The judge, Colonel James Pohl, will review years of reports by the International Committee of the Red Cross, the only human rights group to access the US naval base in Cuba since it opened in 2002, according to one of two rulings revealed by defense lawyers.
After reviewing the massive collection of files, Pohl will decide whether the prosecution or lawyers representing the September 11 defendants can access them.
Although the ICRC has opposed releasing its confidential records to defense lawyers or the public, its correspondence is "the only independent historical record of the prisoners' time at Guantanamo," said James Connell, attorney for accused 9/11 co-conspirator Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, also known as Ammar al-Baluchi yesterday.
In a separate ruling, Pohl for the first time allowed defense lawyers to communicate by mail with the five 9/11 suspects they represent on any topic relating to the case.
"For more than two years, I have not been able to communicate confidentially by letter, telephone or email with my clients at Guantanamo," said Lieutenant Colonel Sterling Thomas, who represents Ali.
"This new order opens the door to a more meaningful attorney-client relationship."
Lawyers representing the men accused of plotting the 2001 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people on US soil have often pressed the US government to lift restrictions on communications with their clients.
Prison authorities seized all legal mail from "high-value detainees" in October 2011 as part of a review. Defense attorneys were later barred from using the Guantanamo legal mail system for privileged communications.
Following Pohl's ruling, the judge will be in charge of controlling mail, not prison guards, in a move hailed by the defense.
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