Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
Concurring opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Appellant, Yasein Khasem Mohammad Esmail, a detainee at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was captured by Northern Alliance forces in December 2001 and transferred to American custody in January of the following year. In 2004, he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The district court denied the petition, and Es-mail now appeals. Because we agree with the district court’s ultimate determination that Esmail was more likely than not “part of’ al Qaeda at the time of his capture in December of 2001, we affirm.
Esmail challenges the district court’s decision on a number of grounds. In particular, he argues that the district court erred in finding that statements he made to American interrogators in Afghanistan and at Guantanamo Bay were voluntary. He also argues that the district court
First, Esmail, a Yemeni who traveled to Afghanistan in 1999, admits to having received weapons training at al Farouq, an al Qaeda training camp, for at least one month. Although he claims that he did not know until after he left that the camp was al Qaeda-run, the district court found this contention to be incredible, and Es-mail offers us no basis to question that fact finding. See Awad v. Obama,
Second, Esmail admits to having studied at the al Qaeda-affiliated Institute for Islamic/Arabie Studies. Although the district court found this fact, on its own, not to be strong evidence, see Abdah v. Obama,
Third, although Esmail contests precisely where he was taken into custody by the Northern Alliance (he asserts it occurred in Jalalabad while the government argues it occurred in a village near Tora Bora, a cave complex in the mountains of Eastern Afghanistan), he does not contest that he passed through Tora Bora in December of 2001 or that when he was taken into Afghan custody, he was with two other men, both of whom had participated in the fighting and one of whom had been injured. Seeking to explain these movements, Es-mail claims that after September 11, when he was in Kandahar, he wanted to return to Yemen, but rather than retrace the route he had taken from Yemen to Afghanistan in 1999, he headed north to Kabul, where he claims he planned to meet and marry a Pakistani friend’s sister. Once in Kabul, he adds, he was kidnapped from the street and taken to Tora Bora, where his kidnappers picked up two other men. The kidnappers then took the three of them to Jalalabad and sold them into Afghan custody. The district court, however, “was not persuaded by Esmail’s attempt to paint his decision to travel from Kandahar to Kabul after September 11 as innocent” and found his allegations of kidnapping
As we explained in Uthman v. Obama, Tora Bora was a “widely known ... battleground between al Qaeda and the United States” and travel in that region in December 2001 “suggests that [the traveler] was affiliated with al Qaeda.”
“Considering] ... as a whole[,]” id. at 407 (internal quotation marks omitted), these admissions and district court fact findings, we conclude as a matter of law that Esmail was more likely than not “part of’ al Qaeda at the time of his capture. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Esmail’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
So Ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the court’s per curiam opinion affirming the district court’s denial of petitioner’s writ. The government’s evidence is easily sufficient to meet any evidentiary standard. (Indeed, I find petitioner’s “story” phonier than a $4 bill.) I write separately for two reasons. First, to note that the government at oral argument agreed that even if petitioner could show he resolutely declined to “join” al Qaeda or the Taliban, and thus could not be said to be a part of either, so long as evidence showed he fought along side of al Qaeda, the Taliban, or with associated forces he would be covered by the Authorization for Use of Military Force. District courts, in that sort of case, need not strain to find a petitioner is “a part of al Qaeda.” See Hatim v. Gates,
My second point, not unrelated to the first, goes to the unusual incentives and disincentives that bear on judges on the D.C. Circuit courts — particularly the Court of Appeals — charged with deciding these detainee habeas cases. In the typical criminal case, a good judge will vote to overturn a conviction if the prosecutor lacked sufficient evidence, even when the judge is virtually certain that the defendant committed the crime. That can mean that a thoroughly bad person is released onto our streets, but I need not explain why our criminal justice system treats that risk as one we all believe, or should believe, is justified.
When we are dealing with detainees, candor obliges me to admit that one can not help but be conscious of the infinitely
That means that there are powerful reasons for the government to rely on our opinion in Al-Adahi v. Obama,
Of course, if it turns out that regardless of our decisions the executive branch does not release winning petitioners because no other country will accept them and they will not be released into the United States, see Kiyemba v. Obama,
Notes
. Of course, "the purely independent conduct of a freelancer” — one who does not fight alongside of, or actively support, al Qaeda, the Taliban, or an associated force' — "is not enough” to justify detention. Bensayah v. Obama,
