Another conversation with Scott Fenstermaker

posted at 12:40 pm on November 28, 2009 by Ed Morrissey

We have a new reader at Hot Air.  After posting the previous e-mail conversation between me and Scott Fenstermaker, the defense attorney representing two of the Guantanamo Bay detainees, the comment string prompted Scott to start up another conversation, this time with more details about his allegations of misconduct by the ACLU and the Office of Military Commissions.  The conversation speaks for itself, and as before, I want to publish the entire conversation (with two redactions, which you will see) before offering my opinion on it.  Scott’s contributions will be blockquoted.

Ed,

I read some of the comments on your blog. I served on active duty from May 30, 1984 through early September of 1989, shortly in excess of my commitment. In the summer of 1984 I worked as a staff officer at the aeronautics lab at the Air Force Academy. I was stationed in Seattle, Washington from September of 1984 through December of 1985, where I received a Masters Degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics from the University of Washington. I was then transferred to Tinker AFB in Oklahoma from January 1986 through August of 1989. I left for law school in August of 1989 and started in September of 1989. I was honorably discharged from the AF in September of 1989. Your subscribers’ efforts to discredit me are amusing, but ultimately unavailing. The ACLU was actively using donated funds to violate the detainees’ rights and the ACLU is well-aware of that fact, which is the reason that they shut down the John Adams Project. Otherwise, the ACLU cannot justify discontinuing that project while detainees are still facing military commissions. If you subscribers have any questions about any of this, including my positions, please feel free to give them my e-mail address [scott@fenstermakerlaw.com] and cell number, [redacted by Ed].

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care. From the perspective of those who died, it makes very little difference who killed them. From the perspective of everyone else, its frankly none of their business, unless they sit on the jury of course. Print that loud, wide, and clear.

Scott Fenstermaker

Scott,

I’d be happy to post another e-mail interview, but generally speaking, it’s a bad idea to post phone numbers on blogs. Your e-mail is already on your site, and I’m fine with posting that, but I would prefer not to post your cell number.

I’d like to find out more about your point of the ACLU. You mentioned it in the last e-mail string, and you have a little more detail here. How did the ACLU violate detainee rights?

On your last point, I strongly disagree. The murder of anyone is the business of the community, which is why we have police to find and arrest the perpetrator. If foreign terrorists attacked New York City and Washington DC, then the entire nation has an interest in fighting the foreign entity responsible for it. On the legal question of innocence or guilt, you’re right — the jury makes that legal determination. But that doesn’t mean the issue is none of anyone else’s business.

Thanks for the clarification Ed. You’re assuming it was murder, which may not be the case. It may not have been murder, but again, that’s for the jury to decide.

I’ve been receiving a lot of calls on my cell, so a few more won’t hurt and I would welcome them. Of course, if your readers speak with me, then I may be able to provide evidence to refute their various claims, and that may not be comfortable to them. In addition, if they spoke to me, then they may have to accept the fact that I’m not a nut, although I am admittedly zealous about the Rule of Law. They, as a group, have way too much trust in the military, particularly the Office of Military Commissions (OMC).

As far as the ACLU goes, the Office of the Chief Defense Counsel and the ACLU are the two organizations that have the records of the ACLU’s (and OMC’s) misconduct. That misconduct occurred in the cases of Rahim al-Nashiri and Mustafa Bin-Ahmad al-Hawsawi, for the record. If you want those records, you should ask the ACLU and OMC. If you want a description of what happened, I can provide that, but the records remain with the OMC and ACLU.

If your readers are skeptical of my claim regarding the ACLU, then they should contact the ACLU and ask why the ACLU discontinued the John Adams Project while there are still detainees facing military commissions. The John Adams Project was ostensibly created to provide paid attorneys to represent detainees before the military commissions. The reason for the Project’s discontinuance is that all of the detainees the ACLU tried to represent fired their government-appointed ACLU lawyers (and the military attorneys who appointed them), shortly after the detainees learned of my suspension on October 22, 2008. My suspension was a real sore spot for the detainees and directly led to the 9/11 defendants firing their military and civilian attorneys and attempting to take a guilty plea about 12 or 13 days after they learned, on October 22, 2008, that I had been suspended. This occurred at their first scheduled military commissions’ appearance after they learned of my suspension.

Anyway, if any of your readers have any questions about my military service, resume, suspension, or anything else for that matter related to 9/11, the military commissions, or anything else, feel free to have them contact me directly. I’d be glad to correspond with, e-mail with, talk with, or meet with any of them. They seem like an interesting group of people.

Scott

Scott,

Thanks as always for your response.

I think you’re arguing over semantics. Almost 3,000 people died, most of them on national television. They didn’t commit suicide or die of natural causes. They died at the hands of others, which makes them homicides. Who’s responsible is a question for a jury, but not the fact that they were murdered, nor do we need a jury to tell us that the nation has an interest in pursuing justice in the case.

I’d like to get your description about the misconduct. I can afterwards request comments for the record from the OMC and ACLU, but that works best when I can present details of the allegations.

Ed,

All murders are homicides. Not all homicides are murders. You may call that semantics. I call it the law. You and your friends can scoff at the law, but it is there to protect you too. Keep that in mind. I will shortly forward you an e-mail from a lawyer with the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). It begins the process of describing the ACLU’s and NACDL’s wrongdoing.

Scott

==========

Scott then forwarded me two e-mails he received, which he and I reference later in the exchange:

Mr. Fenstermaker:

I am one of the attorneys representing the government in the Guantanamo Bay habeas litigation. We have been informed by Joint Task Force Guantanamo that you recently sent letters to Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri (ISN 10015) and Ahmed Ghailani (ISN 10012). As you may be aware, there are two systems by which detainees send and receive mail at Guantanamo. First, most mail sent to Guantanamo detainees is processed in a non-privileged fashion. That is, the mail is screened and reviewed by military authorities before delivery to the intended recipient. Second, a system for privileged legal mail between detainees and eligible counsel exists under the auspices of various protective orders entered by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. That system is available only in cases in which the protective orders have been entered and is subject to requirements and restrictions set out in the orders.

Because you are not authorized to send or receive privileged mail pursuant to any appropriately entered protective orders, the mail you recently sent Messrs. Al-Nashiri and Ghailani would ordinarily be processed in accordance with the procedures established for non-privileged mail unless you request that the mail be returned to you. Because that mail is marked privileged, it has not been reviewed or otherwise processed at this point. Please let me know how you would like to proceed.

Best regards,

[name redacted until I can get a response -- Ed]

We have considered your request for assistance and sympathize with your situation. However, we have a conflict that prevents us from assisting you. Specifically, NACDL is a partner with the ACLU in the John Adams Project, an endeavor that provides counsel and resources to the 14 so-called “high value detainees” at Guantanamo. NACDL has received money from the ACLU to pay lawyers and others and has also raised money with ACLU for the project via cooperative ventures. Many of the legal teams for the HVDs share information and resources (to the extent they can given the privilege and classification considerations). One of the teams that has been active in opposing your participation is funded by the ACLU as part of the John Adams Project and some of the military lawyers who have opposed your involvement in another case (also involving an HVD) are also assigned to represent HVDs represented by ACLU or NACDL representatives on those cases via the Adams project.

