US | Khalid Sheikh Mohammed Alleged 9/11 Plotters Finally Going to Trial Khalid Shaikh Mohammed is up on multiple charges By Neal Colgrass Posted Aug 30, 2019 1:17 PM CDT Copied In this imaged released May 7, 2003, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, al-Qaida's No.3, operational leader, and alleged Sept. 11 mastermind, is seen shortly after his CIA capture during a raid in Pakistan March 1, 2003. (AP Photo/File) Five alleged 9/11 plotters finally have a trial date—and it's not exactly around the corner. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and four others will jointly go on trial at Guantanamo Bay starting Jan. 11, 2021, the New York Times reports. A military judge, Col. W. Shane Cohen of the Air Force, set the date in an order that lays out other deadlines before the trial. It's the accused jihadists' first start-of-trial trial date after seven years of requests from prosecutors. Arraigned on the case in 2012, the accused will face a military jury at a war court compound known as Camp Justice. Mohammad, a former al-Qaeda bigwig, is up on charges including murder in violation of the crimes of war, hijacking aircraft, and terrorism, per the New York Post. (Some think Mohammed will die before the case is resolved.) Read These Next He was an Olympian. Now he's the FBI's most wanted. Disturbing turn of events in case of a teen found dead on a cruise. Trump threatens to fire his 'voice of reason.' Earhart experts not exactly excited about the latest document dump. Report an error