | url=http://www.armytimes.com/legacy/new/1-292925-1411004.php | title=Soldiers in stable condition after grenade attack | first=Todd | last=Pitman | newspaper=Army Times | agency=Associated Press | date=December 17, 2002 | accessdate=November 15, 2011 }}
After the ] struck down the military commission authorized by the President, and ruled that only
* {{cite news | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1817&dat=20021217&id=Rj4dAAAAIBAJ&pg=6279,5531447 | title=Soldiers injured in grenade attack in Afghanistan: Americans spoke to attackers | author-link=Carlotta Gall |first=Carlotta | last=Gall | newspaper=Tuscaloosa News | agency=N.Y. Times News Service | date=December 17, 2002 | accessdate=November 15, 2011}}
] had the authority to authorize military commissions the Congress passed the ].
* {{cite news|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2002-12-18/news/0212170639_1_afghan-capital-kabul-three-grenades |title=Two U.S. Soldiers Wounded |first=Pamela |last=Constable |author-link=Pamela Constable |date=December 18, 2002 |accessdate=November 8, 2011 |newspaper=Sun Sentinel |agency=Washington Post |url-status=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160116033522/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2002-12-18/news/0212170639_1_afghan-capital-kabul-three-grenades |archivedate=January 16, 2016 }}
Three of the original ten men had new charges laid before the Congressionally authorized military commissions.
* {{cite news|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/2003/01/15/teen-outlines-terrorism-training/ |title=Teen outlines terrorism training: Camps revived in Afghanistan |first=Vanesa |last=Gezari |newspaper=Chicago Tribune |date=January 14, 2003 |access-date=November 8, 2011 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130407102246/http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2003-01-15/news/0301150358_1_afghan-border-pakistan-and-iran-gulbuddin-hekmatyar |archive-date=April 7, 2013 }}
Mohammed Jawad is the first captive to face charges before the Congressionally authorized military commissions who hadn't
* {{cite web
been charged before the earlier Presidentially authorized versions.
|first=Sahr
|last=MuhammedAlly
|url=http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/hotline/2008/05/mohammed-jawad-is-another-teen-growing.php
|title=Mohammed Jawad is another teen growing up in detention
|date=May 19, 2008
|accessdate=November 9, 2011
|work=JURIST
|url-status=bot: unknown
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604045538/http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/hotline/2008/05/mohammed-jawad-is-another-teen-growing.php
|archivedate=June 4, 2011
}}
* {{cite web | url=http://s3.amazonaws.com/propublica/assets/docs/vandeveld_declaration_080922.pdf | title=Declaration of Lt. Col. Darrel J. Vandeveld | date=September 22, 2008 | accessdate=November 16, 2011 }}
* {{cite web | url=https://www.aclu.org/files/pdfs/safefree/vandeveld_declaration.pdf | title=Declaration of Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld in Habeas Corpus Case of Mohammed Jawad | date=January 12, 2009 | accessdate=November 16, 2011 | publisher=ACLU }}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/01/14/former-guantanamo-prosecutor-condemns-chaotic-trials-in-case-of-teenage-torture-victim/ | title=Former Guantánamo Prosecutor Condemns "Chaotic" Trials in Case of Teenage Torture Victim | first=Andy | last=Worthington | date=January 14, 2009 | accessdate=November 16, 2011 | author-link=Andy Worthington}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/01/a-child-at-guantanamo-the-unending-torment-of-mohamed-jawad/ |title=A Child At Guantánamo: The Unending Torment of Mohamed Jawad |first=Andy |last=Worthington |date=June 1, 2009 |accessdate=November 11, 2011 |author-link=Andy Worthington |url-status=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111021044135/http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/01/a-child-at-guantanamo-the-unending-torment-of-mohamed-jawad/ |archivedate=October 21, 2011 }}
* {{cite web | url=http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/pdf/Vandeveld090708.pdf | title=Testimony of Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld (USA Reserves) | date=July 8, 2009 | publisher=U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary | url-status=dead | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120128082016/http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/pdf/Vandeveld090708.pdf | archivedate=January 28, 2012 }}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.scotusblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/jawad-hearing-7-16-09.pdf | title=Transcript of the habeas corpus hearing | date=July 16, 2009 }}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.scotusblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/huvelle-jawad-order-7-30-09.pdf | title=Release order | date=July 30, 2009 }}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/07/31/how-judge-huvelle-humiliated-the-government-in-guantanamo-case/ |title=How Judge Huvelle Humiliated The Government In Guantánamo Case |first=Andy |last=Worthington |date=July 31, 2009 |accessdate=November 11, 2011 |author-link=Andy Worthington |url-status=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111021020242/http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/07/31/how-judge-huvelle-humiliated-the-government-in-guantanamo-case/ |archivedate=October 21, 2011 }}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/09/02/reflections-on-mohamed-jawads-release-from-guantanamo/ | title=Reflections On Mohamed Jawad's Release From Guantánamo | first=Andy | last=Worthington | date=September 2, 2009 | accessdate=November 11, 2011 | author-link=Andy Worthington}}
* {{cite web | url=https://www.aclu.org/national-security/mohammed-jawad-habeas-corpus | title=Mohammed Jawad - Habeas Corpus | date=August 29, 2009 | accessdate=November 16, 2011 | publisher=ACLU }}
{{GitmoCharges}}


