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Appropriate Justice for Terrorists:Using Military Tribunals Rather Than Criminal Courts
FindLaw.com ^ | Sep. 28, 2001 | John Dean

Posted on 11/01/2001 3:58:19 AM PST by Polybius

President Bush and senior administration officials have repeatedly stated that combating terrorism will call for new thinking. We are in a non-traditional war against an unconventional enemy — an enemy who takes abusive advantage of our Constitutional freedoms, including our criminal justice system.

On September 24, Newsweek reported that, to bring terrorists to justice, Department of Justice lawyers are rethinking traditional methods. "Perhaps the most startling idea under examination would be a new presidential order authorizing secret military tribunals to try accused terrorists," the magazine reports.

This may be the time for military tribunals.

Crona and Richardson's Work on Tribunals

Military tribunals were also recommended following the earlier terrorists attacks on the World Trade Center, by Spencer J. Crona and Neal A. Richardson, writing in the 1996 Oklahoma City University Law Review. Crona, a former newspaper editor and attorney in Denver, Colorado, and Richardson, a Deputy District Attorney in the same city, collaborated in presenting a case for such proceedings, which I have highlighted below.

While I have drawn on Crona's and Richardson's scholarly analysis, and considered arguments in this column, I have not been able in this space to do it justice, and it is very much worth reading in its entirety. Indeed, I found the article so helpful that I also passed it on to friend at the Department of Justice, requesting that he pass it on to those currently examining the potential of military tribunals.

A World War II Decision Approving the Use of Military Tribunals

President Lincoln made extensive use of military tribunals during the Civil War, and President Roosevelt used them during World War II.

For example, during the Civil War, Confederate army captain Robert C. Kennedy was captured, tried, and convicted by a military commission. Wearing a civilian disguise, he had sought to disrupt the Union war effort by setting fire to New York City.

Kennedy's case was one of several cited by the U.S. Supreme Court when it addressed this issue in Ex Parte Quirin, which was decided in 1942 in the midst of World War II. In Quirin, the Court confirmed the authority of Congress and the President to try Nazi terrorists operating in the United States by military commissions.

Quirin was one of eight Nazi saboteurs who had crossed the Atlantic in a German submarine: four Nazi operatives landed on Long Island, New York and another four at Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The FBI arrested both groups, and turned them over to the military, which promptly tried them.

The Nazis sought to halt the proceedings with habeas corpus petitions, claiming that since the state and federal criminal courts were available, the military tribunal had no jurisdiction. The Supreme Court rejected the claims, and let the military tribunal's convictions of the men for violating the laws of war, spying and conspiracy stand. The Supreme Court noted:

The … enemy combatant who without uniform comes secretly through the lines for the purpose of waging war by destruction of life or property, are familiar examples of belligerents who are generally deemed … to be offenders against the law of war subject to trial and punishment by military tribunals.

A Post-Civil War Decision Against Military Tribunals

In the course of deciding Quirin, the Supreme Court rejected the precedent of Ex Parte Milligan, on which the Nazi saboteurs had relied.

The high Court's landmark ruling in Ex Parte Milligan was issue in 1866, following the Civil War. Milligan had been convicted by a military commission of violating the laws of war by planning to form a secret military organization to seize an arsenal, release Confederate prisoners, arm them, and then join with others to invade, on behalf of the Confederacy, Indiana, Kentucky, and Illinois.

Sentenced to be hanged for his crimes, Milligan appealed. Five justices held that Congress did not have authority to create military commissions when state courts were open and available. They also found that Milligan had been denied his Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial when he was tried before the commission.

Four justices concurred with the majority ruling, but on different grounds. They rejected the majority's contentions that Congress did not have the power to create such military tribunals, and that such tribunals were bound to follow the Bill of Rights.

Chief Justice Rehnquist's Views

No less an authority than Chief Justice William Rehnquist has addressed the cases of Ex Parte Quirin and Ex Parte Milligan, and the question of military tribunals. The Chief Justice has been prescient before (He wrote a book about impeachment long before he found himself presiding at President Clinton's Senate trial). Now he has turned out to be prescient again: In 1998, he wrote and published All The Laws But One: Civil Liberties in Wartime.

