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The Gitmo Prisoners’ Case:What the Supreme Court Really Did, And How the Press Blew the Story
Special to FreeRepublic ^ | 29 June 2006 | John Armor (Congressman Billybob)

Posted on 06/29/2006 3:50:16 PM PDT by Congressman Billybob

Because the Hamdan case was not up on my favorite research site at Cornell Law School early this morning, I read the press coverage first and the decisions afterward. The press has only a superficial understanding of the case, and missed the most important aspect of the decision.

The case is Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, No. No. 05–184, June 29, 2006.

Source: http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/05-184.ZS.html

The Christian Science Monitor gets the facial decision correctly:

The court ruled 5-to-3 Thursday that Mr. Bush acted outside his authority when he ordered Al Qaeda suspects to stand trial before these specially organized military commissions. The ruling said that the commission process at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, could not proceed without violating US military law and provisions of the Geneva Conventions. "The commission lacks power to proceed," writes Justice John Paul Stevens for the court majority.

It also correctly describes what the decision did not do. It says:

Supreme Court ruling does not address whether Guantanámo should remain open or shut down. Instead, it focuses on the process for holding commission trials established by the president....

And,

"It bears emphasizing that Hamdan does not challenge, and we do not today address, the government's power to detain him for the duration of active hostilities," Stevens writes.

Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0630/p01s01-usju.html

However, this article misses the larger, and more important story, entirely.

Reading the actual decisions (there were six of them) reveals a different and more dangerous result. To begin with, there was a unanimous Court decision, In Re Quirin in 1942, which upheld the military trials, convictions and in two cases executions, of eight German saboteurs who sneaked into the US from German submarines with plans and preparation to bomb various facilities, including one who was admittedly an American citizen.

The majority Opinion by Justice Stevens, joined by Justices Kennedy, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer, avoids that prior decision.

Justice Breyer filed a Concurrence, joined by Justices Kennedy, Souter, and Ginsburg. Justice Kennedy filed a Concurrence in Part, joined by Justices Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer. Justice Scalia filed a Dissent, joined by Justices Thomas and Alito. Justice Alito filed a Dissent, joined by Justices Scalia and Thomas. Chief Justice Roberts did not take part in the case, because he had participated in the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which was being reviewed by the Supreme Court in this matter.

The three-judge decision below had agreed unanimously that the Geneva Convention did not apply to Hamden, for reasons clearly stated in the exceptions to the Convention, fighters who do not wear uniforms, or report to any military command structure, and who hide among the civilian population. While the case was on appeal, Congress passed the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, which expressly excluded the jurisdiction of federal courts over “an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba....”

On grounds of statutory construction, the majority decides that Congress did not mean what it said in the 2005 law, and refused to follow the withdrawal of jurisdiction, and denied the government’s Motion to Dismiss.

On the merits of the case, the Opinion claims that “Though foreshadowed in some respects by earlier tribunals like the Board of General Officers that General Washington convened to try British Major John André for spying during the Revolutionary War, the commission “as such” was inaugurated in 1847.” This statement is false. The Law of War was well established before the United States and its Constitution came into existence, as the Quirin Court found unanimously in 1942. The trial, conviction, and hanging of Major Andre, the contact for General Benedict Arnold for his intended betrayal of the garrison at West Point, was the first American example of that.

The Court then looks at the charges against Hamdan, which charge a conspiracy that extended from 1996 to November 2001. The Court questions jurisdiction under the Law of War for this charge, since only two months of this time overlapped the actual declaration of war in this instance. The Opinion therefore concludes that “ At a minimum, the Government must make a substantial showing that the crime for which it seeks to try a defendant by military commission is acknowledged to be an offense against the law of war. That burden is far from satisfied here.”

Finally, the Court repairs to international law to support its conclusions about the application of American law and Constitution. It says, “Finally, international sources confirm that the crime charged here is not a recognized violation of the law of war.38 As observed above, see supra, at 40, none of the major treaties governing the law of war identifies conspiracy as a violation thereof.”

Finally, while recognizing that military tribunals had been used in the past, and approved by the Court, this Court concluded that it was only an “exigency” matter, which did not apply here, and therefore the protections of the Uniform Code of Military Justice which are used in ordinary courts-martial. Also, in finding that the Geneva Conventions apply to Hamdan, the Opinion offers zero discussion of the factual considerations which specifically exclude ununiformed, non-military people as “illegal combatants.”

