There have been a number of posts above relating to two subjects:
1. Khadr was tortured; and
2. That his conviction/guilty plea therefore came as a result of a coerced confession.
That I think could use a little context.
1.
Torture There is no doubt that Khadr was subjected to what the US calls "enhanced interrogation techniques". This appears to have included sleep deprivation, stress positions, threats of physical force and several other highly unpleasant activities. I'm not about to argue as to whether or not this constituted "torture" but it is quite clear that various courts have held that his initial confession came during the time that these "cruel and abusive" treatment took place (around the 2002-2004 mark) and when he did not have legal counsel. Based, in part, on his confessions he was determined to be an "enemy combatant" by a Combatant Status Review Tribunal and continued to be held at Guantanamo. (For those who aren't familiar with the Geneva Conventions, there is a similar process in use to determine if an individual is subject to be held as a POW under the Prisoner-of-War Status Determination Regulations.
See:
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-91-134/FullText.html]http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-91-134/FullText.html]http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-91-134/FullText.html)
2.
Guilty Plea The main problem that I have with some of the statements made by some of the posters above deals with the allegation that because he was "tortured" his 2004 confession is of no worth and that his guilty plea is therefore also worthless. In my humble opinion that is dead wrong.
Between 2004 and his Guilty plea there were two major changes. Khadr was given access to legal counsel and the Mohammad Jawad case had been resolved.
Khadr had legal counsel by the fall of 2004, both American and Canadian. In 2005 he was formally charged with "murder by an unprivileged belligerent" and other charges. In 2006 the commissions structure to try those charges were struck down in the USSC
Hamdan v Rumsfeld decision. In response a new law was struck and a new commission created and in 2006 the charges were relaid. By the week prior to his preliminary hearing in July 2010 Khadr's legal team had been aggressively filing and arguing numerous motions for his defence when he suddenly fired them and said he would represent himself and a few weeks later engaged a new military lawyer who had apparently worked behind the scenes for a few months arranging a plea deal that would get Khadr back to Canada. Concurrently Khadr's Canadian legal team had been working for him in Canada including bringing his case before the SSC twice (2008 and 2010). (I've left out most of the numerous legal proceedings that took place for the sake of brevity)
What is noteworthy is that during the period 2005 to 2010, Khadr had a number of very competent legal counsel (including US military lawyers) who were representing his interests in the US/Guantanamo and Canada.
During this time the Mohammed Jawad case was also making its way through the system. Jawad is of particular relevance as the case concerned an underage teenager (somewhere between 12 to 17 at the time he was taken into custody) who was alleged to have thrown a grenade at a Special Forces Humvee in Dec of 2002 wounding two. He was also taken to Guantanamo, was "enhanced interrogated" and made a confession.
In Oct 2008 a military judge threw out the confessions because of the manner in which they were obtained. (The initial confession was made to the Afghan Police under "threats of severe physical or mental pain or suffering". The subsequent confession was made to US interrogators). Jawad was released from Guantanamo and repatriated to Afghanistan in 2009.
Wikipedia page here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed_Jawad#Release_order_and_possible_trial_in_a_civilian_court
A very enlightening article on the Jawad case and the Guantanamo Military Commissions by one of Jawad's lawyers here:
http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1497&context=dlj
It is therefore in light of the very similar Jawad decision (and that tribunal's willingness to throw out coerced confessions) and with very expert legal counsel available to Khadr and preparing for his defence that Khadr decided to take a plea bargain where he freely and voluntarily admitted to the acts for which he was charged.
:cheers: