The criminal case against the men accused of planning the Sept. 11 attacks is the one aspect of Guantánamo that would seem to make sense – until you start watching it.
Previously on Serial.
It was a ticket out of a jail card, basically.
It's like you can't put a person 50 years in prison.
And plus torture, right?
So when you are tortured by someone who doesn't believe in torture, how can this guy who believes in human rights doing this to me?
Well, it's exhausting because you're, like, pretending.
Everything is pretend.
That's what I'm saying.
We're in a play, and we're playing our part.
Everybody seems to think that the intelligence mission to Guantanamo was to build cases against these detainees for their continued detention.
And I'm here to tell you, that.
Wasn'T the friggin mission.
From serial productions on the New York Times, this is serial season four, Guantanamo one prison camp.
Told week by week.
I'm Sarah Koenig, and this is our final episode.
Every couple of weeks, at the bland hour of 05:00 p.m.
on a Tuesday, a group of people you've never heard of clicks into a Zoom meeting.
They're all family members of people who died on September 11.
Hi.
Hi, everyone.