In the book, Rehnquist examines Milligan at some length. Rehnquist notes that the government, which at the time — 1866 — had yet to create the office of Solicitor General, had little experience presenting cases to the Supreme Court. Mr. Milligan, on the other hand, was extremely well represented. In making this contrast, Rehnquist implies that had the government done a better job, it would not have lost the case.

The Chief Justice also reads the ruling in Milligan as limited. He notes that some 75 years later in Quirin "the Court concluded that Milligan … was a non-belligerent, not subject to the law of war."

Finally, if these comments left any doubt about Rehnquist's skepticism about Milligan, Rehnquist resolves it. He writes: "One may fully agree with the rather disparaging but nonetheless insightful argument of Jeremiah Black [attorney for Milligan] in the Milligan case — soldiers are no more occupationally trained to conduct trials than are sailors or sheep drovers — and yet believe that Congress should be able to provide for trial of defendants by a judge without a jury in a carefully limited class of cases dealing with national security in wartime."

Congressional Action Is Necessary

In short, if the most recent decision (Quirin) and the views of the Court's Chief Justice are to be our guide, there appears to be no Constitutional prohibition on the use of military tribunals to address terrorism — especially terrorism of the scope of the September 11 attacks, and terrorism described by the President as an act of war. However, creation of such tribunals would require an act of Congress — as Crona and Richardson recognize.

Congress should pass such an act — in part because terrorism is very different from other crime. For one thing, existing international laws prohibit such activities. As Crona and Richardson note, when terrorist acts of aggression target innocent civilians, they are not "legitimate acts of war under international law, but rather must be regarded as war crimes or crimes against humanity." The 1949 Geneva Conventions prohibit attacks on civilians. And the Geneva Protocol II expressly prohibits "acts of terrorism."

Nevertheless, we have so far treated terrorist as ordinary criminals — charging them with common law crimes, and give them all the protections of our criminal justice system. The 1993 World Trade Center attack, for example, led to indictments that were tried before a judge in the Southern District of New York.

Granted, Congress has not declared war in authorizing President Bush "to use all necessary and appropriate force against" those involved with "the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001." But it would trivialize what was done to treat it as ordinary crime.

Using military tribunals, rather than the criminal justice system, to bring such terrorists to justice merits serious consideration at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.

Our Criminal Justice System Is Not Appropriate For Terrorists

Crona and Richardson point out that for this type of crime, military tribunals, which are composed of a panel of trained military officers who serve as jury and judge, have many practical advantages over our criminal justice system, which was never designed to deal with war crimes or crimes against humanity. Such tribunals are more efficient, less costly, and more likely to provide swift and sure justice.

As examples, they cite the two criminal trials of the terrorists indicted in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. The first trial required five months of testimony, 207 witnesses, and 1,003 exhibits — not to mention many days of legal arguments and four days of jury deliberations. The second trial, involving the remaining defendants, required over eight months, 200 witnesses, and hundreds of exhibits.

Most troublingly, however, such criminal trials placed the lives of the American citizens who serve as jurors, and their families, in jeopardy of harm from other terrorists. While jurors are purportedly anonymous, in fact they could easily end up living in fear, which would not be unfounded. Witnesses in such cases are, if necessary, placed in the federal witness protection program.

None of these problems exist with military tribunals. Trials without juries are always more efficient. And military officers have accepted the risk of personal harm as a concomitant of their work.

Our criminal justice system, which requires a unanimous finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt by twelve jurors, Crona and Richardson note, "is designed to err on the side of letting the guilty go free rather than convicting the innocent. However, when this nation is faced with terrorist attacks that inflict mass murder or hundreds of millions of dollars of damage in a single instance, we can no longer afford procedures that err so heavily on the side of freeing the guilty. Protection of society and the lives of thousands of potential victims becomes paramount."

