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06.15.2008 9:05 pm

Monday editorial: Who won? ‘We the people’

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gitmoBy a bare 5 to 4 majority last week, the U.S. Supreme Court confirmed what should have been obvious:

• No president is above the law, especially when it comes to depriving people of their liberty.

• No prisoner may be denied the minimum protection of the law, regardless of his citizenship or how dangerous the government claims he is.

People imprisoned by the United States have a right to challenge the legal basis for their detention before a neutral magistrate. They must get due process: a real chance to know the evidence against them and confront their accusers. The government must justify a person’s detention or set him free.

This is the purpose of the writ of habeas corpus — the “Great Writ,” as it is called.

These rights are what the U.S. Supreme Court upheld last week in Boumediene v. Bush, a case involving prisoners held at the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, many for more than six years.

No legal principle is more important to a free people. None should be more deeply cherished. And it is this principle that the Supreme Court majority reaffirmed last week.

Does this mean that the people declared to be “unlawful enemy combatants” by President George W. Bush suddenly will be released? No. It means that they must get a fair chance to challenge in federal civilian courts the legal basis for their detention.

The Constitution provides that the Great Writ may “be suspended . . . when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.” But the Court ruled that that was not the case in Boumediene.

Consider what the Bush administration — sometimes with the assistance of a Republican majority in Congress — has tried to do to deny the constitutional right of the Great Writ:

• Mr. Bush claimed — initially without action by Congress — that as commander in chief, he had the right to imprison anyone he classified as an enemy combatant, even U.S. citizens, and hold them indefinitely without filing charges against them, without allowing them to seek legal counsel and without any right to challenge their detention.

• The Bush administration also argued that prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay military installation were outside the United States and, therefore, not entitled to any constitutional protections.

• After earlier Supreme Court decisions knocked down these arguments, Congress became involved and pushed through legislation stripping the federal courts of the authority to rule on habeas corpus claims by Guantanamo prisoners. Last week’s ruling invalidated that move.

• Left standing were other legislative provisions establishing military commissions to try suspects at Guantanamo, proceedings that a growing number of military and civilian lawyers and judges have begun criticizing as the equivalent of kangaroo courts.

Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. filed a lengthy dissent to the majority decision in Boumediene that is petulant in tone and full of lawyerly quibbles. It contends that as a result of this decision, everyone loses — including the American people.

In fact, everyone wins — at least, everyone who believes in a constitutional system that limits the power of government to imprison people and empowers the judiciary to enforce those limits.

31 comments

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The detainees in Guantanamo are from the Afghan theatre of operations. Not Iraq. The Afghan Northern Alliance is responsible for some of these people being there. Many were “turned in” by war lords getting rid of rivals and are not guilty of anything at all. Beheadings are almost exclusively an arab phenomenon and Afghan native fighters do not normally engage in this practice. When those found innocent are released they will not be met by any Iraqis wishing to do them harm (john). The SCOTUS vote was 5-4 indicates that 3 of the 5 were put there by Republican presidents and believe these people have rights. I am happy with the decision as it affrims that we are, indeed, a “nation of laws.”

— slamfist
6:22 pm June 16th, 2008

So far the Bush Administration is 0 for 2 on their presumptive powers regarding the detainees.

Sorry Mr. President and Mr. Vice-President, you are subject to the Constitution and the rule of law.

It has been an article of faith of the Royalist Republicans that the President has vast imperial powers. Watch out for strike 3.

— RHarnack
10:17 pm June 16th, 2008

RHarnack—

” All embassies of every country are considered part of that country’s sovereign territory, hence things like “diplomatic immunity”, etc. ”

This is true — the land, the building, etc., are sovereign territory. Your mistake is then automatically granting “rights of U.S. citizenship” to foreign nationals who happen to be — for whatever reason — on said territory.

Your reasoning would permit the foreign national gardener/plumber/cook (that happens to be working on embassy grounds) access to petition U.S. courts merely because they’re on U.S. sovereign territory. And this most definitely is not established precedent.

— BobZ.
10:37 pm June 16th, 2008

The decision was wrong.

Period.

— DD
10:55 pm June 16th, 2008

It appewars that some of you do not feel that we should extend the humanity of our laws to all human beings. How dark and perverted. And you call yourselves civilized people? Ever heard of treat others the way you expect to be treated?

No one had the ability to say which of the detainees where guilty or innocent, so of course the Supreme Court made the correct decision.

— D. Walker
1:33 am June 17th, 2008

Mr. Walker… The military tribunals were extending the humanities of our laws to these enemy combatants. What is perverted is opening our already overburdened domestic criminal courts to wartime foreign combatants. They may as well all be released now. There is no way to reconcile their newly granted constitutional rights with the requirements of national security. Our enemies are not saying how nice we are for doing this. They are wondering how stupid we can really be.

— Bb
6:45 am June 17th, 2008

Do all you constitutional geniouses know if this is true? I heard that the President can overrule a ruling by the SCOTUS.

— A CENTRIST
10:35 am June 17th, 2008

Bobz-
If the gardener and other personnel petitioned for protection, and/or citizenship rights, they would have to be considered. Just as the emabassy, while conforming to local pay rates etc, still needs to follow the US labor code.

The Bush Administration worked very hard not to called these captured prisoners POW’s because they knew the moment they did another whole set of rules apply. They are being called on their sophistry.

Given how some of these prisoners were turned in, there exists the strong possibility they had nothing to do with the Taliban or Al-Qaeda. When we went into Afghanistan, we offered rewards to all who turned in “fighters” from one of these groups. Some of the people “capturing” the prisoners were grabbing people who they had a grudge against and claiming they were in one of the two categories.

All this ruling means so far is that a more thorough process of vetting each and every prisoner needs to be done.

— RHarnack
11:46 am June 17th, 2008

The reasonable alternative would be to, take NO prisioners.

— big John
4:22 pm June 17th, 2008

And So It Begins:
” Gitmo Lawyers Say Detainee Was Not Read His Rights– Therefore He Must Be Set Free”(http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2008/06/gitmo-defense-lawyers-say-detainee-was.html)

>>>”In July 2002, Omar Khadr threw a grenade that blew up an American soldier in Afghanistan. Khadr was wounded and captured during this same firefight. After his capture a video was found that shows Khadr toying with detonating cord as other men including Abu Laith al-Libi assemble explosives in the same house that had been destroyed in the firefight. He was also seen planting landmines while smiling and joking with the cameraman. It has been suggested that these were the same landmines later recovered by American forces on a road between Gardez and Khowst”<<<

Sounds like an innocent victim of circumstance to me.

— CaptainAntarctica
7:32 am June 18th, 2008

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