We regret that we can’t be of assistance and certainly wish you well.

The latter is from the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and is a response to a request that their “strike force” intervene on his behalf on the issue of his suspension. The NACDL seems to have considered that a conflict of interest; I’ll ask them for clarification on Monday. I’m posting it at the moment because it has some impact on the narrative in the e-mail conversation.

Let’s pick it back up:

=======

Scott,

Regardless of the legal difference between homicide and murder, of which I am aware, homicides are still the “business” of the community and the nation, and we have a deep interest in resolving them, which is why under almost all circumstances, homicides are a violation of the law.

Thank you for forwarding that e-mail. Did the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers refused to intervene on your behalf regarding your suspension, or did they refuse to bring you in as co-counsel, or a combination of the two? Does your allegation of violation of rights hinge on the detainees not being able to retain your services specifically? If so, was the agreement to let you represent Ghailani offered as a compromise?

Ed,

Well, at least I’ve gotten you to back off your murder claims.

I think you misunderstand the nature of Mr. Aronwald’s [NACDL] response to me. NACDL has a group of lawyers called the “strike force.” The strike force defends criminal defense attorneys who have problems with the authorities as a result of their vigorous representation of their clients. I contacted the strike force to secure their help in challenging my suspension from the Pool of Qualified Civilian Defense Counsel. Mr. Aronwald’s refusal announces the strike force’s refusal to help me. I suggest you contact him directly about the strike force’s refusal. You may also want to contact NACDL headquarters directly. If you don’t know NACDL’s contact information, let me know.

I was suspended from the Pool after a number of detainees, including Messrs. Ghailani, Mr. al-Baluchi, Rahim al-Nashiri, Mustafa Bin-Ahmad Al-Hawsawi, and Abu Faraj al-Libi sought my help. I notified the OMC that I represented Messrs. Ghailani, al-Nashiri and al-Hawsawi. I felt there was a conflict in representing Mr. al-Libi, so I never claimed to represent him. Mr. al-Baluchi did not directly ask me to represent him in the military commissions, at that stage, although he has since done so. However, at his 06/05/08 and 07/09/08 military commissions’ appearances, he asked the military judge presiding over the 9/11 case to allow me to represent him. He also filed a pro se motion on 10/22/08 to the same effect. The OMC has never acknowledged Mr. al-Baluchi’s requests, nor has it ever permitted me to obtain copies of the transcripts of his military commissions’ transcripts, which I requested shortly after the hearings occurred in 2008.

Shortly after I contacted the OMC regarding my representation status of these four detainees, I received an e-mail from a Department of Justice attorney in Washington, informing me that I could no longer send mail subject to the attorney-client privilege to my GITMO clients. That e-mail, a copy of which I will forward to you, was dated 07/01/08. A little less than two months later, Colonel David suspended me from the Pool. Shortly after my suspension, I contacted the strike force, and asked for help challenging my suspension. Mr. Aronwald’s e-mail was the strike force’s resolution of my request for assistance.

The OMC selected John Adams Project attorneys to serve as assistants to the OMC military defense lawyers, as the OMC has decided that no detainee facing trial by military commission can select his own private attorney. The OMC selected the John Adams Project attorneys after I was retained to represent Rahim al-Nashiri and Mustafa Bin-Ahmad al-Hawsawi. The John Adams Project then paid these government-selected attorneys money to work to have me removed as the attorney for Messrs. al-Nashiri and al-Hawsawi by actively interfering with my relationship with them, with the assistance of the government’s refusal to allow me to send privileged mail to them. Again, I urge you to contact the ACLU and ask them why they dropped the John Adams Project when detainees, including Mr. al-Nashiri, are still facing trial by military commission. The reason is that all of the detainees to whom John Adams Project attorneys were assigned fired the John Adams Project attorneys (and their military defense attorneys superiors) after the detainees learned of my suspension (on 10/22/08 at Mr. Ghailani’s military commissions’ arraignment). In January of 2009, Mr. al-Nashiri also fired his John Adams Project attorneys and his military defense counsel, informing them that he wanted me as his attorney. Shortly thereafter, rather than have Mr. al-Nashiri announce his intentions at his scheduled February 2009 arraignment, the OMC dismissed the case against him, for which he faced the death penalty for allegedly murdering 17 US sailors aboard the USS Cole.

As far as the “agreement” to allow me to represent Mr. Ghailani, there was no agreement. There was an acquiescence on their part, to which the OMC had no choice, as Ghailani was repeatedly asking for me as his counsel in the clearest and most emphatic way available to him. The OMC only acquiesced after the decision was made by the government to bring him to New York to face his SDNY indictment, which was handed down by a SDNY grand jury in December of 1998, almost 10 years prior to his arraignment before the military commissions’ judge at GITMO. The OMC allowed me to represent him in the military commissions because they knew, as of March 16, 2009, that he would never face one.

Please encourage your subscribers to continue attacking me. Their attacks only highlight how absurd it is for people who don’t know what is going on to have a say in matters such as these. For bloggers to imply that I never served on active duty is quite humorous. My AF friends are getting a kick out of this. I relish reading your subscribers’ nonsense.

Scott

Scott,

Thank you for the additional details. I will be contacting Mr. Aronwald and Mr. Warden on Monday for their side of the story, and the ACLU as well. The details have helped, as well as the contacts. Just to clarify, which current/former Gitmo defendants are you currently representing?

Ed,

When you contact Messrs. Aronwald, Warden, and the ACLU, you may also want to contact Nancy Hollander and Nina Ginsberg, the John Adams Project attorneys for Rahim al-Nashiri and Mustafa Bin-Ahmad Al-Hawsawi, respectively. Ms. Hollander is located in Albuquerque, NM and Ms. Ginsberg is located in the Washington, DC area. I don’t think I have their contact information, but I can get it for you if you want it. You may also want to contact Colonel David, who is a state court judge in Boone County, Indiana, and Colonel Masciola, who I believe is still the Chief Defense Counsel for the OMC. I think I have Colonels David and Masciola’s contact information if you need it.

I represent Mr. al-Nashiri and Mr. al-Baluchi, but Messrs. al-Hawsawi and Mr. Ghailani both want me as their counsel, but have been denied by various federal judges to have counsel of their choice. I have never been permitted to meet with Messrs. al-Nashiri or al-Hawsawi, as a result of the government’s claims that I don’t represent them. The only evidence I have of my representation of Messrs. al-Nashiri and al-Hawsawi is multiple letters from them asking me to represent them. The government doesn’t recognize that apparently. In addition, the fact that I am cut off from writing to them also creates a bit of a logistical problem as well.

