Posted on 04/02/2005 2:11:51 AM PST by Lori675
Hi, explain this to me. How was Janet Reno able to defy the 11th circuit court, but Jeb Bush wasn't. In 2000, the 11th circuit court ruled the U.S couldn't send Elian Gonzales to Cuba. He had to be in the U.S. What happened to Bill and Janet? NOTHING. They stated that the 11th Circuit had no jurisdiction and that the Florida Court had no jurisdiction.
So why didn't Jeb do the same thing and send state troopers to get Terri into a hospital.
Read this from April 2000. You'll see the 11th circuit court ruled Janet Reno couldn't send Elian to Cuba.
http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2000/April/220ag.htm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AG WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 2000 (202) 616-2777 WWW.USDOJ.GOV TDD (202) 514-1888
STATEMENT BY ATTORNEY GENERAL JANET RENO ON THE 11th CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS DECISION
"For the past four months, the case of Elian Gonzalez has touched the hearts of virtually every American. It is a case about a 6 year old boy -- and the sacred bond that exists between he and his father. It is that simple -- Juan Miguel is in this country and wants his son back.
"I believe Elian should be reunited with his father. I have said that all along. The order today from the Court of Appeals says that Elian should not be removed from the country and we will abide by that order. But it does not disagree with my determination that the boy should be reunited with his father in the United States as soon as possible. In fact, the court said that 'we need not decide where or in whose custody Plaintiff should remain while this appeal is pending.'
"There are two issues here that must be kept separate. One is whether an asylum application can be brought by distant relatives over the objection of a father who is the sole surviving parent. The other issue is who cares for the child while he is in the United States. The appeal addresses only the asylum issue, not the care issue. The court's order does not preclude me from placing Elian in his father's care while he is in the United States.
"The immigration laws clearly call for a child to be placed in the care of a parent in preference to a more distant relative while the child's immigration status is being resolved.
"The 11th Circuit's order prevents the child from leaving the country, while the appeal is pending. We will abide by the court's order.
"We are still reviewing the court's decision as I have just had a chance to read it. And we will consider all options and take the course of action most appropriate under the circumstances.'"
9 times out of 10, that's usually the case.
This is the question I have too. I'd like to hear others' comments. After all, FR's strength is that "come, let us reason together" approach to thorny issues isn't it?
So I ask....when, or under what circumstances would it be appropriate to disobey the law? Certainly our history has had ample evidence of the 'rightness' of such lawless action; refusing to sit at the back of a bus, transporting &/or harboring fugitive slaves, a tea party...things like that. Could this not have been one of those times?
In this case the "rule of men" was instituted by those black-robed judges who assumed that "law" meant "their personal pronouncements."
I very much appreciate your response, because it lays bare the essential disagreement we've been having here at FR -(everyone's noticed the snippiness - and I'm just another frustrated keyboard cowboy too - it's the sense of sad helplessness that has fueled the anger at the very public, and brazen murder of a helpless innocent life, so I share in it and understand it)- so you know there are those who feel that this just wasn't one of the times that it (civil disobedience) could've been effectively accomplished, and others....
I include myself in this group - who feel that it should've been done, Terri should have been saved. That's all. I understand your side, and don't think you're a coward, or cynic, or anything like that for seeing it the way you do. If anything, I'm a coward for just talking about it, and not going on down there to git 'er dun. (Going to jail wouldn't have helped her). I think most of us are just hurting about the whole rotten thing.
PS - go here and paste your tagline to SaltyJoe!
I don't think anyone is advocating law breaking. But there are tens of thousands of laws in the land, and many people here have cited many which Jeb et al, could have used to save Terry.
Clinton and Reno interpreted the law to their liking, shopped for a judge to give them a warrant, and then seized Elian. Later on the 11th Circuit which they earlier defied, supported his deportation.
I'm not aiming this message to you in particular, your comment was at a convenient point in the thread for response.
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