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SR psychiatrist testifies for defense

UCSF professor said Hamdan 'feels dead inside,' worked for bin Laden only to support family

Published: Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 4:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 5:26 a.m.

A nationally renowned psychiatrist from Santa Rosa who has been a key witness in the military trial of Osama bin Laden's chauffeur took the stand Wednesday to again testify as a defense witness.

Emily Keram, a Pentagon-paid consultant, became involved in the case in 2004 when the defense team for Salim Ahmed Hamdan hired her to conduct an independent medical exam of the Yemeni native who was bin Laden's chauffeur and alleged bodyguard from 1996 to 2001.

The 37-year-old Hamdan, who worked as bin Laden's $200-a-month driver at the al-Qaida leader's Afghanistan farm, was captured by Afghan troops during the U.S. invasion in late 2001 and accused of being a member of al-Qaida and a terrorist, charges he denied.

Keram's initial analysis of Hamdan's deteriorating mental state, following more than a year in solitary confinement at Guantanamo Bay, was originally introduced before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2004 by Lt. Commander Charles Swift, a veteran of the Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps and Hamdan's attorney.

Swift convinced the court to reject President Bush's effort to try more than 400 suspected al-Qaida and Taliban-connected terrorists by military tribunals, contending it violated both the Geneva Convention and the nation's Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Keram, who has been the key psychiatric consultant in several local high-profile cases, is a clinical professor in the Psychiatry and the Law program at UC San Francisco's School of Medicine.

She has spent more than 100 hours with Hamdan over the past several years and, according to news reports, testified during the initial phase of his trial on July 16 that Hamdan was so traumatized by his detention and sleep deprivation that he was unresponsive to his own lawyers.

"He feels dead inside," Keram testified.

Hamdan was convicted Wednesday at a military commission trial at Guantanamo Bay.

Keram has consistently declined to talk to The Press Democrat about her involvement in the landmark case.

But during Wednesday's hearing, news reports said Keram told the six-judge panel that Hamdan, orphaned at age 10 and largely uneducated, worked for bin Laden because he thought it was the only way for him to support his family.

Keram said when prosecutors showed Hamdan video of the Sept. 11 attacks, "He told me it was hard on his soul."

Keram said Hamdan told her that if he ever won his freedom he'd return to Yemen.

"I'll take my wife and my daughters and go to the desert with a camel and never talk to anyone again," she reported him saying, although she added that he also said he would consider returning to his job as a driver.

"I'll take whatever I can get," she quoted him as saying.

Hamdan, who might take the stand in his defense today, however, faces a possible life sentence.

You can reach Staff Writer Mike McCoy at 521-5276 or mike.mccoy@pressdemocrat.com.


Comments

  1. lovesthelaw says...
    August 7, 2008 9:10:57 am

    RE: http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20080807/NEWS/808070381

    Just think of the salary this woman is pulling down!

    This is war folks and we are providing psychiatrists to evaluate our enemy combatants.

    America is really screwed up in every way, thanks to the liberal strangle-hold on our leaders!

  2. foodguy15 says...
    August 7, 2008 9:19:44 am

    GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba ? When Salim Hamdan discovered that his employer was responsible for the attack on the USS Cole, which killed 17 U.S. servicemembers in 2000, the Yemeni said he felt no joy. Rather, Hamdan said he felt betrayed.
    "It kills you. It's a shock. Someone who you greatly respect, whom you hold in esteem, suddenly turns into someone else," Hamdan said, according to a psychiatrist who interviewed him.TRIAL: Split Hamdan decision illustrates cases' difficulty
    Yet after coming to that realization, Hamdan did not quit his job as the personal driver of Osama bin Laden. He did not stop working for al-Qaeda. He remained all the way through the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and even helped bin Laden elude capture in the days following them.

    Such decisions, according to Army Col. Lawrence Morris, the chief prosecutor for the military commissions, showed that Hamdan was not merely a cab driver but an "al-Qaeda warrior."

    Hamdan on Wednesday became the first person since World War II to be convicted in a war crimes trial. During his trial, few details emerged about the path Hamdan took from Yemen to aide to the leader of a worldwide jihadist movement.

    On Wednesday, psychiatrist Emily Keram, a defense witness, spent the afternoon on the stand relaying some of what she was told by Hamdan during more than 120 hours she spent talking with him at Guantanamo Bay.

    The psychiatrist's testimony will be a factor in Hamdan' sentence. He could face a maximum of life in prison.

    Orphaned at age 10 and with little family in Yemen, Hamdan dropped out of school and spent years in Yemen's capital, Sana, driving a taxi. Keram said Hamdan was desperate to start a family. Yemeni custom demands a payment of thousands of dollars to a family for the right to marry a woman, and his job would never make him that much.

    That's when he "found" bin Laden, Keram testified. He was paid $100 to $150 a month to drive him, and bin Laden gave him $1,000 to help with the payment to his future wife's family.

    Hamdan twice left Afghanistan and spent months with his family, Keram said. Not only was he disinterested in the holy war being waged against the United States by al-Qaeda, but he told Keram he couldn't understand some of the religious overtures being discussed all around him.

    His lack of interest turned to disgust, Keram said, when