Bush Fights Courts' Attacks on War Against Terrorism
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Dec. 19, 2003
SAN FRANCISCO Two federal courts ruled that the U.S.
military cannot deny prisoners access to lawyers or the American
courts by detaining them indefinitely, dealing twin setbacks to the
Bush administration's strategy in the war on terror.
One of Thursday's rulings favored the 660 "enemy combatants" held at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The other involved American citizen Jose Padilla, a.k.a. Abdullah al Muhajir, who was seized in Chicago in an alleged plot to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb" and declared as an enemy combatant.
In Padilla's case, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ordered the former gang member released from military custody within 30 days and if the government chooses, tried in civilian courts. The White House said the government would appeal and seek a stay of the decision.
In the other case, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled that prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base should have access to lawyers and the American court system.
'Troubling and Flawed'
The White House said the ruling was inconsistent with the
president's constitutional authority as well as with other court
rulings.
"The president's most solemn obligation is protecting the
American people," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said
Thursday. "We believe the 2nd Circuit ruling is troubling and
flawed."
An order by President Bush in November 2001 allows captives to
be detained as "enemy combatants" if they are members of
al-Qaida, engaged in or aided terrorism, or harbored terrorists.
The designation may also be applied if it is "the interest of the
United States" to hold an individual during hostilities.
The Justice Department this week said such a classification
allowed detainees to be held without access to lawyers until U.S.
authorities believe they have disclosed everything they know about
terrorist operations.
But Padilla's detention as an enemy combatant, the New York
court ruled 2-1, was not authorized by Congress and Bush could not
designate him as an enemy combatant without such approval.
Michael Greenberger, a University of Maryland School of Law
professor and former Clinton administration Justice Department
official, said the government "is being painted into a corner that
is not very favorable. How bad of a corner will be determined by
the U.S. Supreme Court."
The court, Greenberger said, did not address the broader
question of whether constitutional rights would be violated if Bush
had congressional authority to designate somebody as an enemy
combatant.
Padilla, a convert to Islam, was arrested in May 2002 at
Chicago's O'Hare airport as he returned from Pakistan. Within days,
he was moved to a naval brig in Charleston, S.C. The government
said he had proposed the bomb plot to Abu Zubaydah, then al-Qaida's
top terrorism coordinator, who was arrested in Pakistan in March
2002.
In ordering his release from military custody, the court said
the government was free to transfer Padilla to civilian authorities
who can bring criminal charges. If appropriate, Padilla also can be
held as a material witness in connection with grand jury
proceedings, the court said.
Padilla's lawyer, Donna Newman, did not immediately return a
telephone message for comment.
Chris Dunn, a staff attorney with New York Civil Liberties
Union, called the ruling "historic."
"It's a repudiation of the Bush administration's attempt to
close the federal courts to those accused of terrorism," Dunn
said.
Thursday's 2-1 decision out of San Francisco was the first
federal appellate ruling to rebuke the Bush administration's
position on the Guantanamo detainees who have been without charges,
some for nearly two years. The administration maintains that
because the 660 men confined there were picked up overseas on
suspicion of terrorism and are being held on foreign land, they may
be detained indefinitely without charges or trial.
The Supreme Court last month agreed to decide whether the
detainees, who were nabbed in Afghanistan and Pakistan, should have
access to the courts. The justices agreed to hear that case after
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that
the prisoners had no rights to the American legal system.
"Even in times of national emergency - indeed, particularly in
such times - it is the obligation of the Judicial Branch to ensure
the preservation of our constitutional values and to prevent the
Executive Branch from running roughshod over the rights of citizens
and aliens alike," Judge Stephen Reinhardt wrote for the majority.
Stephen Yagman, the Los Angeles civil rights lawyer who filed
the suit on behalf of Libyan detainee Faren Cherebi, said if the
decision survives, the government "has to put up some evidence
that there is a reason to hold these people and charge them, or
give them up."
Justice Department spokesman Mark Corallo said the government's
position is that "U.S. courts have no jurisdiction over non-U.S.
citizens being held in military control abroad."
The Defense Department announced Thursday that the Pentagon had
appointed a military defense lawyer for a terrorism suspect held at
Guantanamo. Salim Ahmed Hamdan of Yemen becomes the second
Guantanamo prisoner to be given a lawyer. Australian David Hicks
got a lawyer earlier this month and recently met with an Australian
legal adviser.
___
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