A jury found Padilla guilty in 2007 on charges of supporting al-Qaida and terrorism conspiracy, which carried a possible life sentence. Evidence showed he attended an al-Qaida terrorist camp in Afghanistan before returning to the US in May 2002 on what authorities originally claimed was a mission to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb" in a major city. Those accusations were later discarded when the "mission" was deemed only a sketchy idea.
Cooke, an appointee of President George W Bush, whose administration approved Padilla's treatment, said she remained concerned that he had been held for so long without criminal charge, had almost no access to a lawyer and under conditions few US citizens have experienced in this country.
"I was then, and am now, dismayed by the harshness of Mr. Padilla's prior confinement," Cooke said.
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