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GUANTANAMOBAY
NAVAL BASE, Cuba -- A jury of six military officers at
GuantanamoBay reached a split verdict Wednesday in
the war crimes trial of a former driver for Osama bin Laden, clearing him of
some charges but convicting him of others that could send him to prison for
life.
The Pentagon-selected jury deliberated for about eight
hours over three days before convicting Salim Hamdan of supporting terrorism.
He was cleared of the conspiracy charge.
Hamdan,
who faces a maximum life sentence, held his head in his hands and wept at the
defense table after a Navy captain presiding over the jury read the sentence in
a hilltop courtroom on this US Navy base.
The
judge scheduled a sentencing hearing for later Wednesday.
Defense
lawyers had feared a guilty verdict was inevitable, saying the tribunal
system's rules seemed designed to achieve convictions, said Navy Lt. Cmdr.
Brian Mizer, Salim Hamdan's Pentagon-appointed attorney.
"I
don't know if the panel can render fair what has already happened," Mizer
told reporters as the jury deliberated.
Hamdan's
attorneys said the judge allowed evidence that would not have been admitted by
any civilian or military US
court, and that interrogations at the center of the government's case were
tainted by coercive tactics, including sleep deprivation and solitary
confinement.
Supporters
of the tribunals said the Bush administration's system provided extraordinary
due process rights for defendants.
"This
military judge is to be commended for providing a fair and internationally
legally sufficient trial for the accused and the government -- regardless of
the ultimate verdict," said Charles "Cully" Stimson, a former
deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs.
Hamdan
was captured at a roadblock in southern Afghanistan
in November 2001 and taken to Guantanamo
in May 2002.
The
military accused him of transporting missiles for al-Qaida and helping bin
Laden escape US retribution
following the Sept. 11 attacks by driving him around Afghanistan. Defense attorneys said
he was merely a low-level bin Laden employee.