TruthSeeker
PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2008
- Messages
- 6,390
- Reaction score
- 3
- Country
- Location
Court hearing to determine Aafias competence to stand trial on Monday
NEW YORK, July 5 (APP): A federal court in New York City is set to hold a hearing on Monday to determine whether Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist who is in US custody on terrorism charges, is competent to stand trial.Ms. Siddiqui, 37, was arrested and brought to New York in August last year for allegedly attempting to kill US personnel while in detention in Afghanistan. The FBI said she was picked up from outside the governors office in Ghazni and she was shot at twice in the encounter.
Later, Ms. Siddiqui was sent to the Federal Medical Center Carswell in Fort Worth, Texas, on the orders of Judge Richard Berman for psychological evaluation when her defence lawyers pleaded that she was unfit to stand trial. They cited the conclusions of an expert who found she is suffering from delusional disorder and depression.
The detainee was shifted back to New York on June 17 after the completion of her examinations in Texas and placed in a high security prison in Brooklyn, a borough of New York City.
Ahead of Mondays hearing, an American news agency circulated the report of a psychologist, appointed by the prosecutors, who examined Ms. Siddiqui.
While asserting that she is competent to stand trial, the report goes on to make some statements that, according to experts, go beyond her mandate as a medical specialist. For instance, Leslie Powers, the psychologist, wrote in a document dated May 4 and put in the courts public file late Thursday that new information helps show Siddiqui was living freely in Pakistan and Afghanistan from 2003 to 2008, according to Associated Press (of America).
That claim also contradicts assertions that the neuroscientist had spent those years in the custody of American authorities. Some of Ms. Siddiquis supporters and her former lawyers had argued she had likely been taken into custody by a U.S. intelligence agency during those years and was subjected to torture and abuse.
Incidentally, Dr. Powers had, in her first report in November, also concurred with the conclusion that Ms. Siddiqui was not in a shape to stand trial. But Dr. Powers changed her opinion in May, and Ms. Siddiquis family members say she did it under official pressure.
Associated Press Of Pakistan ( Pakistan's Premier NEWS Agency ) - Court hearing to determine Aafias competence to stand trial on Monday
NEW YORK, July 5 (APP): A federal court in New York City is set to hold a hearing on Monday to determine whether Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist who is in US custody on terrorism charges, is competent to stand trial.Ms. Siddiqui, 37, was arrested and brought to New York in August last year for allegedly attempting to kill US personnel while in detention in Afghanistan. The FBI said she was picked up from outside the governors office in Ghazni and she was shot at twice in the encounter.
Later, Ms. Siddiqui was sent to the Federal Medical Center Carswell in Fort Worth, Texas, on the orders of Judge Richard Berman for psychological evaluation when her defence lawyers pleaded that she was unfit to stand trial. They cited the conclusions of an expert who found she is suffering from delusional disorder and depression.
The detainee was shifted back to New York on June 17 after the completion of her examinations in Texas and placed in a high security prison in Brooklyn, a borough of New York City.
Ahead of Mondays hearing, an American news agency circulated the report of a psychologist, appointed by the prosecutors, who examined Ms. Siddiqui.
While asserting that she is competent to stand trial, the report goes on to make some statements that, according to experts, go beyond her mandate as a medical specialist. For instance, Leslie Powers, the psychologist, wrote in a document dated May 4 and put in the courts public file late Thursday that new information helps show Siddiqui was living freely in Pakistan and Afghanistan from 2003 to 2008, according to Associated Press (of America).
That claim also contradicts assertions that the neuroscientist had spent those years in the custody of American authorities. Some of Ms. Siddiquis supporters and her former lawyers had argued she had likely been taken into custody by a U.S. intelligence agency during those years and was subjected to torture and abuse.
Incidentally, Dr. Powers had, in her first report in November, also concurred with the conclusion that Ms. Siddiqui was not in a shape to stand trial. But Dr. Powers changed her opinion in May, and Ms. Siddiquis family members say she did it under official pressure.
Associated Press Of Pakistan ( Pakistan's Premier NEWS Agency ) - Court hearing to determine Aafias competence to stand trial on Monday