The Concurrence by Justice Breyer is only two paragraphs. The second one says: “Where, as here, no emergency prevents consultation with Congress, judicial insistence upon that consultation does not weaken our Nation’s ability to deal with danger. To the contrary, that insistence strengthens the Nation’s ability to determine—through democratic means—how best to do so. The Constitution places its faith in those democratic means. Our Court today simply does the same.”

This underscores the conclusion – missed in most of the press coverage, that a properly crafted statute passed by Congress, can restore the authority of President Bush to order military tribunals for all future defendants excepting (possibly) only Hamden himself.

The long Concurrence by Justice Kennedy is addressed primarily to the need for “uniformity,” in holding that the evidentiary rules of courts-martial should also be applied to military tribunals. He wrote, “The rules for military courts may depart from federal-court rules whenever the President “considers” conformity impracticable, §836(a); but the statute requires procedural uniformity across different military courts “insofar as [uniformity is] practicable,” §836(b), not insofar as the President considers it to be so.”

Translated into common English, the Court is saying that whatever is most frequently done, is what must be done in all instances. The prior decisions of the Court expressly reject this conclusion.

The Dissent by Justice Scalia attacks primarily the refusal of the majority to obey the withdrawal of jurisdiction from the federal courts, passed by Congress in 2005. He writes, “An ancient and unbroken line of authority attests that statutes ousting jurisdiction unambiguously apply to cases pending at their effective date.”

His position is supported in prior Court cases. ““Without jurisdiction the court cannot proceed at all in any cause. Jurisdiction is power to declare the law, and when it ceases to exist, the only function remaining to the court is that of announcing the fact and dismissing the cause. And this is not less clear upon authority than upon principle.” Ex parte McCardle, 7 Wall. 506, 514 (1869) (emphasis added).

As is common in Scalia Dissents, he chastises the majority in strong language. He writes, “ Though the Court resists the Bruner rule, it cannot cite a single case in the history of Anglo-American law (before today) in which a jurisdiction-stripping provision was denied immediate effect in pending cases, absent an explicit statutory reservation. By contrast, the cases granting such immediate effect are legion, and they repeatedly rely on the plain language of the jurisdictional repeal as an ‘inflexible trump....’ ”

Justice Scalia notes that the majority used selective quotes from Senators and House Members to support its conclusion that Congress did not intend to exclude jurisdiction in this particular case. He writes, “But selectivity is not the greatest vice in the Court’s use of floor statements to resolve today’s case. These statements were made when Members of Congress were fully aware that our continuing jurisdiction over this very case was at issue. The question was divisive, and floor statements made on both sides were undoubtedly opportunistic and crafted solely for use in the briefs in this very litigation.” Justice Scalia offers examples.

He continues his attack, “With regard to the floor statements, at least the Court shows some semblance of seemly shame, tucking away its reference to them in a half-hearted footnote. Not so for its reliance on the DTA’s drafting history, which is displayed prominently....” And here, “As always—but especially in the context of strident, partisan legislative conflict of the sort that characterized enactment of this legislation—the language of the statute that was actually passed by both Houses of Congress and signed by the President is our only authoritative and only reliable guidepost.” [Emphasis in the original.]

Justice Scalia accuses the majority of turning the statute directly on its head. “The Court’s interpretation transforms a provision abolishing jurisdiction over all Guantanamo-related habeas petitions into a provision that retains jurisdiction over cases sufficiently numerous to keep the courts busy for years to come.” He also writes that the Court “made a mess” of the statute, and that its logic is “absurd.”

As he notes, the majority’s reference to “lurking questions” is foreclosed by the express language of Article II, Section 2, which gives Congress control over the entire appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.

Justice Alito’s Dissent is addressed primarily to the majority’s conclusion that military tribunals are not “regularly constituted” under the Geneva Conventions. As he notes, the answer to this question is to be determined under the domestic law of any nation conducting trials under the Law of War. It has nothing to do with comparisons between civil courts, criminal courts, courts-martial or military tribunals under the laws of the United States or any other nation.

There is only one defect in the Dissents in this case. Justices Scalia and Alito failed to mention the very first case ever decided by the Supreme Court, sitting as a whole court. That was The Schooner Peggy, 1805.