Scott

Scott,

Any help you can provide in getting the proper contact information would be much appreciated. I’ll post this exchange in its entirety in the meantime, probably later today. I appreciate your responsiveness and look forward to discussing the responses of the other stakeholders with you, if and when they come.

===========

Scott provided me with the contact information, and I will follow up on Monday with the ACLU, the OMC, the NACDL, and others.

It appears to me that most of the problem Scott presents flows from the decision by the OMC and the Office of Chief Defense Counsel to suspend him from the defense pool. The issue of privileged communications arises because of that (or at least it seems so). The NACDL’s refusal to intervene on his behalf relates to the ACLU’s position, on which I cannot comment because I have not had an opportunity to ask them why they discontinued the John Adams Project.

In my opinion, his response to me about the “none of anyone’s business” remark from the first exchange was highly insufficient, and playing semantic games about murders versus homicides is a distraction. If these were homicides, then they were murders as well by legal definition. They weren’t self-defense, and they weren’t negligent homicides or even manslaughter. Whoever committed these acts and whoever else conspired to commit them, no one can doubt that they were preplanned, deliberate, and completely unjustifiable under American law. The only possible argument against that would be to call them an act of war, which would make the attack on, and the homicides of, almost 3,000 civilians a war crime — and for which a military tribunal would be the proper venue. And regardless, any homicide is the business of the entire community, and any attack is the business of the entire nation.

Scott will be reading your responses, so let him know how you feel. On the issue of representation, though, I think that’s still an open question, one which I will pursue in the coming days.

Update: John Stephenson has more on the John Adams Project at Stop the ACLU.

Update II: An interesting perspective on representation that I didn’t consider can be found at So It Goes In Shreveport.

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Ed, I would not give this POS another moment of my time…but thanks for letting us know that he is truly a POS.

d1carter on November 28, 2009 at 12:47 PM

Why are you wasting electrons on this a$$hole? The only contribution it makes is reaffirmation of the long known fact that lawyers are bottom feeders…apologies to bottom feeders for lumping them with lawyers. This idiot is particularly disgusting.

Dingbat63 on November 28, 2009 at 12:51 PM

Denial is not a river in Egypt.

VegasRick on November 28, 2009 at 12:52 PM

His willful(and feigned) ignorance and apathy towards the circumstances of 9/11 is utterly appalling and reprehensible.

There’s such a thing as serving your clients to the best of your ability without tuning out reality, and that’s precisely what this slimebag is doing. I was willing to give their attorney the benefit of the doubt if he could speak with his feet on the ground, but it appears he has no interest in doing so. Fenstermaker, you’re a disgrace.

MadisonConservative on November 28, 2009 at 12:52 PM

What is going on? This Fenstermaker is disgusting!!!!

mobydutch on November 28, 2009 at 12:54 PM

I relish reading your subscribers’ nonsense.

So you “don’t care” who brought down the World Trade Center, but you’re obsessing over comments at HotAir. I think you need to work on your priorities.

CarolynM on November 28, 2009 at 12:56 PM

The second paragraph of Scott’s first letter hits me exactly as it hits you, Ed — a rather dramatic overreach.

One wonders if this statement, in a nutshell, epitomizes Mr. Fenstermaker’s issues with nearly everyone else, including his putative allies — in his zeal to defend his clients, he’s willing to ride roughshod over the victims.

I have an image of a defense attorney savagely questioning an 8 year old kid who witnessed the homicide of his mother at the hands of her drug-addled boyfriend. The kid is made doubly a victim.

Personally, Mr. Fenstermaker’s client was captured on the field of battle, and, by the rules of the Geneva Convention, is not entitled to a trial except with regard to those crimes which occur after his capture, and then only by a military court (since the Convention prevents the use of civilian courts unless our own soldiers are subject to same). If the Convention were properly enforced, his client would be held until cessation of hostilities and then repatriated to his country of citizenship, or tried before a military court for war crimes against civilians.

His client, as a foreign combatant captured on the field of battle, does not deserve a civilian trial, just as the Nazis at Nuremberg did not deserve a civilian trial.

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 12:58 PM

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care.

Uh, it was Mohammed Atta and a host of others. You can Google it, a-hole.

Sincerely,

Subscriber JWF

JammieWearingFool on November 28, 2009 at 12:59 PM

I think Ed is doing a great public service by educating people about the duty of a lawyer tasked with defending the accused . Anyone who thinks a person accused of a crime in this country is not entitled to all the protections of our Constitution simply does not believe in this country’s principles . If you have a problem with these terrorist scumsacks beig tried in our courts , take it up with obambi , and don’t attack a lawyer for doing his duty .

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 12:59 PM

Scott Fenstermaker… Douchebag extraordinar Marxist useful idiot and personification of corrupt elitist lawyer.

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 1:04 PM

One smells the acrid stench of a truther in Mr. Fenstermaker, which not be altogether startling for a defense attorney eager to represent terrorists, but troubling nonetheless.

I want KSM and his cohorts to get competent attorneys to defend them, but I want those attorneys to be held to high standards. Mr. Fenstermaker begins from a position of bitterness and blindness (prerequisites for his position some might insist), and easily morphs into antagonism and recrimination. I think I’ve heard all I need from him…

Evrviglnt on November 28, 2009 at 1:06 PM

It’s none of our business who attacked the WTC? Seriously, Scott, you’re a douchebag. Well, it is my business, whether you like it or not.

Maybe I’ll call the relatives of my friends who were killed there and let them know it’s also none of their business. I guess they should just move on and let our moral superiors like this jackass decide what’s good for us.

JammieWearingFool on November 28, 2009 at 1:07 PM

Jesse Ventura was a Navy Seal, he’s still an idiot. This terrorist-defending dweeb doesn’t get it.

Narutoboy on November 28, 2009 at 1:07 PM

This guy won’t even admit that the 2,976 victims of 9/11 were murdered in cold blood. I refuse to read any of this “conversation” or any others with him. He doesn’t deserve to have this venue.

KSgop on November 28, 2009 at 1:07 PM

Regardless of the legal difference between homicide and murder, of which I am aware, homicides are still the “business” of the community and the nation, and we have a deep interest in resolving them

It depends on what your definition of “are” is… /s

I deal with lawyers all the time (and love every minute of it), and I think Fenstermaker is just doing the usual schpiel of not conceding any point unnecessarily, so I’m not going to get too worked up about it. It’s what they do.

forest on November 28, 2009 at 1:08 PM

Has anyone asked Mr. Fenstermaker the truther question? Who does he think brought down the towers?

Evrviglnt on November 28, 2009 at 1:08 PM

I remember O’Reilly being upset about that John Adams group using the name of one of our patriots. He sent his producer to confront this woman and my understanding was they disbanded shortly afterward, due to family members of John Adams complaining.