{{Afghanistan War}}
== References ==
{{WoTPrisoners}}
<references/>


] {{DEFAULTSORT:Jawad, Mohamed}}
]
]
] ]
] ]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 19:38, 30 September 2024

Mohamed Jawad
Three months before capture.
Born1985 (age 39–40)
Miranshah, FATA, Pakistan
ArrestedDecember 2002
Afghanistan
Afghan police
ReleasedAugust 24, 2009
CitizenshipAfghan
Detained at Bagram, Guantanamo
Other name(s) Amir Khan, Mir Jan, Sakheb Badsha
ISN900
Charge(s)Attempted murder in violation of the law of war

Mohamed Jawad, an Afghan refugee born in 1985 in Miranshah, Pakistan, was accused of attempted murder before a Guantanamo military commission on charges that he threw a grenade at a passing American convoy on December 17, 2002. Jawad's family says that he was 12 years old at the time of his detention in 2002. The United States Department of Defense maintains that a bone scan showed he was about 17 when taken into custody.

Jawad insists that he had been hired to help remove landmines from the war-torn region, and that a colleague had thrown the grenade. He was held in extrajudicial detention first at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility in Afghanistan and then at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, Cuba, from 2003 until 2009. His Internment Serial Number was 900.

The military commission presiding judge ruled that Jawad's confession to throwing a grenade was inadmissible since it had been obtained through coercion after Afghan authorities threatened to kill him and his family. He was ordered released after a successful petition for a writ of habeas corpus before Judge Ellen Huvelle of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., on July 30, 2009. On August 24, 2009, he was transported from Guantanamo Bay to Afghanistan.

Age

See also: Juveniles held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp

Like many Afghans, Mohamed Jawad has no official record of his birth, and does not know his exact age. Human rights workers trying to establish a reliable estimate of his birth date consulted with his mother; she said that he was born six months after his father was killed during a battle near Khost in 1991. In an English-language Al Jazeera broadcast, one of his uncles said he was born four months after the battle where his father was killed, which he said occurred in 1990.

Pentagon spokesman Jeffrey D. Gordon disputed these claims, saying that bone scans performed when Jawad arrived at Guantanamo established that the youth was about eighteen at the time. A report by the University of California at Davis, about juveniles held at Guantanamo, stated that military records show Jawad to have been either 17 or 18 at the time of his arrival.

Background

Jawad's father was killed in a battle in Khost, Afghanistan called, Battle for Hill 3234, in January 1988 during the Afghan-Soviet War. Relatives say Jawad was born six months later in an Afghan refugee camp in Miran Shah, Pakistan, where they continued to live.