Military Tribunals Are Not Biased Or Unfair Proceedings

Based on historical evidence, Crona and Richardson argue that using such a military proceeding does not mean stacking the deck against terrorists. To the contrary, they note that the WW II war crimes trials with military tribunals resulted in many acquittals, and point out that for the 177 Nazi officials tried by American military judges, the tribunals issued only 12 death sentences.

In a military tribunal, rules of evidence are not applicable, nor necessary, because trained military jurists can, like other judges, weigh all the evidence. Exclusionary rules, which preclude using evidence improperly obtained (a means for our courts to police the police), have no place in a military proceeding. Thus, before a military tribunal, a known terrorist could not walk because of a legal technicality, such as the arresting officer's failure to give him a Miranda warning.

"The primary purpose of any adjudicative proceeding where a person is accused of a crime," Crona and Richardson write, "is to find the truth as to that person's factual guilt or innocence. The search for the truth in the terrorism arena will be enhanced by the military commission framework." But these authors, and other proponents of military tribunals, are not suggesting that the accused terrorists be denied due process. To the contrary.

Crona and Richardson write: "The pre-eminent question with due process always is, given the circumstances, what is due process?" They believe that military tribunals "provide the process due to those accused of committing terrorist war crimes." They would have the right to counsel, to confront witnesses, dispute evidence, and present evidence in their defense. These authors are merely saying that in times of war, such military proceedings are fair and just.

Those accused of terrorist activities are due no more. If it is necessary to draw a bright line to protect American citizens, the authors suggest (but do not recommend) limiting the jurisdiction of military tribunals to alien terrorists.

Would Terrorists Be Denied Civil Liberties?

The last chapter of Chief Justice Rehnquist's book on civil liberties in wartime is entitled "Inter Arma Silent Leges." According to Black's Law Dictionary, this means, "in times of war the laws are silent." Rehnquist observes that "there remains a sense that there is some truth to [this] maxim." He explains why.

Rehnquist says it is a simple "truism: in time of war the government's authority to restrict civil liberty is greater than in peacetime. … Quite apart from the added authority that the law itself may give the President in time of war, Presidents may act in ways that push their legal authority to its outer limits, if not beyond."

He adds that because judges are often loath to interfere with wartime activities, they often defer decisions until hostilities end. "If the decision is made after hostilities have ceased, it is more likely to favor civil liberty than if made while hostilities continue." To illustrate his point, he contrasts the pro-tribunal Quirin ruling, which was decided at the height of WW II, and the anti-tribunal Milligan holding, which was made after the Civil War had ended.

In short, the Chief Justice tells us that terrorists — like others — will not enjoy the same civil liberties during a war as in peace. Rehnquist concludes that while the laws are not silent in time of war, "they will speak with a somewhat different voice."

In this war, a new law should be passed — a law authorizing the use of military tribunals for suspected terrorists. If many terrorists are involved — as now appears the case — it is difficult to conceive of a more appropriate procedure to bring them to justice.


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To: Victoria Delsoul
1. What happens when the terrorists are apprehended? Do they go through our judicial system just like any common criminal? Who knows, he might even be acquitted or paroled in 15 or 20 years. Most of them are young guys. Fifteen, twenty or even thirty years in jail to a 25 years old is not that bad.

And what do we do if 10 years down the road, some liberal idiot, i.e., Clinton, decides to "pardon" these people as a show of solidarity, i.e., FALN, or the need to win an election?

81 posted on 11/16/2001 1:15:25 PM PST by Commonsense
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To: The Documentary Lady
I think U.S. citizens are excluded; for the near term, anyway. What's you do to get deemed a terrorist?
82 posted on 11/16/2001 1:15:25 PM PST by packrat01
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To: monkeywrench
agree to throw a hissy-fit, or agree that it's bad news? and why sadly?
83 posted on 11/16/2001 1:15:25 PM PST by packrat01
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To: XBob
The problem is exactly that no State has claimed responsibility for 9/11, and we do not choose to declare war on those we suspect of harboring its perpetrators. The Taliban was de facto in control of Afghanistan, but even before 9/11 hardly any foreign power recognized their government--and we certainly don't NOW.

