In late November 2001, after the
United States invasion of Afghanistan, Hamdi was captured by Afghan
Northern Alliance forces in
Kunduz, Afghanistan, along with hundreds of surrendering
Taliban fighters. All the men were sent to the Qala-e-Jangi prison complex near
Mazar-i-Sharif. The United States transported Hamdi to the
Guantanamo Bay detention camp and detained him there starting February 11, 2002. On April 5, the government transferred Hamdi to a jail at
Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia. Armed with a federal appeals court finding, the
Bush administration refused Hamdi a lawyer until December 2003.
The Pentagon announced then that Hamdi would be allowed access to legal counsel because his "intelligence value" had been exhausted and that giving him a lawyer would not harm national security. The announcement said the decision "should not be treated as a precedent" for other cases in which the government had designated U.S. citizens as "illegal enemy combatants". (
José Padilla was then the only other U.S. citizen known to be imprisoned by the U.S. government as an "illegal enemy combatant"). After the decision,
Frank Dunham, Hamdi's lawyer, was finally able to meet with him in February 2004, more than two years after he was incarcerated. Under Pentagon guidelines, military observers attended and recorded their meetings. Dunham was not allowed to discuss with Hamdi the conditions of his confinement. By this time, he had been transferred to the Navy Brig in
Charleston, South Carolina. After the initial meeting, Hamdi was allowed to have confidential discussions with his attorneys without military observers, or video or audio taping in the room. Hamdi's father petitioned a
federal court for Hamdi's rights to know the crime(s) he is accused of, and to receive a fair trial before imprisonment. In January 2004, the
U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Hamdi's case (
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld). It ruled that U.S. citizens were entitled to the basic rights of
due process protections, and rejected the administration's claim that its war-making powers overrode
constitutional liberties. == 2002 memos ==