is back in the news as his lawyers seek to stop his military commission trial, set for 21 Jul 2008.

Article by Lyle Denniston here:

http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/new-cha...als/#more-7638

New challenge to war crimes trials
Thursday, July 3rd, 2008
Lyle Denniston
....
Lawyers for Salim Ahmed Hamdan — the Yemeni national detained at Guantanamo Bay whose case led to the scuttling of President Bush’s first attempt to set up military trials for terrorism suspects — moved on Thursday to stop the replacement system enacted by Congress. In legal filings in U.S. District Court, Hamdan’s counsel sought a court order blocking the scheduled military commission trial of Hamdan, now due to begin on July 21.
.....
UPDATE 4:23 p.m. District Judge James Robertson, moving this new case along swiftly, has told the Justice Department to file its opposition on Monday, July 14, and detainee’s counsel to file their reply on Wednesday, July 16. The judge set oral argument on the motion for Thursday, July 17.
More than 250 cases are expected in the DC district::

http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/detaine...istrict-court/

Federal District judges in Washington, D.C., who will handle scores of pending and likely future challenges by Guantanamo Bay detainees to their confinement, decided on Monday to shift them temporarily to one judge to work on ways to process the cases. Attorneys for detainees began receiving notices Tuesday that the judges, in a closed-door session earlier in the day, had agreed that Senior District Judge Thomas F. Hogan would handle “coordination and management” issues. The underlying cases will remain with the individual judges for future action on the merits.
Of course, there was an exception - so, 18 cases (including Boumediene) are following a separate track:

http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/separat...ome-detainees/

A federal judge in Washington, refusing to give up even temporarily the handling of 18 cases by Guantanamo Bay detainees seeking to challenge their captivity, moved forward with those on Wednesday, calling in lawyers for an update on the cases’ status on July 10. Among the 18 cases is the lead case that led to the Supreme Court’s decision allowing habeas pleas by the captives – Boumediene v. Bush (District Court docket 04-1166, Supreme Court docket 06-1195).
For more in depth coverage of the major detainees, see the DoD's Military Commissions page at:

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/commissions.html

E.g.,

Military Commissions Act
Military Commissions Manual
Military Commissions Regulation
Military Commissions Trial Judiciary Rules of Court
United States Court of Military Commission Review
...
Commission Cases

Sept. 11 Co-Conspirators *New Items*
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarek Bin 'Attash
Ramzi Binalshibh
Ali Abdul Aziz Ali
Mustafa Ahmed Adam al Hawsawi
[etc.]
Since this site includes the charge sheets and MC orders (including the Dec 2007 orders for Hamdan), one can draw one's own conclusions about how "due" the process has been.

At least, in Hamdan's case (after reading the MC judge's decisions in Dec 2007), here and here:

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/commissionsHamdan.html

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/commissionspress.html

12/19/2007 - Ruling in Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction - Salim Ahmed Hamdan
12/17/2007 - Ruling on Defense Motion for Article 5 Status Determination - Salim Ahmed Hamdan
I fail to see the problem. They were well considered decisions.