hayil al mithal told his family that when he returned from guantanamo after more than a decade, he wanted to get married. his brothers went so far as to plan the role hayil would take on in the advertising shop they run as a family business, to help him reintegrate into society. then they learned that that hayil was on the list of 46 indefinite detainees - 26 of them from yemen. they want to know why - if the us is convinced hayil was a dangerous "enemy combatant" and an al qaeda operative - he won't be tried. across town, the banner of another 'indefinite detainee' hangs outside the al hilah home. abdulsalam's family has put up a ton of posters asking for his release. this one asking "when will the son of freedom rise." it speaks to a few things. one obviously to the family's sway in this area but also to the fact that there isn't a stigma attached to being a family member of a guantanamo detainee. and as you see these posters up on vehicles, in storefronts hanging from banners, it suggests that there's a ton of public support at least in this area for having those guantanamo detainees r