Former commander of Guantánamo Bay Navy base sentenced to federal prison
A federal judge sentenced a former commander of the Navy base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, on Thursday to two years in prison for trying to cover up a drunken fight with a commissary worker who was later found dead in the bay.
Testimony at the trial showed that the fight inside the official residence of the now-retired Navy captain, John R. Nettleton, 54, followed a night of drinking during a celebration at the base’s private officers’ club. At the party, the man who died, Christopher Tur, 42, loudly accused Nettleton of having an affair with his wife....
Federal prosecutors had sought 37 to 46 months in prison, citing sentencing guidelines. Defense lawyers had urged no time, or home confinement.
Tur was found dead and floating in Guantánamo Bay on Jan. 11, 2015, two days after the fight and after Nettleton ordered the military and other residents to mount an extensive search for him. Tur had four broken ribs, a bruised forehead, and potentially lethal amounts of Prozac and alcohol in his system. A medical examiner ruled his death was caused by drowning, probably accidental.
Before announcing the sentence, the judge said: “This is not a homicide case. This is not a murder case. It’s not a case in which Capt. Nettleton stands accused or convicted of causing the death of Mr. Tur.”
Rather, a civilian jury found that during the search, Nettleton did not report that he had fought with Tur, denied to another officer that Tur had come to his house and lied about the affair he had with Lara Tur, who ran the base’s social service department.
Tur’s family members asked the judge to exceed the sentencing guidelines and send a message of accountability to other military officers about the costs of getting drunk, infidelity and lying. Some argued that had Nettleton called the base police after the fight, Tur would be alive.
“What message will it send to other members of the military if the sentencing is guidelines?” said Ann Tur, his mother. “If you’re not highly ranked, you are not entitled to justice? Senior officers in the Navy, the Department of Justice will watch this closely. A good man, my baby boy, is dead.” ...
Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Karma:
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Tragic; a love story blooming among torture and legal black holes that ends in an unexpected way. Should be a movie.
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
neoplacebo wrote: ↑Fri Oct 09, 2020 8:44 pmTragic; a love story blooming among torture and legal black holes that ends in an unexpected way. Should be a movie.


Man Accused in 9/11 Plot Is Not Fit to Face Trial, Board Says
Duh, they've known that since at least 2008.
It's not that I have sympathy for actual terrorists, but the Cheney/Shrub torture program is a stain on America that can never be scrubbed away and the inefficiency of the military tribunals compared to our terrorism-proficient federal courts is astounding.... It is not clear what military medical staff at the prison can do to restore his competency. Among other things, the defendants want assurances as part of the plea deal that the prison will establish a civilian-run trauma care program for them.
According to their lawyers, at least four of the defendants have sleep disorders, brain injuries, gastrointestinal damage or other health problems they attribute to the agency’s brutal interrogation methods during their three to four years in C.I.A. custody before their transfer to Guantánamo Bay in 2006.
Close Gitmo yesterday!
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Noooo, keep it open for Trump and his merry band.
However, regarding the guy incompetent to stand trial: The guy's a terrorist that doesn't like barbeque or women - you expect sanity? Anyway, he's locked up for the rest of his life - what's the problem?
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
I'm not pleading for mercy for him (or for future inmates Trump and his merry band

Ftr, I think the Fulton County Jail and GA prisons may be worse than Gitmo. It should be closed on principle and for US diplomatic reputational reasons, not because today's prisoners necessarily fare worse there than they would stateside.
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Ah, a compliment of the highest order.....Vrede too wrote: ↑Sat Aug 26, 2023 4:42 pmneoplacebo wrote: ↑Fri Oct 09, 2020 8:44 pmTragic; a love story blooming among torture and legal black holes that ends in an unexpected way. Should be a movie.You are a poetic describer of sleaze.
![]()
It's not that I have sympathy for actual terrorists, but the Cheney/Shrub torture program is a stain on America that can never be scrubbed away and the inefficiency of the military tribunals compared to our terrorism-proficient federal courts is astounding.
Close Gitmo yesterday!