In any event…Im with Caroline. He needs to work on his priorities. It also seems to me that he is in this for the show. He’ll have his pic all over the news, I mean look at all the attention hes getting now. btw..he still is scum. They do not deserve to have any Constitutional rights since they are not citizens of this great country. They were captured on the battlefield and should be tried in a military tribunal.

becki51758 on November 28, 2009 at 1:08 PM

The desire to serve your country in the military probably always starts as an honorable goal but it doesn’t always end that way. I hope Mr. Fenstermaker is not suggesting that his service will require us to ignore our differences. It’s early yet, with facts and clarification yet to be made. I don’t want to be rude to our guest lurker but I have to admit I am not “warming up to him.

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:09 PM

Listen to me, I’m a lawyer and this guy has no idea what he’s talking about. He is the embodiment of everything wrong with modern practice. It is an endless string of rationalization and justification for being a jerk and, in my opinion, a traitor.

He won’t stop it. It’s who he is. But make no mistake about it, this has nothing to do with the law. He’s a disgrace.

Russ

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:10 PM

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care.

I couldn’t read past this sentence, it infuriates me so much. Ed, please don’t waste one more minute on this douchy SOB.

farright on November 28, 2009 at 1:11 PM

The fact that all of the detainees are clamboring (supposedly) for him to personally represent them tells me that they all know something we don’t. My opinion is that is not a good thing. Why would they all fire their lawers and plead guilty while asking for the death penalty just after he gets suspended? This reeks and this lawyer is really creepy. Thanks for reading Mr. Fenstermaker!

Subscriber Mord, anonymous internet poster.

Mord on November 28, 2009 at 1:11 PM

I don’t know that Fenstermaker’s wife is a crackhead whore and I really don’t care.

JammieWearingFool on November 28, 2009 at 1:12 PM

I think Ed is doing a great public service by educating people about the duty of a lawyer tasked with defending the accused . Anyone who thinks a person accused of a crime in this country is not entitled to all the protections of our Constitution simply does not believe in this country’s principles . If you have a problem with these terrorist scumsacks beig tried in our courts , take it up with obambi , and don’t attack a lawyer for doing his duty .

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 12:59 PM

You can tell that to all those German prisoners from WWII who were transported over here to POW camps. The fellows over in Gitmo were not apprehended on our soil by civilian authorities — they were captured on the field of battle. That includes Mr. al-Baluchi, whom Mr. Fenstermaker now intends to represent.

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 1:12 PM

Scott,
You “still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center”? Where have you been hiding? Or does your definition of knowledge require something akin to first-hand observation with total consciousness?

Cloaking your fatuousness with “the Rule of Law” is one of things that gives lawyers a bad name. And your admitted zealousness for the rule of law stands in stark contrast with your total apathy about not caring who attacked the World Trade Center. There is something profoundly wrong with you and that one just gives you a bad name.

Blackacre on November 28, 2009 at 1:12 PM

Mord on November 28, 2009 at 1:11 PM

Ive read that some want to use the insanity defense. Now wouldnt that be nice to see them sent to a mental hospital….with limited security.

becki51758 on November 28, 2009 at 1:15 PM

I don’t know that Fenstermaker’s wife is a crackhead whore and I really don’t care.

JammieWearingFool on November 28, 2009 at 1:12 PM

Exactly.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:15 PM

Has anyone asked Mr. Fenstermaker the truther question? Who does he think brought down the towers?

Evrviglnt on November 28, 2009 at 1:08 PM

If you want the answer to that, just think how a 13 year old answers questions:
I don’t care!!!
It’s none of your business!!!

Scott F. exhibits some very juvenile qualities. How do you like those semantics, Scott?

CarolynM on November 28, 2009 at 1:16 PM

I’ve had the misfortune to be represented by someone who had other interests. Clearly Mr. Fenstermaker represents his clients first. I would seek such a professional if I needed representation.

obleo on November 28, 2009 at 1:17 PM

Just a sample of what’s coming as the trials progress.

1. Does he have any thoughts on how this goat roping will affect how our military does business in the field?

2. Does he have any thoughts on how this bastardizes the current legal process for U.S. citizens if war criminals captured and processed without following strict civilian safeguards for due process are found guilty in nonmilitary trials?

a capella on November 28, 2009 at 1:17 PM

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 12:59 PM

… lawyer tasked with defending the accused…

This is rather passive, I think. This particular attorney chooses to insert himself into this case. That is his choice (though not his right, I don’t believe). In Ed’s earlier posting this attorney stated that he has inserted himeslf into this process to prove to foreigners (Europe or perhaps the Arab world) that at least one American would stand in defense of these men.

His biography (linked in a Pittsburgh neighborhood newspaper further explained this particular attorney’s worldview, which is very anti-government.

None of this makes him particularly noble or notable in my book. His deliberate ignorance (or worse) of the nature and intended affect of the 9-11 attack on the Uninted States is not a function of legal ethics. Instead it is very creepy, but perhaps you become creepy when you seek to represent very creepy clients like his.

I am an attorney and I am very familiar with ethical considerations and obligations to the system of justice. This particular lawyer more than volunteered for defenind ‘these men’ with his last dying breath. I do not wish him the best of luck in his endeavors.

chaswv on November 28, 2009 at 1:17 PM

I deal with lawyers all the time (and love every minute of it), and I think Fenstermaker is just doing the usual schpiel of not conceding any point unnecessarily, so I’m not going to get too worked up about it. It’s what they do.

forest on November 28, 2009 at 1:08 PM

It’s one thing to say “there was a terrible crime committed here, but my client didn’t do it”, and quite another thing completely to say “no, there was no crime committed here, and therefore my client can’t be guilty”, when everyone who has sight agrees that there was most certainly a crime, given those huge smoking holes in the ground.

Mr. Fenstermaker’s position is the latter, and we’ll see if he can convince even one member of the jury likewise.

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 1:18 PM

He’s Lynne Stewart who has yet to pass a note, that we know about, to his client’s fellow bomb-tossers. That’s all this guy is.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:18 PM

Please encourage your subscribers to continue attacking me. Their attacks only highlight how absurd it is for people who don’t know what is going on to have a say in matters such as these.

You know, I didn\’t have an issue with your correspondent until I got to this. I\’ll only give him the benefit of the doubt because I suspect that some of the subscribers he\’s referring to sent \”colorful\” emails. On the other hand, he did invite comments….Don\’t claim the cloak of \”defender of the rule of law,\” Scott, without defending all of it – specifically the First Amendment. Those of us that join the conversation as observers rightly expect to have our rights defended as vigorously as \”alleged\” terrorists.

n0doz on November 28, 2009 at 1:18 PM

Hey, Scott, if you can’t get the recognition you crave by defending terrorists, maybe Law & Order will provide you with a guest spot. Just think! You could team up with Jack McCoy to prosecute Bush for torture.

Connie on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

How can he say he doesn’t know who attacked on 9/11 when his clients were all hot to trot to confess?

