Petitioner's status report, Majid Khan, July 17, 2008

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

=Petitioner's status report=

Petitioner Majid Khan, by and through his undersigned counsels, respectfully submits this status report in response to the Court's July 11, 2008 Order.

Preliminary Statement
Majid Khan is unique among Guantanamo prisoners. He has long had legal status in the United States. He grew up in the suburbs of Baltimore, Maryland, and has had political asylum in this country since 1998. He graduated from Owing Mills High School in 1999, purchased a home near Baltimore, opened a bank account, and worked for the State of Maryland and Electronic Data Systems. He paid thousands of dollars in taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. His family still resides legally near Baltimore; and some of his family members are U.S. citizens.

In March 2003, Khan was captured and forcibly disappeared by the United States. There is no serious dispute that he was abducted, imprisoned and tortured by U.S. officials at secret overseas "black sites" operated by the Central Intelligence Agency before he was transferred to Guantanamo Bay in September 2006. Nor is there any serious dispute that Khan's detention and interrogation violated U.S. and international law. Khan is not charged with any crime or offense and is not designated for trial by military commission.

Khan's Habeas Case
On September 29, 2006, Khan filed the above-captioned habeas case, challenging his detention in military custody. He repeatedly sought access to his counsel in this case, which the government denied because he might possess and transmit to his counsel classified information. In particular, Khan filed three emergency motions for counsel access (dkt. nos. 2, 12, 29), and a motion for a status conference (dkt. no. 34). The Court denied those motions without prejudice and administratively closed the case.

Notably, in denying one of Khan's counsel access motions, the Court "encourag[d] the respondents to medically evaluate Khan to assess his mental and physical health . . . and to file with this court a report of his condition and whether he is in need of and is receiving treatment for any physical or mental conditions, so that this information can be made available to putative counsel and Khan's family." Nov. 17, 2006 Order at 4 n.4 (dkt. no 11). But the government never filed such a report with the Court, and Khan's family does not know the state of his mental and physical health, or whether he is receiving any treatment, apart from public disclosures in the redacted transcript of Khan's Combatant Status Review Tribunal proceedings, see http://www.defenselink.mil/news/transcript_ISN10020.pdf, at 24 of 39, which indicate that he has been on a hunger strike and tried to commit suicide by chewing through the artery that runs through his elbow.

On June 20, 2008, following the Supreme Court's decision in Boumediene v. Bush, No 06-1195 (U.S. June 12, 2008), the District Court ordered the parties to file a joint status report in this case. The parties files a joint report on June 27, 2008 (dkt. no. 42) (attached hereto as Ex. 1). Khan also prepreated a supplemental status report containing presumptively Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Informatin ("TS/SCI"). But the government refused to consent to disclosure of that supplemental report fo the Court absent entry of a protective order; and so Khan lodged the document with the Court Security Office pending further instructions from the Government and/or the Court. See id.

On July 1, 2008, the Court transferred this case for coordination and management (dkt. no. 43). The Court also administratively reopened the case on July 3, 2008.

Khan's Detainee Treatment Act Case
With his habeas case effectively stayed, Khan filed a petition for review in the Court of Appeals pursuant to the Detainee Treatment Act ("DTA") on August 14, 2007. He challenged his detention as an "enemy combatant" and preserved all other legal claims including his right to habeas relief. But the government continued to deny him access to his existing counsel for two months. And the government refused to produce the complete "record on review" in that case.

On November 30, 2007, Khan filed a motion in his DTA case to preserve evidence of his torture. He also filed a motion on December 6, 2007, to declare that the interrogation methods inflicted on him constitute torture. These motions (the "torture papers") are supported by counsel declarations describing Khan's experience in the CIA Torture Program (Declaration of Gitanjali S. Gutierrez) and the imprisonment and torture of other CIA "ghost prisoners" (Declaration of J. Wells Dixon), as well as several statement written directly by Khan. The torture papers are fully briefed and pending before the Court of Appeals.

Also fully briefed and pending before the Court of Appeals is a motion to unseal Khan's torture papers, filed by the New York Times and other news organizations on March 6, 2008. In addition, Khan filed a motion to unseal his torture papers on different grounds on May 9, 2008. The government has not responded ot that motion on its merits. All four motions have been referred to a merits panel of the Court of Appeals, but no panel has been assigned to the case. It is unclear when that may happen.

In addition, the government has moved to dismiss or hold Khan's DTA case in abeyance pending resolution of the above-captioned habeas case. Khan has objected to dismissal but consented to holding the case in abeyance, subject to the government's agreement to certain conditions including entry of the habeas protective order in this case.

The government has consented in part, and objected in part, to the various conditions, and thus the motion remains pending before the Court of Appeals.

Khan's Present Status
After more than five years of imprisonment and torture, and almost two years after filing the first legal challenge to his detention in federal court, Khan has not had a hearing before the Court of Appeals or the District Court on the merits of his claims. Nor has he received a decision on the merits of a single substantive motion that he has filed. He has not even had a status conference to address the specific issues in his case, which his family in the Baltimore area might attend. No further delay is warranted. See Boumediene v. Bush, No. 06-1195, slip op. at 66 (U.S. June 12, 2008) ("[T]he costs of delay can no longer be borne by those who are held in custody.")

Accordingly, Khan requests that this Court schedule a status conference to address the following issues:

Khan further notifies the Court that he anticipates there will be substantial, material factual disputes in this case warranting further discover. In particular, as undersigned counsel have already informed counsel for the government, Khan will seek to serve interrogatories and deposition notices (or subpoenas) on certain current and former senior government officials who may have exculpatory information, if any concerning him. Khan also will seek to interview other prisoners in U.S. custody.

Finally, Khan requests that representatives from the CIA General Counsel's Office be required to attend all proceedings before the Court in this case, and justify or verify the positions taken on various matters including with respect to entry of a protective order, on the ground that those officials appear to the decision-makers concerning all aspects of Khan's pending cases.

Date: New York, New York
 * July 17, 2008