Gtmo trials
The Deep State international network of VIPs that are involved in child trafficking, human rights abuses, corruption and Satanic rituals are being investigated, detained and extracted to Gitmo via sealed indictments enforced by U. Special Forces. The implications of these unfolding events for disclosure of classified technologies related to secret space programs, Antarctic bases hidden under the ice sheets and extraterrestrial life, all previously suppressed by the Deep State, are profound.
Their removal from powerful global leadership positions will help greatly in ending their decades-long policies of denying the rest of humanity the benefits of advanced technologies that will revolutionize life all over the planet.
Some global and political elites named in the indictments would be tried in federal courts, some faced Military Tribunals at GITMO, while others would go before international courts.
A partial list of those believed named in over 71, federal indictments:. Watch the video below:. This article contains information about alleged arrests, tribunals and executions that were being made during the Covid outbreak. We cannot verify this information for certain so please do your own research. Ever since this list started to circulate throughout the internet, many people have asked:.
We believe that this is for optics. If people learned about all of this all at once, it would be very upsetting to them. Feel free to research deepfakes, robotics, body doubles, and cloning and decide for yourself. There is plenty of evidence out there for those who know what to look for. Feast your eyes on these fine examples:. There are currently only 41 prisoners there. Obviously, there will soon be many more prisoners in Gitmo and since the National Guard was sent in, these will most likely be high-profile prisoners.
Has resigned and was charged with possession of child pornography and has been accused of bragging at an online site about sexually molesting a 6-year-old girl. Was charged with distribution and possession of child pornography.
Resigned from his position after being charged with possession of child pornography and abusing children between 2 and 6 years-old. He was found guilty on six counts of sex trafficking. Schutt, was arrested and charged with four counts of felony third-degree sexual assault of a child and one count of intentional child abuse.
In November , he pleaded guilty to one count of child sex trafficking in exchange for the dropping of the other charges. Bush commended during the presidential campaign, surrendered to police after admitting to a sexual affair with a female juvenile.
Delgaudio was found guilty of child porn charges and paying two teenage girls to pose for sexual photos. Brooks was charged with molesting a year old boy and possession of child pornography. Republican candidate Richard Gardner admitted to molesting his two daughters. Gardner was convicted of molesting a year old girl. Dasen Sr. The Committee concluded that while the events did occur his apology was sufficient and took no further action.
On May 28, , al-Sharbi was charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism and providing material support for terrorism. The US government withdrew these charges on October 21, , only to refile against in but subsequently dismissed those charges as well.
Tarek Mahmoud El Sawah of Bosnian and Egyptian descent had been charged with conspiracy and material support for terrorism for allegedly serving as an Al-Qaeda explosives expert. His charges were dismissed in He was initially charged with conspiracy before the military commissions on December 16, , but those charges were later dismissed.
Mohammed al-Qahtani, a Saudi who is accused of being the would-be twentieth hijacker, was taken into US custody in December and transferred to Guantanamo a few months later. In al-Qahtani recanted a confession he said he made after he was beaten, abused and humiliated at Guantanamo. On February 11, the US government charged him with conspiracy to commit terrorism and other crimes in it withdrew these charges without explanation.
In , it was revealed that Susan Crawford, the then convening authority of the military commissions, refused to refer any charges against al-Qahtani because he had been tortured. Faiz Mohammed Ahmed al-Kandari of Kuwait had been charged with providing material support for terrorism and conspiracy for allegedly providing training at an Al-Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan and giving advice and assistance to Osama bin Laden.
David Hicks, an Australian, was the first person to have been convicted by the US military commissions. He pleaded guilty in April to one count of providing material support for terrorism and was sentenced to seven years. All but nine months of this sentence were suspended. Hicks served seven months in his native Australia and was released on December 29, In Hicks' conviction was vacated after a US federal appeals court found that material support for terrorism is not a war crime.
Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al-Qosi, a Sudanese national, confessed to providing, and conspiring to provide, material support for terrorism on July 7, Al-Qosi admitted that from to he served as a driver and cook for Osama bin Laden. He pled guilty to these charges and was sentenced to 14 years imprisonment. In exchange for cooperating with prosecutors he was returned to Sudan in July Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen, was just 15 when he was captured and seriously injured in a firefight in Afghanistan on July 27, He pleaded guilty on October, 25, , to murder and attempted murder in violation of the laws of war, conspiracy to commit terrorism, providing material support for terrorism, and spying, and was sentenced to eight years of imprisonment.
In , he was transferred back to Canada to serve out the remainder of his sentence and in he was released on bail. In February Noor pled guilty to conspiracy and providing material support for terrorism and got a reduced sentence of 34 months for cooperating with the prosecution.
He was repatriated to Sudan in His conviction was vacated in after a US federal court of appeals found that material support for terrorism is not a war crime. Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian, was initially indicted by federal prosecutors in New York in December for the August bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania but was a fugitive at the time.
His four co-defendants were tried in US federal court in and sentenced to life without parole. Born in , he moved with his family to the Baltimore, Maryland area in Khan was facing a life sentence but in February , Khan pleaded guilty as part of a pre-trial agreement. In exchange for the promise of a reduced sentence, he agreed to cooperate with the prosecution. He remains at Guantanamo.
In August , Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni who worked as a driver for Osama bin Laden, became the first Guantanamo detainee to go to trial before the military commissions. In the only full contested trial to have taken place in the military commissions, he was ultimately cleared of charges of conspiracy but convicted of material support for terrorism.
With credit for time served, after his conviction he had five months left of his sentence after his case was over. He served four of these months in Guantanamo but was then transferred to Yemen to serve out the remaining one month of his sentence. He was released by Yemeni authorities in In October , his conviction was vacated after a federal appeals court found that the law only permitted prosecution for war crimes, and that material support for terrorism was not a war crime.
Ali Hamza Ahmad Suliman al-Bahlul was tried by the military commissions and sentenced to life in prison on November 3, , after a military jury found him guilty of 35 counts of conspiracy, solicitation to commit murder, and providing material support for terrorism.
US federal appellate courts have overturned his convictions of material support for terrorism and solicitation but upheld his conviction for conspiracy. Mustafa Ahmed Adam al-Hawsawi, originally from Saudi Arabia, has been charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism, attacking civilians and civilian objects, murder in violation of the laws of war, destruction of property in violation of the laws of war, hijacking, terrorism, and providing material support for terrorism.
Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, a Saudi of Yemeni descent, is charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism, murder and attempted murder in violation of the laws of war, and terrorism.
Ramzi bin al-Shibh, a Yemeni, has been charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism, attacking civilians and civilian objects, causing serious bodily injury, murder in violation of the laws of war, destruction of property in violation of the laws of war, hijacking, terrorism, and providing material support for terrorism.
Mohammed Hashim, an Afghan, was charged in with spying, terrorism and providing material support for terrorism. However, in May the charges were dropped, and in December , Hashim was transferred from Guantanamo back to Afghanistan. Mohammed Jawad, an Afghan citizen, was taken into US custody when he was somewhere between the ages of 12 to 17 he does not know his birthday and his relatives have given conflicting accounts.
He was charged with attempted murder in violation of the laws of war and intentionally causing serious bodily injury. Jawad told a panel of US military officers that he falsely confessed after being beaten and tortured by Afghan police when first taken into custody in In , the lead prosecutor in Jawad's case resigned stating that he believed Jawad was innocent and should be releaed. A federal judge ordered Jawad's release in July and he was repatriated to Afghanistan in August the same year.
Binyam Ahmed Mohamed, an Ethiopian, trained as an electrical engineer in the United Kingdom, where he had been granted refugee status.
He was initially charged in the military commissions with conspiracy to commit terrorism and providing material support for terrorism but the United States withdrew the charges against him in and in February , Mohammed was repatriated to the United Kingdom. In , the US government alleged that al-Rabia committed the crimes of conspiracy to commit terrorism, attacking civilians, and providing material support for terrorism.
However, before formally charging al-Rabia before a military commission, a federal judge granted his habeas corpus petition and ordered the government to release him. He was sent home to his native Kuwait in December Help us continue to fight human rights abuses.
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