US | military commissions Judge Purges General From Gitmo Case Says he's not impartial; move could throw wrench in 9/11 trials By Matt Cantor Posted May 10, 2008 12:10 PM CDT Copied Col. Morris Davis, chief prosecutor, speaks to reporters after the first hearing of the U.S. Court of Military Commission review in Washington, Friday, Aug. 24, 2007. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) A military judge has expelled a Pentagon general from the case of a Guantanamo detainee in a move that could open the military tribunal system to further attacks. The judge said the general—who is supposed to be impartial as overseer of the Gitmo legal process—worked too closely with the prosecution, fueling critics’ argument that the system is designed to score convictions, the New York Times reports. The former chief Gitmo prosecutor had accused the general of, among other things, pushing to use evidence gained through torture. While the judge’s decision applied to just the trial of Osama bin Laden’s former driver, the role of Gen. Thomas Hartmann will likely be questioned in others, potentially slowing the death-penalty trials of 9/11 detainees, the Wall Street Journal notes. Read These Next Theater got snarky with its Melania marquee, and Amazon was ticked. This publication's review of Melania just got much worse. Prominent law firm chairman faces up to Epstein revelations. Power glitch interrupts first Winter Olympics event. Report an error