Clayton Trivett: Difference between revisions

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'''Clayton Trivett''' is a lawyer with the US military.<ref name=nytimes2020-07-27/><ref name=thehill2021-01-28/>  As of 2022 he is a [[Commander]] in the [[United States Navy Reserve]].<ref name=nytimes2022-03-20/>
'''Clayton Trivett''' is a lawyer with the US military.<ref name=nytimes2020-07-27/><ref name=thehill2021-01-28/>  As of 2022 he is a [[Commander]] in the [[United States Navy Reserve]].<ref name=nytimes2022-03-20/>
In January 2021 Trivett was the prosecutor who announced the Guantanamo suspects would be offered [[Covid 19]] vacciations.<ref name=thehill2021-01-28/>


[[Carol Rosenberg]] reports Trivett has served as a prosecutor, for the [[Guantanamo military commissions]] since 2008.<ref name=nytimes2022-03-20/>  However, since 2022, he has been assigned greater responsibility.  Rosenberg reports Trivett will be taking a new role in a new attempt to agree to plea bargains with [[Khalid Sheikh Mohammed]], and the four other men charged with him.  In these negotiations prosecutors have been authorized to take the death penalty off the table.
[[Carol Rosenberg]] reports Trivett has served as a prosecutor, for the [[Guantanamo military commissions]] since 2008.<ref name=nytimes2022-03-20/>  However, since 2022, he has been assigned greater responsibility.  Rosenberg reports Trivett will be taking a new role in a new attempt to agree to plea bargains with [[Khalid Sheikh Mohammed]], and the four other men charged with him.  In these negotiations prosecutors have been authorized to take the death penalty off the table.


<ref name=nytimes2021-11-05/>
<ref name=nytimes2021-09-07/>
==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|refs=  
{{Reflist|refs=  

Revision as of 23:36, 20 March 2022

Clayton Trivett
Occupation lawyer
Known for Guantanamo prosecutor

Clayton Trivett is a lawyer with the US military.[1][2] As of 2022 he is a Commander in the United States Navy Reserve.[3]

In January 2021 Trivett was the prosecutor who announced the Guantanamo suspects would be offered Covid 19 vacciations.[2]

Carol Rosenberg reports Trivett has served as a prosecutor, for the Guantanamo military commissions since 2008.[3] However, since 2022, he has been assigned greater responsibility. Rosenberg reports Trivett will be taking a new role in a new attempt to agree to plea bargains with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and the four other men charged with him. In these negotiations prosecutors have been authorized to take the death penalty off the table.

[4]

[5]

References

  1. Carol Rosenberg. Prosecutors Struggle to Resume Guantánamo Trials, The New York Times, 2020-07-27, p. A13. Retrieved on 2022-03-21. “A prosecutor, Clayton G. Trivett, notified defense lawyers last week of the planning, which he said would consolidate court hearings and personnel to prevent “posing unnecessary risk to the resident base population of 6,000 people.””
  2. 2.0 2.1 Zack Budryk. Guantanamo Bay prisoners to be offered coronavirus vaccines, The Hill, 2021-01-28. Retrieved on 2022-03-21. “Trivett said the base could begin providing the shots to prisoners who consented as early as next Monday. The prison complex houses 40 detainees.”
  3. 3.0 3.1 Carol Rosenberg. The 9/11 Trial: Why Are Plea Bargain Talks Underway?, The New York Times, 2022-03-20, p. A13. Retrieved on 2022-03-21. “Now a trial prosecutor who has been on the case since the George W. Bush administration, Clayton G. Trivett Jr., is in talks with defense lawyers about trading guilty pleas for at most life in prison without parole.”
  4. Carol Rosenberg. Some Sept. 11 Trial Secrets May Not Be Secrets Anymore, The New York Times, 2021-11-05, p. A15. Retrieved on 2022-03-21. “A lead prosecutor, Clayton G. Trivett Jr., agreed to the review, saying that 'there is some reconciliation that needs to be done' by his team. He said prosecutors would compare documents released by the C.I.A. under FOIA to those his team had prepared and given to defense lawyers.”
  5. Carol Rosenberg. Proceedings in 9/11 Case Resume, and Then Are Delayed Again, The New York Times, 2021-09-07, p. A17. Retrieved on 2022-03-21. “A lawyer for Mr. Mohammed had just begun to question the new judge, Col. Matthew N. McCall, about the circumstances of his assignment to the case when a prosecutor, Clayton G. Trivett Jr., announced that the U.S. Court of Military Commission Review had issued a 23-page ruling on a challenge to the military commission judge selection process.”