Jawad was studying at a sixth or seventh-grade level at a school which United States agents later described as "Jihadi". Several years later, he was approached by four or six men at Qari Mosque in his hometown. They asked if he would be willing to take a lucrative job in Kabul, Afghanistan where the government intended to remove landmines. He was promised 12,000 Pakistani rupees to help clear Soviet-era mines from the region.

Jawad agreed, but said he needed to gain his mother's permission to travel. The men told him to tell his family he had found a job across the border, but not to mention the details lest they worry about his safety. Some of his relatives tried to discourage him, saying Jawad was too young for a job. His mother was not around and he decided to accompany the men.

Attack and capture

Sergeant first class Michael Lyons was driving a white Soviet UAZ jeep, with Sergeant first class Christopher Martin in the passenger seat and the Afghan interpreter Assadullah Khan Omerk in the rear. They had just finished an operation in the marketplace and were stopped in traffic, when somebody tossed a homemade grenade through the jeep's missing rear window.

Both soldiers from the 19th Special Forces Group were wounded, Lyons in the eye, eardrum, and both feet; while Martin had less serious injuries to his right knee, and the Afghan interpreter suffered only minor injuries.

Four American Humvees cordoned off the site of the attack, and Afghan police near the area arrested three men; they held Jawad and Ghulam Saki, while releasing a third suspect. A police officer said that he had seen one throw the grenade, and the other was tackled by a fruit vendor as he prepared to throw a second.

Jawad would later tell his Administrative Review Board at Guantanamo that the men he was with gave him devices he didn't recognise. They told him to put them in his pocket and wait for their return. When he went into his pocket for coins to purchase raisins from a shopkeeper, he was asked why he had a "bomb" in his pocket; the shopkeeper advised him to run and throw the two grenades in the river. It was while running toward the river, yelling at people to move aside because he had a bomb, that Jawad alleges he was "caught".

In an October 2009 interview, Jawad asserted that his nose was broken during his first interrogation at an Afghan police station.

Imprisonment at Bagram

Jawad was held at Bagram prison and interrogated from December 2002 until February 2003.

Imprisonment at Guantanamo

Jawad was transported to Guantanamo Bay detention camp in February 2003. Military records show Jawad tried to kill himself on December 25, 2003, by repeatedly banging his head against a cell wall. Jawad said that guards had subjected him to sleep deprivation.

Medical records

The Department of Defense published heights and weights for the detainees on March 16, 2007. At the time of his capture in Afghanistan in December 2002, Jawad was weighed at 130 pounds. Jawad is one of the detainees whose inprocess date at Guantánamo is missing. His inprocess weight is recorded as 119 pounds. His inprocess height is recorded as 64 inches tall (5'4"). His weight was recorded 23 times between August 2003 and November 2006. No record of his weight was made for six months during the longest and most widespread Guantánamo hunger strike from October 2005 through March 2006.

  • In 2004 his weight ranged from 118 to 143 pounds.
  • In 2005 his weight ranged from 140 to 150 pounds.
  • In 2006 his weight ranged from 142 to 160 pounds.

On November 11, 2012, Santiago Wills wrote in the Atlantic Magazine that health professionals had taken part in Jawad's interrogation. His article discussed the question of ethics of health professionals supporting severe interrogation techniques and treatment in Guantanamo.

Wills quoted from a leaked detainee assessment, in which a member of the BSCT team wrote:

He appears to be rather frightened, and it looks as if he could break easily if he were isolated from his support network and made to rely solely on the interrogator... Make him as uncomfortable as possible. Work him as hard as possible.

Wills described how Jawad was moved to cell blocks where he didn't speak any of the languages of the captives, in order to increase his feelings of loneliness and isolation. He said the youth was punished for trying to speak to his fellow captives. In addition, his "comfort items" were repeatedly removed—leaving him naked, and without the toiletry required for the ritual cleanliness observant Muslims are supposed to observe prior to their prayers.

Katherine Porterfield, a psychologist from the Survivors of Torture Program at Bellevue Hospital was allowed to treat Jawad in the last years of his detention.