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

becki51758 on November 28, 2009 at 1:15 PM

Yes I heard about that. One guy is even on some serious Meds too. The insanity defense is something I know nothing about, so it’s hard to even guess what will happen. I’ll guess that whatever happens, it will be alot different than what SHOULD happen.

Mord on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care.

Because it is so much easier to argue semantics than the facts surrounding the case.

fourdeucer on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:10 PM

+1

d1carter on November 28, 2009 at 1:22 PM

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 12:58 PM

I’m not sure this is correct. The Geneva Conventions has two classifications, POW and Civilian. Since we didn’t (or couldn’t) classify them as POWs then they are civilians and afford “all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples.”

The Calibur on November 28, 2009 at 1:24 PM

You know, I didn\’t have an issue with your correspondent until I got to this. I\’ll only give him the benefit of the doubt because I suspect that some of the subscribers he\’s referring to sent \”colorful\” emails. n0doz on November 28, 2009 at 1:18 PM

Sounds a lot like Phil Jones, doesn’t it?

a capella on November 28, 2009 at 1:27 PM

This POS is probably going to say the deaths were caused by an accident.

moonsbreath on November 28, 2009 at 1:27 PM

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 1:18 PM

The first line of defense is to force the prosecution prove that a specific crime took place. It would be foolish for an attorney to conceded that point up front.

His saying that he “doesn’t care” who did it, and that it’s none on anyone’s business is going way too far and serves no legal purpose that I can see. The purpose of any decent system of justice is to find out what happened, who did it, and to administer justice properly on behalf of the greater community.

forest on November 28, 2009 at 1:28 PM

Mord on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

Wasnt John HInkley put into a mental hospital after pleading the insanity defense. He eventually got to visit his parents and isnt he being released? or he asked to be…

In any event, they plead insanity, I dont think there is a trial.

becki51758 on November 28, 2009 at 1:28 PM

How can he say he doesn’t know who attacked on 9/11 when his clients were all hot to trot to confess?

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

How??? Because he is one of these people, that’s how Cindy…

The greatest evil ever invented.

Posted by doriangrey1 on October 2, 2009

The end justifies the means; this is the liberal left in America’s new ideology. Do what ever it takes to win and correct any social injustices afterwards. With this as their guiding ideological and philosophical mantra America’s liberal left has launched a new assault on American politics.

Within this frame work lays the Politics of personal destruction, enter Sarah Palin. A wife, a mother, a Christian and the Former Governor of the State of Alaska and the most public example of the politics of personal destruction ever seen on the stage of American politics.

There was no insult, slur or denigrating comment so vile or reprehensible that the win at any cost, ends justify the means crowd were not gleeful to throw at her. She represented a threat to their agenda that had to be neutralized at any cost. Any cost included truthfulness, decency morality and ethics. Every single one sacrificed at the alter of winning.

What the win at any cost, ends justify the means crowd don’t know or don’t care about is the historical record of their ideological and philosophical mantra. This ideological and philosophical mantra is not new, it did not originate with their unspoken intellectual guru Saul Alinsky.

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 1:29 PM

NOw I could be wrong….of course. :)

becki51758 on November 28, 2009 at 1:29 PM

I’m not sure this is correct. The Geneva Conventions has two classifications, POW and Civilian. Since we didn’t (or couldn’t) classify them as POWs then they are civilians and afford “all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples.”

The Calibur on November 28, 2009 at 1:24 PM

In which case, Mr. al-Baluchi should be returned forthwith to the country of his citizenship. That’s the position of the Convention. The Government was treating Mr. al-Baluchi as a combatant and was affording him all the legal protections thereof (including enhanced protection provided by a law passed by Congress and signed by President Bush). Mr. Holder has determined that the protections afforded by a Democratic Congress and a Republican President are not good enough.

So be it — such is the world in which we live. My mind remains unchanged on this matter, given the evidence before me.

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 1:30 PM

How can he say he doesn’t know who attacked on 9/11 when his clients were all hot to trot to confess?

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:20 PM

He’s just priming the pump for the “confession under torture” defense.

a capella on November 28, 2009 at 1:30 PM

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care. From the perspective of those who died, it makes very little difference who killed them. From the perspective of everyone else, its frankly none of their business, unless they sit on the jury of course. Print that loud, wide, and clear.

Wow.

If this guy were alive in December of 1941, he’d probably also deny that the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.

Can’t reason with Leftists like this, Ed. They aren’t interested in the truth, only what they think is the truth. In their 3-ringed world, the worst attacks on US civilians in the country’s history wasn’t aided by any foreign countries, despite the evidence proving other countries were involved, such as Afghanistan (giving sanctuary to al Qaeda)and Saudi Arabia.

And they will immediately dismiss any possibility of a certain country in the Middle East being involved, because they are deathly afraid to admit such a possibility, even though a Democrat President’s Justice Department specifically cited a link between that country and al Qaeda when they indicted bin Laden in 1998.

They would rather be waterboarded first.

Del Dolemonte on November 28, 2009 at 1:31 PM

Jesse Ventura was a Navy Seal, he’s still an idiot.

Narutoboy on November 28, 2009 at 1:07 PM

We’ll all get to see how big an idiot he is soon. He has a new show coming to truTV called “Conspiracy Theories.”

Connie on November 28, 2009 at 1:35 PM

I agree with Russ (russcote) this guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about. He seeks an audience to float potential trial balloon arguments. He needs therapy.

Crimefyter on November 28, 2009 at 1:38 PM

I hope Ed doesn’t have anymore conversations planned.

moonsbreath on November 28, 2009 at 1:39 PM

I was suspended from the Pool after a number of detainees, including Messrs. Ghailani, Mr. al-Baluchi, Rahim al-Nashiri, Mustafa Bin-Ahmad Al-Hawsawi, and Abu Faraj al-Libi sought my help.

I would seek your help too if it meant you were willing to go through every loop hole in the law to denounce your country and defend the indefensible.

fourdeucer on November 28, 2009 at 1:39 PM

a capella on November 28, 2009 at 1:30 PM

I have this overwhelming urge to introduce Mr. Fenstermaker to Major Hasan, they can reminiscence about their military careers. I wonder if those were murders or any of our business?

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:39 PM

Fascinating post, Ed. Excellent job.

Keep him talking the more light on him and the scum he represents the better.

deebinto on November 28, 2009 at 1:40 PM

moonsbreath on November 28, 2009 at 1:39 PM

I look forward to more and I think Mr. Morrisey is doing a great service. If we are lucky it won’t be limited to the eyes of HotAir.

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:41 PM

I agree with Russ (russcote) this guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about. He seeks an audience to float potential trial balloon arguments. He needs therapy.

Crimefyter on November 28, 2009 at 1:38 PM

Thanks CF. Lawyers don’t need any help looking like jerks, it’s a stigma I fight everyday, but Scott Fenstermaker’s forays into the media have nothing at all to do with the law. You’re exactly right that he is seeking an audience.