De jure, then, we aren't at war with any State, and our president is simply pursuing prudent--but not secret, as he is authorized to do--action against some pirates. We have had a CIA for half a century, and I for one would be amazed to learn that it had never killed a foreign national abroad. So establishing a military tribunal is actually far more lawyerly than possible alternatives, overseas.

As to terrorists inside our borders, that is in principle a somewhat different matter. The best analog of the present situation is the Civil War. There was a case where you had people who had been native born citizens waging war on the U.S. When a Confederate soldier was captured, he was on "U.S." soil so far as the federal government was concerned. But such people were generally paroled after the hostilities were ended, if not before.

Undoubtedly some of the sleepers in the U.S. have availed themselves of the opportunity to become naturalized citizens, and that puts them in different legal standing from aliens. Yet they committed perjury in taking an insincere oath of loyalty to the U.S., and deserve the greater condemnation on that account. Of course we have of late seen influential people vigorously defending insincere oaths by a certain member of the bar not now accredited to appear before the SCOTUS . . .

On which account I would like to see the Constitution amended to make the governors of the nation's States the tribunal for impeachments.

84 posted on 11/16/2001 1:15:50 PM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: XBob
Yes they did. We should declare war in return, instead of shredding our own Constitution in response. The politicians are using this attack on us as a means to further their own careers. They seem not to care whether we win or lose. They should be forced to act in accordance with our Constitution and declare war so that the President can exercise full war powers.

Putting foreigners on our soil under the jurisdiction of a military tribunal is entirely proper and would be within the President's war powers once war is declared.

85 posted on 11/16/2001 1:15:51 PM PST by Twodees
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To: packrat01
BTTT- interesting idea. Seems a reasonable idea to me.
86 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:32 PM PST by mafree
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To: packrat01
Thanks for the ping, packrat01.
87 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:54 PM PST by Bigg Red
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To: packrat01
Conyers and his ilk don't like this one bit. If they don't like it, it must be good. It's a shame there are so MANY in congress that don't give a rats butt about this country.
88 posted on 11/16/2001 1:17:46 PM PST by monkeywrench
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To: Commonsense
And what do we do if 10 years down the road, some liberal idiot, i.e., Clinton, decides to "pardon" these people as a show of solidarity, i.e., FALN, or the need to win an election?

That's exactly right. That's why we need effective justice using military tribunals. The extermination of terrorists may not always be feasible and some terrorists will be apprehended rather than killed. These terrorists will go through our civil judicial system unless Congress declares war or passes a law permitting the use of Military tribunals against the terrorists who committed these atrocities.

"Congress should pass such an act - in part because terrorism is very different from other crime. For one thing, existing international laws prohibit such activities. As Crona and Richardson note, when terrorist acts of aggression target innocent civilians, they are not "legitimate acts of war under international law, but rather must be regarded as war crimes or crimes against humanity." The 1949 Geneva Conventions prohibit attacks on civilians. And the Geneva Protocol II expressly prohibits "acts of terrorism."

"Nevertheless, we have so far treated terrorist as ordinary criminals - charging them with common law crimes, and give them all the protections of our criminal justice system. The 1993 World Trade Center attack, for example, led to indictments that were tried before a judge in the Southern District of New York.

"Granted, Congress has not declared war in authorizing President Bush "to use all necessary and appropriate force against" those involved with "the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001." But it would trivialize what was done to treat it as ordinary crime."


89 posted on 11/16/2001 1:17:58 PM PST by Victoria Delsoul
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To: Twodees
what nation(s) do we declare war against, and for what reason(s).
90 posted on 11/16/2001 1:20:07 PM PST by XBob
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To: GVgirl
It's not really a question of "civilians". It's a question of "foreign enemy." The tribunal decides if the individual is quilty of participation in/ or conspiracy to commit acts of war.

But who decides whether the individual is tried before the tribunal?

And, to whom does the individual appeal this decision?

How does one know if the individual is a "foreign enemy"?

91 posted on 11/16/2001 1:20:09 PM PST by BabylonXXX
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To: BabylonXXX
But who decides whether the individual is tried before the tribunal? And, to whom does the individual appeal this decision? How does one know if the individual is a "foreign enemy"?