Experienced the "frequent flyer" program

Although the practice was officially banned in March 2004, in May 2004, Jawad was subjected to the "frequent flyer" program of sleep deprivation by being forced to move to a new cell on average every 2 hours and 55 minutes. These transfers happened 112 times over two weeks. Jawad testified that during these weeks, he was also subjected to blaring loud music and bright lights at all times. Military records indicated that Jawad lost 10% of his body weight over this period and told doctors he was urinating blood.

Combatant Status Review

A summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 19, 2004, for Jawad's Combatant Status Review Tribunal. The memo stated that Jawad was from Miran Shah, Pakistan and was recruited by six men in the local mosque to clear Russian mines in Kabul, Afghanistan. The memo alleged that Jawad:

  • was affiliated with Hezb-E-Islami, a terrorist organization with ties to Osama bin Laden
  • attended "Jihad Madrassas" that prepared him to fight on the front lines
  • attended a training camp in late 2002 and received instruction on the AK-47, shoulder-held rocket launchers and grenades
  • told an associate that he would kill Northern Alliance and American forces.
  • was captured fleeing the scene of a grenade attack targeting Americans on December 17, 2002.

Jawad had his Personal Representative read from notes from a previous interview at his CSRT hearing. Jawad added verbal testimony for clarification.

First annual Administrative Review Board

An unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on November 7, 2005, for Jawad's first annual Administrative Review Board. It listed several factors favoring continued detention, including that Jawad:

  • met with an individual in Khost Province, Afghanistan in October 2002. The individual offered Jawad a job that involved killing Americans,
  • met four people at Qurey Mosque in Miran Shah, Pakistan in December 2002. They offered him 12,000 Pakistan Rupees to clear mines, and
  • trained for one and a half days in Khost. Jawad was given one or two injections that caused confusion and incoherence. On December 17, 2002, Jawad was given two oral pills that caused the same effects.

The ARB memo repeated claims about training from the CSRT memo, summarized Jawad's statements from his interrogation in Afghanistan immediately after the attack, and registered Jawad's contention that although he was at the scene of the attack, he did not throw the grenade and that he never received any military or terrorist training. There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.

Second annual Administrative Review Board

An unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 26, 2006, for Jawad's second annual ARB. The memo lists Jawad's name as Amir Khan. The allegations and denials listed in the memo are mostly similar to earlier memos and mostly summarize alleged statements from Jawad. There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.

Guantanamo military commission charges

Major David Frakt.

In October 2007 Jawad was charged before a Guantanamo military commission for attempted murder for allegedly throwing a grenade into a U.S. military vehicle in Kabul, Afghanistan on December 17, 2002. He was the fourth detainee to face charges under commissions authorized by the Military Commissions Act of 2006. On October 17, 2007, Jawad was charged with three counts of attempted murder in violation of the law of war and three counts of intentionally causing bodily injury in violation of the law of war.

Jawad refused to appear at his arraignment in March 2008. He was forcibly removed from his cell and brought to the commission hearing room. He appeared without incident at the next hearing in May.

Jawad's military defense attorney, Major David Frakt, who was assigned by the government, filed motions seeking the dismissal of charges based on the fact that Jawad was captured as a teenager, treated brutally in U.S. custody and was not a member of a terrorist organization.

In another motion, Frakt complained about the inappropriate involvement by the legal adviser to the commissions, Brigadier General Thomas W. Hartmann, who had withheld exculpatory evidence in recommending charges. Hartmann had been suspended from participating in another commission following similar complaints. He had intervened to move Jawad's case forward in the military commission priorities because wounded victims were available for possible testimony from California. On August 14, 2008, judge Colonel Stephen Henley barred Hartmann from future participation in Jawad's case.

On September 25, 2008, Jawad's military prosecutor, Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, resigned in protest from the Office of Military Commissions, saying it was not providing due process for defendants. He filed a four-page declaration with the court that stated "potentially exculpatory evidence has not been provided" to the defense in the Jawad case. The evidence included the possibility that Jawad may have been drugged prior to the attack, and that the Afghan Interior Ministry said two other men had confessed to throwing the grenade into the U.S. jeep. Frakt intended to call Vandeveld as a defense witness about due process issues. In addition, Vandeveld said he had hoped to arrange a plea deal for Jawad. Vandeveld's superiors banned him from testifying for the defense and said they would do no plea deal. Vandeveld resigned and later testified about the due process issues in court. He was the fourth military prosecutor to resign because of problems with the system of military tribunals.

