US wants quicker hearings for 9/11 suspects

{{The US government is pushing for an acceleration of preliminary hearings in the case of five alleged September 11 plotters as proceedings resumed in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.}}

Lead prosecutor Brigadier General Mark Martins told the court on Tuesday he hoped to see progress “this week” after prosecutors filed a motion calling for a September 2014 trial date.

Self-declared mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, wearing camouflage garb and his beard tinted with henna, appeared in the military court at the US prison in Cuba with his four co-defendants.

All face the death penalty if convicted of plotting the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, which left nearly 3,000 people dead. Preliminary hearings in the case began in May 2012.

“The current practice of being in court for five days approximately every six weeks is inefficient and will result in litigation that is unnecessarily prolonged, and does not serve the interests of justice,” the prosecutors’ motion said.

Defence lawyers countered, however, that their efforts had been hindered by a variety of factors.

wirestory

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