Those are good questions. I presume, without any other reference, that the ultimate decision to use a tribunal would rest with the President of the United States as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. Bush has already indicated his approval of the process by issuing the EO and directing the Sec. of Defense to select a convening authority. As tribunals would not be used for US citizens, anyone tried by this system would be a foreigner. Whether they are an enemy or not would be decided by the tribunal. A matter that would be fairly obvious in most cases involving the capture of a combatant/saboteur/conspirator during a time of war. It is my understanding that there is no appeals process, although I'm sure someone would launch a Supreme Court protest upon the first use of these tribunals.

92 posted on 11/16/2001 1:20:58 PM PST by GVnana
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To: XBob
What's wrong with declaring war against every single terrorist organization whose name is known? War doesn't have to be declared only against another nation. You shouldn't have to ask about the reason. We were attacked on our own soil. That's the reason. Bin-Laden declared war against the US two years ago in the name of his organization, Al-Queda. That's a perfectly legitimate enemy. It's also convenient that Al-Queda exists in every one of the ME nations which sponsor terrorism.

Look at the list of enemies in the joint resolution that Congress fobbed off on the President, "permitting" him to conduct a limited war under their supervision. That list of hostiles should be as legitimate in a declaration of war as it is in the joint resolution.

93 posted on 11/16/2001 1:21:18 PM PST by Twodees
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To: goodieD
Can't we just kill them?

No, first we have to give them a fair trial, and then kill them.
Love your approach, Goodie, got a great laugh from me.

So far on page one I haven't seen the most important reason why this is a necessary step.

How many average people are going to want to serve on a jury and then be marked for reprisals by other terrorists?

94 posted on 11/16/2001 1:22:42 PM PST by patriciaruth
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Comment #95 Removed by Moderator

To: XBob
".........why are military trials not just fine for the terrorists? They are fine for the military, why not for the terrorist jihad warriors?"

I could be wrong about this but here's my take on it. I think it has something to do with an oath the terrorists swear to when being tried in a court. Furthermore, the U.S. courts does not have jurisdiction over these terrorists. They would have to be tried in a Muslim court.

96 posted on 11/16/2001 4:13:22 PM PST by goldilucky
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To: ohioWfan
I don't think foreign terrorists may be tried in a U.S. court. Even if the court is military, the issue of jurisdiction stands to reason that the U.S would have no jurisdiction over the terrorists. They would have to be tried in a Muslim court.
97 posted on 11/16/2001 4:19:47 PM PST by goldilucky
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To: Guna
I wonder if Ashcroft's removal of jurisdiction from Mary Jo White and placing it in DC is in some way a prelude to establishing a military tribunal? I hope it is.


When did he do that?

98 posted on 11/16/2001 5:09:11 PM PST by Lady In Blue
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To: Dan Day
In the Declaration, "all men are created equal" implies that no man is born a king. In other words, it repudiates hereditary monarchies. The "liberty" it speaks of is the right of men not to live under governments of these kings, but rather to form governments of their own, as is stated in the Declaration:
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed

Aliens are considered to have the rights in the Declaration. But that means that they come from another place where another "government has been instituted among them". They do not have the rights delineated in the Constitution - the Constitution is the framework of the government of the CITIZENS of the United States.

If Aliens have the same rights as citizens under the Constitution, then second amendment rights apply. In which case, the Mexican Army is completely within its "constitutional" rights to march across the border under arms and take up residence in Tucson. Plus they get to vote. You buy that?

Your interpretation of the usage of the word "persons" was argued successfully in one famous case: Plyler v. Doe. But Plyler rests on the 14th, and a comment by Justice Douglas that the founders really did mean just persons, as in anyone who happens to be in the country under whatever auspices. Justice Rehnquist disagreed with him at the time and said so. To say I disagree is to put it mildly.

The Declaration is a human rights document but the Constitution is not. The Constitution is the framework of a "government among men", i.e., Citizens, and is amendable. The Declaration is not.

99 posted on 11/16/2001 5:30:27 PM PST by Regulator
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Comment #100 Removed by Moderator


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