In that case, an American privateer captured The Peggy during a brief conflict between the US and France. He brought his prize into an American port, to claim ownership of it under his letter of marque. The trial court awarded the ship to him.

The French owners appealed to the Supreme Court. Before the appeal could be heard, France and the US entered into a protocol, ending their differences, and providing that any French ships not finally seized, should be returned to their French owners. So the Supreme Court was presented with a clear question.

If the law applied was that at the time of the capture, The Peggy rightly belonged to the privateer. But if the law applied was that at the time of the appeal, The Peggy had to be returned. The Court held that the correct law was at the time the appeal was held, and ordered The Peggy returned to its owners.

If the logic of The Schooner Peggy had been applied in this case (as it was in a civil rights attorneys fees case in 1986), the Court would have obeyed the withdrawal of jurisdiction passed by Congress, and dismissed this case.

And this is the greatest defect in the press reporting on this case. A majority of the Court has thumbed its nose at both the Constitution and Congress by refusing to obey the 2005 law withdrawing its jurisdiction. The Court is, in effect, saying that “we own the law,” and “neither Congress nor the Constitution should control the actions of this Court.”

And that point, which is avoided in the press coverage, is harmful far beyond the confines of the various cases involving Gitmo prisoners.

- 30 -

About the Author: John Armor practiced in the US Supreme Court over 30 years, filing briefs in 18 cases. John_Armor@aya.yale.edu

- 30 -


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Free Republic; Government; News/Current Events; US: North Carolina; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: blackrobedthugs; congressmanbillybob; etc; genevaconventions; gitmo; gitmw; hamdan; hamdancase; johnarmor; scotus; supremecourt
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To: Shermy
the case is thrown to Congress. I'm ok with that.

Having just seen "A Man for All Seasons" I have to ask,"Why are you okay with that?"

21 posted on 06/29/2006 4:28:46 PM PDT by Dutchgirl (Jeg er en dansker (I am a Dane.))
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To: Pukin Dog

It may be good for politics- but it is a disaster in terms of the decision itself...

I'm too furious with the decision to look ahead yet. I'll get a grip and see the political side...later.


22 posted on 06/29/2006 4:32:38 PM PDT by SE Mom (Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet)
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To: Pukin Dog

Howard Dean got his return to the 60's wish: a civil rights issue.


23 posted on 06/29/2006 4:33:00 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: sourcery

Article II of the Constitution concerns the Executive. Article I is the Legislature and Article III is the Courts.


24 posted on 06/29/2006 4:35:22 PM PDT by Lawgvr1955 (You can never have too much cowbell !!)
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To: Congressman Billybob

Brilliant. Thank you.


25 posted on 06/29/2006 4:35:28 PM PDT by khnyny (Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.- Winston Churchill)
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To: Shermy
Yeah. Back then, if I recall, Nixon shoved civil rights right up McGovern's ass.
26 posted on 06/29/2006 4:36:02 PM PDT by Pukin Dog (Dont be a Conservopussy! Defend Ann Coulter, you weenies!)
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To: Congressman Billybob

bump


27 posted on 06/29/2006 4:39:19 PM PDT by moehoward
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To: Congressman Billybob

I think one of the points is that they are attempting to prosecute Hamdan via military channels for crimes that occurred before hostilities began in US eyes. One could argue that Bin Laden twice declared war on the US during the late 90's.

What ever happened to shooting illegal combatants caught out of uniform on the spot?


28 posted on 06/29/2006 4:39:22 PM PDT by Wristpin ("The Yankees announce plan to buy every player in Baseball....")
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To: Congressman Billybob

bump for later


29 posted on 06/29/2006 4:41:54 PM PDT by don-o (Don't be a Freeploader. Do the Right thing. Be a monthly donor.)
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To: Congressman Billybob

Wow! Thanks. Looks like politics has completely infested our Supreme Court.


30 posted on 06/29/2006 4:43:05 PM PDT by SW6906 (6 things you can't have too much of: sex, money, firewood, horsepower, guns and ammunition.)
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To: Dutchgirl

Because it will be argued in Congress, if I'm reading it right. They could rubber stamp the Bush program or add some small tweaks but I know Kennedy, Pelosi, etc. will do everything to get media time to bash Bush and show their moral superiority by expressing their concerns for jailed terrorists.

As for the law itself it may be an atrocity of legal reaonsing, some here think so.


