Holder commented on the case against Khalid Sheik Mohammed during a visit to New York yesterday to congratulate the trial team that last week won a conviction of Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, who is Osama bin Laden's son-in-law and was al-Qaida's spokesman after the 2001 attacks.
The attorney general said it was fitting that Abu Ghaith, "who publicly gloated about the attacks on the World Trade Centre, stood trial near where those buildings once stood; before a jury of New Yorkers, and; in full view of many of those who lost loved ones in the attack."
But he said at a news conference that the success of the Abu Ghaith prosecution did not mean Mohammed could be moved to New York for a civilian trial.
"The time has passed for that determination," Holder said.
"This is not a decision that we are going to revisit."
In November 2009, Holder announced that Mohammed would be tried in Manhattan courts.
He reversed the decision in April 2011 amid rising political opposition and claims by city officials that a trial would damage the local economy and require hundreds of millions of dollars to boost security.
"I think the decision I announced at that time was a correct one," Holder said. "Many of the problems that we're now seeing in the military commissions were predicted in the papers that I reviewed that helped shape my decision."
When Holder announced in 2011 that Mohammed would be tried before a military tribunal, he said families of victims of the attacks deserved swift justice.
The prosecution of Mohammed and four others at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, drag on with a trial unlikely before next year.
"The defendant was put on trial a little over a year after being captured," he said. "He was convicted on all three counts after roughly six hours of jury deliberations."
He said the government had demonstrated "great skill" in catching foreign terror suspects, obtaining high-value intelligence from them and then processing them through the civil court system, with more than 165 defendants convicted of terrorism or terrorism-related charges in US courts since 2009.
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