Therapy probably couldn’t hurt either.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:41 PM

I watched this creep on BOR. He danced around questions then and he continues to do so here. The first thing I thought of when I saw him was “he’s a big time troofer” and I have no desire to hear or read anything else this idiot has to say.

Which leads me to this question of why Ed is giving this guy what he wants and craves, and that’s an audience when it’s obvious he’s never going to give anyone a straight answer.

I question your integrity on this one Ed. Reading anything this moron writes in his e-mails is not worthy of my valuable time.

Knucklehead on November 28, 2009 at 1:42 PM

The first line of defense is to force the prosecution prove that a specific crime took place. It would be foolish for an attorney to conceded that point up front.

forest on November 28, 2009 at 1:28 PM

He’ll have to work hard to find the right jury, particularly if he argues as he just did in his letter.

unclesmrgol on November 28, 2009 at 1:42 PM

Is he coming to HA because no one else will give him the time of day? Maybe we should stop.

It’s not hard to see why he was suspended at the colonel’s discretion, and I think we can safely assume he used the phrase “your interactions…have been counterproductive” because it sounded more professional than “go pound sand, douchebag”, but the sentiment was there.

TexasDan on November 28, 2009 at 1:42 PM

I have a question for Mr Fenstermaker. Has he had any affiliation with Eric Holder in his affairs defending the terrorists, either directly or through Holder’s law firm?

Wine_N_Dine on November 28, 2009 at 1:42 PM

Whoever committed these acts and whoever else conspired to commit them, no one can doubt that they were preplanned, deliberate, and completely unjustifiable under American law.

This conversation is bizarre. We know who committed these murders. The names and motives of the 19 who hijacked the planes has been known for 8 years. The suggestion that facts do not exist unless they have been proven in a court of law betrays a profound detachment from the real world including the purpose of the rule of law.

The rule of law requires that before anyone can be punished for breaking a law her guilt must be proved in a trial. It does not require that we suspend reason and deny the existence of known facts unless and until the end of a trial.

BTW. I am a lawyer.

Basilsbest on November 28, 2009 at 1:43 PM

Basilsbest on November 28, 2009 at 1:43 PM

+100

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:45 PM

I am an attorney with over 25 years of experience in criminal defense, 12 of those as a public defender in one of the most crime-ridden counties in the country.

The duty of a criminal defense attorney is to see that his client gets a fair deal or a fair trial. (That does not mean I ever permitted a client or defense witness to commit perjury or obstruction of justice; I did not, at least not knowingly.) The prosecutor, the defense attorney, the judge and the jury all have their roles to play in our adversarial system of criminal justice. Taking on responsibilities for the results beyond the role it is your duty to fulfill is likely to lead to a failure in the system.

A good defense attorney does not think in terms of absolutes or opinions or beliefs but of probabilities. For example, a confession typically increases the probability that a client committed the crime and will be found guilty, but it does not create certainty. I generally did not spend time on forming opinions regarding guilt. It wasn’t my job to do so (that is the duty of the trier of fact) and doing so might interfere with my performance of my duty and fulfilling my role in the system. A good attorney’s assessment of the probability of conviction is a purely practical one. And notice I do not speak in terms of guilt or innocence, because we do not find defendants innocent, only guilty or not guilty. Not guilty only means guilt was not proven beyond a reasonable doubt, which is not at all the same thing as innocence.

It is not an easy job to perform. I frequently had to put aside my personal loathing of the people I represented. I was able to do it only because I believe firmly in the rights of the accused to competent counsel and a fair trial. These rights inure to the benefit of the guilty and the innocent alike, and if even the most vile of defendants is not accorded those rights, the rights of all to a fair trial and the presumption of innocence are at risk.

On occasion my efforts led to acquittals of people who committed further crimes. I will carry that weight to my grave, and it is bearable only because I believe to this day I did my duty and fulfilled an important role in our system of criminal justice. We do not have a perfect system of justice. Human frailty being what it is, we will never have a perfect system. There will always be bad people on the loose, and sometimes the perpetrators of crime are acquitted. Hopefully we will have damned few innocent wrongly convicted and punished.

I find some of Mr. Fenstermaker’s comments and actions to be deeply troubling, particularly these:

…I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care. From the perspective of those who died, it makes very little difference who killed them. From the perspective of everyone else, its frankly none of their business, unless they sit on the jury of course. Print that loud, wide, and clear.

It is appropriate as an attorney for him to say he does not know who attacked the WTC. That is not the same thing as assessing the evidence and coming to the conclusion that the probability is very high that certain defendants are responsible, and their conviction highly likely. Likewise, his remarks regarding the commission of murder and its distinction from homicide, both legal terms of art, have legal significance but reflect the role of counsel more than the realities of the situation. His failure to put his remarks in that context serves to inflame public opinion to no one’s benefit. And his remarks to the effect it is no one’s business but the trier’s of fact are simply preposterous and despicable.

He does appear to be using these cases to some extent to advance his personal career and interests, to the detriment of his duty to his clients and the administration of justice. In this regard his conduct is reprehensible and unethical.

novaculus on November 28, 2009 at 1:46 PM

These exchanges have been some of the most fascinating posts I’ve ever read on Hot Air. It’s a credit to Ed for keeping his questions calm and respectful even if this guy is doing the unthinkable.

However no matter how vile the co-conspirators of 9/11 are they still are entitled to legal representation. As somebody else said Fenstermaker isn’t going to concede a single iota of guilt by his clients. He wouldn’t be doing his job if he did.

That being said he’s still grossly overreaching by not conceding that the victims of 9/11 were murdered. If he can’t concede that now (or in the trial) what’s his defense actually going to consist of? Self defense? Religious expression?

What people tend to forget is that we put scum bags through the whole legal process so the government can’t arbitrarily deem us scum bags and prosecute us unjustly. It may seem obscene that they’re getting a trial but they’re getting it for our protection, not their’s.

Of course this would all be moot if this took place in a military tribunal…..

sluhser589 on November 28, 2009 at 1:46 PM

I question your integrity on this one Ed. Reading anything this moron writes in his e-mails is not worthy of my valuable time.

It’s not a matter of integrity but of judgement.

Basilsbest on November 28, 2009 at 1:46 PM

His statements are all that is wrong with lawyers who seek to justifiy their position through misdirection at any cost. In the narrow view of defending his clients in an attempt at a “win,” he is neither concerned with finding the truth nor acknowledging the facts of the case which are nothing more than an inconvenence to his ultimate goal of setting his clients free. He only wants a non-guilty verdict and doesn’t care if that verdict posits the truth. That is his job and he will convince himself that he is right in doing so by hiding behind semantics.

If Mr. Feinstermaker actually had a conscious, he might one day realize that defending someone is only honorable if you truly believe they are innocent — it is not a exercise in twisting justice to prove what a great lawyer he is. Receiving an honorable discharge from the military may turn out to be the one honorable thing he ever achieved.

wordsmithy2009 on November 28, 2009 at 1:48 PM

How many ways do you have to be told the problem is not the lawyer but the administrations decision to try these people in civilian courts ?