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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
neoplacebo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 27, 2023 7:50 amAh, a compliment of the highest order.....Vrede too wrote: ↑Sat Aug 26, 2023 4:42 pmneoplacebo wrote: ↑Fri Oct 09, 2020 8:44 pmTragic; a love story blooming among torture and legal black holes that ends in an unexpected way. Should be a movie.You are a poetic describer of sleaze.
![]()
It's not that I have sympathy for actual terrorists, but the Cheney/Shrub torture program is a stain on America that can never be scrubbed away and the inefficiency of the military tribunals compared to our terrorism-proficient federal courts is astounding.
Close Gitmo yesterday!![]()

9/11 defendant ruled unfit for trial after panel finds torture left him psychotic
A military judge at Guantanamo Bay has ruled one of the 9/11 defendants too mentally ill to stand trial
Even if they're not psychotic, you can bet that lawyers for Ramzi bin al-Shibh's 4 co-defendants will attempt to raise the issue of military tribunal-proven devastating torture at the long-delayed trials.
Cheney/Shrub war criminality, the gift that keeps on giving.

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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
I'm no fan of Cheney/Shrub, but really, I don't care what they do with these guys as long as they don't ever turn them loose. Or go ahead and turn them loose and tell all the 9/11 survivors and family of non-survivors where they are.
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
You assume that they're guilty just because Cheney/Shrub and the torturing CIA said so.
The article states that if Ramzi bin al-Shibh is ever deemed sane enough for theoretical release he will first be tried.
Is their extreme punishment already sufficient?... (Defense attorney David) Bruck told McCall in Tuesday's hearing PTSD treatment would offer the best hope of al-Shibh ever regaining competency to stand trial. He said the forced sidelining of the U.S. case against the man would be “an opportunity for the country to come to account on the harm” done by what he called the CIA's “program of human experimentation.”
Reached by phone Friday, Bruck said the judge's ruling was the first time the U.S. government had acknowledged that “the CIA torture program did profound and prolonged psychological harm to one of the people subjected to it.”
The five 9/11 defendants were variously subjected to repeated waterboarding, beatings, violent repeated searches of their rectal cavities, sleep deprivation and other abuse while at so-called CIA black sites.
The CIA says it stopped its detention and interrogation program in 2009. A Senate investigation concluded the abuse had been ineffective in obtaining useful information.
President Joe Biden this month declined to approve post-trauma care when defense lawyers presented it as a condition in plea negotiations. The administration said the president was unsettled by the thought of providing care and ruling out solitary confinement for the 9/11 defendants, given the historic scale of the attacks.
“Of course it's not popular" among Americans, Bruck said Friday. “Enforcing human rights, the most fundamental human rights, is often not popular. But we should do it.”
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Well I don't assume them to be guilty just because Bush/Cheney say so, but I don't assume them innocent, either. That "innocent until proven guilty" applies in court in that it is the government's job to prove guilt, rather than the defendant's job to prove innocence. Unless I want to believe that the torturing CIA just rounded up random Muslim-looking guys, then I'd have to believe that there's some basis or probable cause for believing these guys are guilty. So for non-US citizens who were probably involved in 9/11 or some other terrorism, a bit of abuse doesn't keep me awake at night.
I don't know if their extreme punishment is already sufficient. That event changed America permanently and not in a good way. It led to ill-fated and ill-advised wars, thousands of lives lost and even more messed up, billions of dollars spent and people thinking that for some reason walking around half undressed at airport check would make us safer. I'm not sure there is a "sufficient."
I don't know if their extreme punishment is already sufficient. That event changed America permanently and not in a good way. It led to ill-fated and ill-advised wars, thousands of lives lost and even more messed up, billions of dollars spent and people thinking that for some reason walking around half undressed at airport check would make us safer. I'm not sure there is a "sufficient."
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
US government vs US government
:
9/11 guilty pleas delayed after US government objects
Just admit that terrorism AND torture AND state-sponsored executions are wrong, lock them up for life without parole and finally be done with it.

9/11 guilty pleas delayed after US government objects

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Guantánamo
Critics Condemn Donald Trump’s ‘Disgusting’ New Plan For Undocumented Immigrants
Amnesty International led the criticism of the president's announcement.
Critics, including the human rights organization Amnesty International, slammed President Donald Trump’s announcement about opening a detention center at Cuba’s Guantánamo Bay to house up to 30,000 undocumented immigrants.
“We’re going to send them out to Guantánamo,” the president said Wednesday, just before signing the Laken Riley Act into law.