31 posted on 06/29/2006 4:44:10 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Congressman Billybob

bttt


32 posted on 06/29/2006 4:45:07 PM PDT by Christian4Bush (The Rat Party's goal is to END the conflict, not WIN the conflict...should be the other way around.)
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To: marron

Somewhere in Europe, Winter 2044:

"Sergeant Demoniac, take this message to Captain Scabbard at once, and take these reinforcements and ammo with you!"

"Sorry, Colonel, no can do."

"Why not [@#%%^&$] it?"

"Gotta be in court tomorrow morning to testify in the Habeas Corpus hearing for SS Oberkommando Scheisskopf - you remember, the Kraut we captured last week."

"Hey, now, Sergeant -- no calling the enemy 'Krauts' -- that's insensitive. Call them Germans."

"OK, Colonel Murfa..."


33 posted on 06/29/2006 4:45:13 PM PDT by GadareneDemoniac
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To: Congressman Billybob; All

[Reading the actual decisions (there were six of them) reveals a different and more dangerous result. To begin with, there was a unanimous Court decision, In Re Quirin in 1942, which upheld the military trials, convictions and in two cases executions, of eight German saboteurs who sneaked into the US from German submarines with plans and preparation to bomb various facilities, including one who was admittedly an American citizen.

The majority Opinion by Justice Stevens, joined by Justices Kennedy, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer, avoids that prior decision.]

That's nice./sarc


34 posted on 06/29/2006 4:45:30 PM PDT by khnyny (Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.- Winston Churchill)
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To: Pukin Dog

"Yeah. Back then, if I recall, Nixon shoved civil rights right up McGovern's ass."

That was '72. I'm thinking mid-60's anti-racist legislations, troubles in the South segregation. Now Dean can march for terrorist rights!


35 posted on 06/29/2006 4:46:43 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Shermy
"The way I read it, and I assume Pukin Dog does too, is the case is thrown to Congress.

I'm ok with that."

You are?

I'm not and for this reason. As Congress has proportionately more lawyers per capita than any other other body, why have we NOT heard a peep (from either side of the aisle) about this travesty and usurping of their legislative authority?

36 posted on 06/29/2006 4:47:18 PM PDT by seasoned traditionalist (ALL MUSLIMS ARE NOT TERRORISTS, BUT ALL TERRORISTS ARE MUSLIMS)
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To: Pukin Dog

If this congress had any balls, they would start impeaching judges at every level, the msm be damned. But then we all know that they lack any moral courage or guts. Every congressman should be out there denouncing the court for ignoring the jurisdiction stripping portion of the DTA. But then they don't hesitate to ignore the fifth amendment and host of others when allowing government to apply emminent domain, so why should anyone be surprised.


37 posted on 06/29/2006 4:48:55 PM PDT by appeal2
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To: Congressman Billybob

[And this is the greatest defect in the press reporting on this case. A majority of the Court has thumbed its nose at both the Constitution and Congress by refusing to obey the 2005 law withdrawing its jurisdiction. The Court is, in effect, saying that “we own the law,” and “neither Congress nor the Constitution should control the actions of this Court.”]

Yep. Unbelievable.

[Scalia's Dissent mentions the fact Congress stripped the courts of the very power they think they still have: Detainee Treatment Act of 2005: (1) IN GENERAL- Section 2241 of title 28, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: `(e) Except as provided in section 1005 of the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, no court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider-- `(1) an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; or `(2) any other action against the United States or its agents relating to any aspect of the detention by the Department of Defense of an alien at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who-- `(A) is currently in military custody; or `(B) has been determined by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in accordance with the procedures set forth in section 1005(e) of the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant.'.]


38 posted on 06/29/2006 4:51:35 PM PDT by khnyny (Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.- Winston Churchill)
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To: seasoned traditionalist

"I'm not and for this reason. As Congress has proportionately more lawyers per capita than any other other body, why have we NOT heard a peep (from either side of the aisle) about this travesty and usurping of their legislative authority?"

Well, give 'em a day or two to figure it out! :) It's complicated. I thought the supremes said Bush effectively usurped congress' authority. Maybe I'm reading it wrong.


39 posted on 06/29/2006 4:54:18 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Congressman Billybob

A good example of the Court rewriting the law to satisfy the personal ideological partisanship of the Justices.


40 posted on 06/29/2006 4:54:23 PM PDT by Brilliant
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