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 1:49 PM

Sounds like a truther.

Howcome on November 28, 2009 at 1:50 PM

Mr. Fenstermaker doeth protest too much. There is something deeply disturbing about his attitude and apparent motivations,

Pathological narcissism.

eaglesdontflock on November 28, 2009 at 1:51 PM

Fenstermaker is a textbook aberration. He qualifies, meagerly, as an undergrad case study.

Insatiable ego. Publicity hound. Unabashed self promoter. Ludicrous rationalizations. Blatant disregard for the MURDER of 3000 innocents. Idiotic shifting of blame. Expedient and self-serving interpretation of the law.

Methinks Fenstermaker doth protest too much, and he protests for reprehensible reasons. Methinks he likes controversy and all the attention it can garner to supply his endless body of conceit.

anXdem on November 28, 2009 at 1:52 PM

Mr. Fenstermaker, if you are reading this, then here’s one just for you. You, sir, are a parasite, and I hope this case is the albatross round your neck that drags your career into the depths of oblivion.

fusionaddict on November 28, 2009 at 1:52 PM

However no matter how vile the co-conspirators of 9/11 are they still are entitled to legal representation.
sluhser589 on November 28, 2009 at 1:46 PM

I take serious issue with this statement. According to who?

And you answer your own concerns with this:

Of course this would all be moot if this took place in a military tribunal…..

That’s the point. This is an intentionally contrived circus trial with no discernible benefit present. It is setting a terrible, terrible precedent for the future in terms of who is entitled to Constitutional protections and when. The concerns raised by several Senators and organizations like CNS news regarding evidence gathering, miranda warnings, etc., are very real whether Nancy Pelosi thinks they are or not.

This will not end well.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:53 PM

Mr. Fenstermaker, if you are reading this, then here’s one just for you. You, sir, are a parasite, and I hope this case is the albatross round your neck that drags your career into the depths of oblivion.

fusionaddict on November 28, 2009 at 1:52 PM

Sounds like his career is already there.

Crimefyter on November 28, 2009 at 1:55 PM

I’m starting to think that this is going to turn out just like Holder wants it to.

Crimefyter on November 28, 2009 at 1:57 PM

Listen to me, I’m a lawyer and this guy has no idea what he’s talking about.

Have you ever been appointed to represent a person who who was obviously factually responsible for the death of someone and everybody “knew it” ? What would you suggest a lawyer do ? Be less than a zealous advocate to secure every advantage for his client ?

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 1:57 PM

Pathological narcissism.

eaglesdontflock on November 28, 2009 at 1:51 PM

The real pandemic in our nation currently.

Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:58 PM

I agree with posters who say Fenstermaker is a “truther”, a common term that he claimed not to understand, which means a person who believes that the 911 attacks were not in fact committed by Islamic extremists but were orchestrated by our own government.

All of the blather about what the ACLU did or did not do really obscures the point that this person, who has a choice about where he spends his time, prefers to use it in the support of sworn military enemies of the country.

He doesn’t care about the death of 3000 people but cares deeply about the law. Right. He revels in notoriety and hopes for a celebrity pay day, victims be damned.

virgo on November 28, 2009 at 1:59 PM

We still don’t know why the HVDs fired their attorneys after Mr. F. was suspended. Do you think it just might be a political maneuver by the HVDs? Maybe? Or is Mr. F. the one and only savior lawyer who can represents these poor innocent murderers oppressed defendants?

In my career I have known attorneys who histrionically argue for a nirvana through the legal system–it doesn’t exist here on earth–and they wind up hurting their clients, not helping them. I think his explanations have exhausted their usefulness.

PattyJ on November 28, 2009 at 2:00 PM

Rage and whatnot aside, it’s certainly interesting to see a dialogue between two… let’s say, wildly disparate points of view. So thanks to Ed for posting this.

Siobhan on November 28, 2009 at 2:01 PM

There are a number of discrepancies among Mr. Fenstermaker statements on O’Reilly and what he has been writing here.

On O’Reilly, he said he was not representing any of the NY defendants, but was consulting with their attorneys.

Here, he indicates that the attorneys for the GITMO detainees are all his adversaries.

Here, he says he represents Mr. al-Nashiri and Mr. al-Baluchi, but no civilian court nor the military court has issued an order that he can send legally privileged mail.

He also reports here that because he cannot send legally privileged mail, he has sent no mail at all.

The March 16, 2009 letter from COL Masciola states that Mr. Fenstermaker can represent Mr. Ghailani at GITMO, but Mr. Fenstermaker says that he still cannot send legally privileged mail. That absolutely does not make sense.

slp on November 28, 2009 at 2:02 PM

If Mr. Feinstermaker actually had a conscious, he might one day realize that defending someone is only honorable if you truly believe they are innocent —

wordsmithy2009 on November 28, 2009 at 1:48 PM

That is simply not true, the role of a defense advocate is to defend through the procedures laid down in the jurisprudence system. The honorable execution of that role, is to follow the procedures for adjudication faithfully and insure that your client receives competent counsel and that they are tried in a manner which is equitable.

Even those who are guilty must receive a fair trial and competent counsel in the appropriate venue. A Civilian court is not the appropriate venue for KSM and company and Scott Fenstermaker is the embodiment of the most vile nature of a win at any cost mentality that has come to pervade our jurisprudence system.

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 2:04 PM

Have you ever been appointed to represent a person who who was obviously factually responsible for the death of someone and everybody “knew it” ? What would you suggest a lawyer do ? Be less than a zealous advocate to secure every advantage for his client ?

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 1:57 PM

No I haven’t. I’ve been appointed to several cases but none involving the cold-blooded murder of 3000 innocent people.

I would first suggest that Fenstermaker STFU.

Secondly, I would look at the facts of the case and figure out those that offered my client the greatest chance of raising a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury.

But here’s what you’re missing, this isn’t an American citizen who committed an American crime in America.

These are terrorists who committed an act of War against our Country, the retaliation for which has had us engaged in two wars overseas for many years. It is a mockery of justice to consider these animals worthy, legally or morally, of the protections afforded to you and I.

I’ll be honest with you, if I were “assigned” to represent these cretins, I’d resign or file a motion to be relieved because of deep moral concerns with my representation. I wouldn’t be able to be a “zealous advocate”.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 2:05 PM

Someone should do research on his claim that his family (or whoever) was 200 something yards away from where the attacks happened. I guarantee you that this weasel just said that to gain sympathy and credibility with commenters.

Narutoboy on November 28, 2009 at 2:07 PM

I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care.

What kind of American doesn’t care who slaughtered nearly 3000 of his fellow citizens, on American soil no less? What kind of human being would say that who is responsible for their deaths is nobody’s business except a jury’s?