In October 2008, judge Col. Henley determined that the two confessions Jawad made to Afghan and U.S. officials on December 17, 2002, were both inadmissible due to being obtained as a result of torture and intimidation. Afghan policemen had threatened to kill him and his family unless he confessed. Col. Henley ruled that Jawad's confession in U.S. custody was also inadmissible because of the earlier torture; in addition the U.S. interrogator had blindfolded and hooded Jawad in order to frighten him.

In Boumediene v. Bush (2008), the Supreme Court ruled that detainees could have direct access to federal courts for habeas corpus cases. By the time of his military commission, Mohamed Jawad also had a habeas case pending in the US District Court for the District of Columbia.

Following US District Court Judge Ellen Huvelle's ruling in Jawad's habeas corpus case in federal court that he was a noncombatant, Maj. Frakt filed a motion on July 28, 2009, with his military commission asking for dismissal of his charges and release to freedom.

Release order and possible trial in a civilian court

Judge Huvelle was assigned Jawad's habeas corpus petition. He was represented by Joshua Haifetz of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). On July 17, 2009, Judge Huvelle ruled that the Jawad's confessions were coerced, and thus inadmissible.

She gave the Department of Justice a deadline of July 24, 2009, to produce another justification for holding Jawad as an enemy combatant. On July 24, the Department of Justice acknowledged it lacked the evidence necessary to justify holding Jawad as an enemy combatant.

According to Reuters, the Department of Defense announced it was "taking steps to house" Jawad at an "appropriate facility" in Guantanamo.

United States Attorney General Eric Holder has said that he has ordered a new criminal investigation. The Justice Department said the new investigation is examining videotapes of eyewitness testimony that was not previously available. The investigation could result in new criminal charges in a civilian court on US soil.

On July 28, 2009, Judge Huvelle gave the Department of Justice 24 hours to justify continuing to hold Jawad so it could conduct an "expedited criminal investigation," and scheduled a hearing for July 30, 2009. On July 29, 2009, BBC News reported that Jawad would be released because "there was no military case for Mr Jawad's continued detention."

Carol Rosenberg, writing in the Miami Herald, reported on July 28, 2009 that Jawad has been transferred to Camp Iguana at Guantanamo. His defense attorney David Frakt told Rosenberg that one of Jawad's co-counsels had recently visited Jawad in Camp Iguana. Frakt said, "He's adjusting to his new environment, learning to play the Wii and getting caught up on Afghan cricket and soccer scores. He's pleased but bewildered by the legal developments. Yet again he's won, but he's still there."

Repatriation

Carol Rosenberg, writing in the Miami Herald, reports that Jawad was repatriated on August 24, 2009. He was first sent for questioning to the Pul-e-Charkhi prison, a former Soviet facility. The United States built an American wing in 2007.

Major Eric Montalvo, a former military defense counsel, said that Jawad was scheduled to meet with President Hamid Karzai. He was to be released into the custody of an uncle, Hajji Gul Naik. Montalvo, who had flown to Afghanistan at his own expense because the Department of Defense would not authorize him to help aid Jawad's arrival, said: "It's still not over until he can walk free, but he is almost there. I don't trust anything until I see him in his house with his family."

An article published in The National on October 15, 2009, covered Jawad's return to Afghanistan:

A photograph of before his ordeal shows a boy virtually unrecognisable from the 19-year-old man who, after his release in the summer, described being stripped naked, choked, slammed against walls and often held in isolation during this time. 'The people who are in jails are all Muslims. The Americans are not respecting their religion and they are not respecting them as humans,' he said.

The National described Jawad as now present for a war that has grown noticeably fiercer in the years he has been away. "The situation will get worse because it's impossible to finish fighting with fighting," he said. "It's impossible to clean blood with blood."

See also

References

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