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Quad City TimesThe Obama administration said Tuesday it plans to hold military tribunals at the Thomson Correctional Center as it moves forward with plans to send foreign detainees from the controversial prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to the nearly vacant facility in the rural cornfields of northwestern Illinois.The administration’s plan to buy the Thomson prison, formally announced Tuesday, will set in motion an acquisition process and, later, security improvements at the prison.
Eventually, it will mean the hiring of 900 federal prison workers there, along with 1,000 to 1,500 Defense Department employees who will guard the Guantanamo detainees.
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They have not specified a number of detainees, saying only it would be a “limited.” Some news reports have put the number between 35 and 90.Administration officials did reveal some new details Tuesday of what will become of some of the detainees sent to Thomson.
A senior administration official confirmed that military commission trials would be held at the facility. Previously, they had only left open the possibility.
“I think the plan would be to hold the military commission trials at Thomson,” the official said.The controversial tribunals have been rare since Guantanamo Bay opened, and the administration has identified only five cases that could go to a military trial.
They did that last month at the same time they announced five 9/11 plotters would be tried in civilian court in New York City.
Among the five facing military trial is Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the man accused of orchestrating the bombing of the USS Cole in 2001. Seventeen U.S. sailors were killed in the attack.
It is not clear how many others might be tried the same way.
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