Yes, Scott Fenstermaker, I am questioning not only your patriotism but whether you even have a moral compass.

I won’t be reading any more threads about you. I get a serious whiff of the banality of evil from you.

ProfessorMiao on November 28, 2009 at 2:08 PM

Conversations like this are what happens when we confuse acts of war with simple violations of domestic criminal law. What Mr. Fenstermaker can not admit is that his clients were acting as agents of an organization that explicitly declared hostilities against the Unites States, then launched a series of attacks against military and civilian targets.

He can’t admit that because, if he does, then they are no longer subject to our domestic criminal justice system. They must be treated as illegal combatants (or, if you don’t like that term, call them “spies” or “enemy agents”, which is what we called then before World War II) and he doesn’t have a job.

What he’s doing is protecting his turf and ensuring that he gets his share of the fame that protecting a high-profile defendant will bring him. He’s playing the role of Tom Cruise’s character in “A Few Good Men” and God help the poor benighted fool who tries to take that away from him.

Jimmie Bise, Jr on November 28, 2009 at 2:08 PM

“Not murder”?

Are you kidding me? Did they “accidentally” fly two planes into the WTC and one into the Pentagon within minutes of one another?

Was there any justification for hijacking four commercial airplanes in the first place?

I get it, defense lawyers are necessary to keep prosecutors in check, but why is it too much to ask that the defense at least be truthful? Or does this guy actually believe what he says? And does he think the Nuremberg trials were illegitimate too?

OscarSchneegans on November 28, 2009 at 2:10 PM

Jimmie Bise, Jr on November 28, 2009 at 2:08 PM

+100

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 2:10 PM

What would you suggest a lawyer do ? Be less than a zealous advocate to secure every advantage for his client ?

borntoraisehogs on November 28, 2009 at 1:57 PM

If anything he should not be advocating on national television, or through any public media that could pave the way for a mistrial or prejudice a jury.

fourdeucer on November 28, 2009 at 2:11 PM

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 1:53 PM

That’s my point. Once they were granted trial in the US courts they were entitled to representation. Perhaps I was unclear.

sluhser589 on November 28, 2009 at 2:12 PM

Again, when you decide to give civilian trials to enemy combatants, you are rolling out the red carpet for lawyers like Fenstermaker who’s job it is to cast doubt on every single element of the particular crime(s) charged, even including whether a crime was committed in the first place.

As a recovering lawyer myself, and as detestable as he might be or appear — and I happen to believe he’s a truther — he is nonetheless performing a permissable function and one enabled by the Cover-girl in Chief and his like-minded AG who both want our country to be placed on trial and want guys like Fenstermaker to do the dirty work for them.

Blame those two individuals, not their willing tool.

TXUS on November 28, 2009 at 2:16 PM

That’s my point. Once they were granted trial in the US courts they were entitled to representation. Perhaps I was unclear.

sluhser589 on November 28, 2009 at 2:12 PM

Yes they are, but they are not getting representation, they are getting propaganda and they should not be in the US Courts. Obama and Holdren should be for TREASON and SEDITION.

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 2:16 PM

Good journalism, IMHO, Ed. People can take away what they will from what this guy says.

To him I offer the words of the Duke of Exeter from Act 2 Scene 4 of Henry V:

Scorn and defiance, slight regard, contempt and any thing that may not misbecome the mighty sender.

dogsoldier on November 28, 2009 at 2:17 PM

bin Laden admits that al Qaeda did 9/11

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/binladen_10-29-04.html

October 29, 2004, 5:10pm EDT

BIN LADEN ADMITS 9/11 RESPONSIBILITY, WARNS OF MORE ATTACKS

A tape aired by Al-Jazeera television Friday showed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden admitting for the first time that he orchestrated the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks and saying the United States could face more.

This has been public knowledge for 5 years. Good luck finding a jury member who doesn’t know this.

Del Dolemonte on November 28, 2009 at 2:17 PM

If anything he should not be advocating on national television, or through any public media that could pave the way for a mistrial or prejudice a jury.

fourdeucer on November 28, 2009 at 2:11 PM

And that’s exactly what he’s doing here and it looks like someone fell for it hook, line and sinker. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised to see all of these threads and posts show up at this circus aka trial.

Knucklehead on November 28, 2009 at 2:18 PM

Blame those two individuals, not their willing tool.

TXUS on November 28, 2009 at 2:16 PM

I dont think anyone is blaming Scott Fenstermaker for defending KSM and company, we’re just blaming him for being an ultr-super douche bag and all around worthless excuse for a human being.

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 2:18 PM

Please encourage your subscribers to continue attacking me.

This exchange is a preview of the trial. Our arguments presented and collected here are pre-trial strategy.

By the way, please tell your subscribers that I still don’t know who attacked the World Trade Center and, yes, I still don’t care.

It must be really cool to be so detached and above the United States.

Any American who doesn’t care who did this is simply no American.

beatcanvas on November 28, 2009 at 2:18 PM

That’s my point. Once they were granted trial in the US courts they were entitled to representation. Perhaps I was unclear.

sluhser589 on November 28, 2009 at 2:12 PM

Ok, and my point is that I don’t have to like that decision and will voice my disagreement vociferously every chance I get.

And my other point is that modern lawyers like Fenstermaker have no morality underpinning their existence as lawyers. That is not, in my opinion, the purpose of either the law or of lawyers. Nobody has to represent these animals. Fenstermaker wants to represent them and he’s perfectly willing to lie about the law and his intentions to do so.

russcote on November 28, 2009 at 2:19 PM

It must be really cool to be so detached and above the United States.

Any American who doesn’t care who did this is simply no American.

beatcanvas on November 28, 2009 at 2:18 PM

Seems more like snotty indifference? Sorta Ward Churchillesque? I agree he is not an American.

dogsoldier on November 28, 2009 at 2:21 PM

Seems more like snotty indifference? Sorta Ward Churchillesque? I agree he is not an American.

dogsoldier on November 28, 2009 at 2:21 PM

Scott Fenstermaker is the pure and unadulterated personification of this mentality…

doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 2:24 PM

Even those who are guilty must receive a fair trial and competent counsel in the appropriate venue.
doriangrey on November 28, 2009 at 2:04 PM

I guess you don’t understand the difference between duty and honor. No one is forcing him to be their attorney, he is choosing to do so knowing they have already admitted to masterminding the crime even before they were brought to Gitmo and “tortured” to reveal information leading to more of their psychopathic, religious zealot compatriots. In fact, they are proud of their involvement in the murder of nearly 3000 innocent Americans. That makes Mr. Fenstermaker a bloodsucking opportunist looking to elevate his career on the bodies of their victims.

Pathological narcissism.
eaglesdontflock on November 28, 2009 at 1:51 PM
The real pandemic in our nation currently.
Cindy Munford on November 28, 2009 at 1:58 PM

Right on, Cindy. You win the prize for today.

wordsmithy2009 on November 28, 2009 at 2:25 PM

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