... On social media, critics slammed the move as “disgusting” and cruel.
Some pointed out the logistical issues of housing so many people in the relatively small base....

What he's announcing is a concentration camp. A deeply illegal, unconstitutional, anti-human rights atrocity. Anyone who supports this is complicit. Anyone in any federal service, military or otherwise, is morally obligated to refuse to carry out any orders related to this deeply criminal act.
So, a concentration camp, away from the prying eyes of whichever journalists may care anymore.
So he's not going to deport them, he's going to imprison them in an American Gulag.
#antifacism #fucktrump #fightback #resist
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Re: Guantánamo
Where do you suggest these ILLEGAL immigrants be placed?Vrede too wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 7:37 amCritics Condemn Donald Trump’s ‘Disgusting’ New Plan For Undocumented Immigrants
Amnesty International led the criticism of the president's announcement.
Critics, including the human rights organization Amnesty International, slammed President Donald Trump’s announcement about opening a detention center at Cuba’s Guantánamo Bay to house up to 30,000 undocumented immigrants.
“We’re going to send them out to Guantánamo,” the president said Wednesday, just before signing the Laken Riley Act into law.![]()
... On social media, critics slammed the move as “disgusting” and cruel.
Some pointed out the logistical issues of housing so many people in the relatively small base....
![]()
What he's announcing is a concentration camp. A deeply illegal, unconstitutional, anti-human rights atrocity. Anyone who supports this is complicit. Anyone in any federal service, military or otherwise, is morally obligated to refuse to carry out any orders related to this deeply criminal act.So, a concentration camp, away from the prying eyes of whichever journalists may care anymore.
So he's not going to deport them, he's going to imprison them in an American Gulag.
#antifacism #fucktrump #fightback #resist
More posts at the link.![]()
![]()
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Re: Guantánamo
I think our 34 time FELON POTUS should place them anywhere but a small base in Cuba. He only wants a VERY costly concentration camp there in order to hide them from any monitoring and accountability. Do you really think that we have a sudden shortage of land in the US, Trumpette?
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Re: Guantánamo
Somewhere they are accommodated as least as well as your standard American criminal. The where doesn't matter as much as the how.Supsalemgr wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 9:52 am
Where do you suggest these ILLEGAL immigrants be placed?
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Re: Guantánamo
It's not 30K, but I do know that about 1500 spots formerly holding MAGA terrorists just became available.
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Re: Hunger Strike at Guantánamo
Real question: why are they "holding" them? I thought the plan was to catch and deliver to wherever they came from. Or, related question, if they're catching actual criminals - i.e. people who have really committed a crime in the US and could be tried for it, why aren't they treated in the same way, kept in the same jails as any other criminal. Isn't deportation somewhat of a literal get-out-of-jail card?
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Re: Guantánamo
It is best these characters be removed from the US. It is my understanding this for the worst.Vrede too wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 10:10 amI think our 34 time FELON POTUS should place them anywhere but a small base in Cuba. He only wants a VERY costly concentration camp there in order to hide them from any monitoring and accountability. Do you really think that we have a sudden shortage of land in the US, Trumpette?
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Re: Guantánamo
Ridiculous. The US does just fine at building mainland prisons that relatively few escape from, including for "the worst" criminals. Nothing is gained other than hiding human rights abuses, and the costs skyrocket in Cuba. Are you volunteering your retirement savings or are you just another 'tax and spend' con?Supsalemgr wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 2:06 pmIt is best these characters be removed from the US. It is my understanding this for the worst.
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Re: Guantánamo
He's just one of the millions of gullible fools that believe without question everything they see and hear on Fox News from the "open border" (US immigration law hasn't changed in decades) to "weaponized Justice Department" (something they are now actively trying to do in spite of the fact that ALL of the actions against trump are due to HIS OWN ACTIONS). Hilarious.Vrede too wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 3:48 pmRidiculous. The US does just fine at building mainland prisons that relatively few escape from, including for "the worst" criminals. Nothing is gained other than hiding human rights abuses, and the costs skyrocket in Cuba. Are you volunteering your retirement savings or are you just another 'tax and spend' con?Supsalemgr wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 2:06 pmIt is best these characters be removed from the US. It is my understanding this for the worst.