Posted on 11/20/2001 11:10:54 AM PST by dead
Abandoning the Constitution to Military Tribunals
During his terms as governor of Texas, George W. Bush made it clear that he was dangerously ignorant of the Constitutionnot only denying due process to the record number of people he executed but also refusing effective counsel to indigent inmates of Texas prisons.
But as president, Bush, terrorized by the terrorists, is abandoning more and more of the fundamental rights and liberties that heand his unquestioning subordinatesassured us they were fighting to preserve.
On Thursday, November 15, William SafireThe New York Times' constitutional conservativedistilled Bush's new raid on the Constitution:
"Misadvised by a frustrated and panic-stricken attorney general, a president of the United States has just assumed what amounts to dictatorial power to jail or execute aliens. . . . We are letting George W. Bush get away with the replacement of the American rule of law with military kangaroo courts. . . . In an Orwellian twist, Bush's order calls this Soviet-style abomination 'a full and fair trial.' "
These secret trials will be based, to a large extent, on secret evidence.
What Bush has done by executive orderbypassing Congress and the constitutional separation of powersis to establish special military tribunals to try noncitizens suspected of terrorism. Their authority will extend over permanent noncitizen American residents, lawfully living in the United States, as well as foreigners.
The trials will be held here or in other countrieslike Pakistan or "liberated" Afghanistanand on ships at sea. The trials will be in secret. There will be no juries. Panels of military officers will be the judgeswith the power to impose the death penalty if two-thirds of these uniformed judges agree. There will be no appeals to any of the sentences. (Even in regular court martials, judges must rule unanimously for executions.)
The defendants may not be able to choose their own counsellawyers who, after all, might get in the way of the swift justice commander in chief Bush has ordered.
The military tribunal will have other, more extensive ways to undermine the rule of law than exist in court martials or regular trials. The evidence to be allowed will be without the range of protections accorded defendants in what used to be the American system of justice.
For example, under "the exclusionary rule" in American courts, illegally obtained evidence cannot be used at a trial. Neither can hearsay evidence, which can include rumor and other unverified information about which a witness has no personal knowledge. Such evidence helps produce a death sentence.
Much of the prosecution's evidence will be withheld from the defendant and from whatever lawyer he or she can get because it will allegedly be based on classified intelligence sources. And the military officers in charge will, of course, decide the severe limits on the defense in other respects as well. These secret trials will be based, to a large extent, on secret evidence.
As for proving guilt, the standard will fall below "beyond a reasonable doubt." In a startled response, Democratic senator Patrick Leahy, who caved in to the administration and supported the anti-terrorism bill, with its pervasive assaults on the Constitution, has awakened to what this reckless president is capable of.
Leahy said in the November 15 New York Times that these drumhead tribunals with their arbitrary standards can "send a message to the world that it is acceptable to hold secret trials and summary executions without the possibility of judicial review, at least when the defendant is a foreign national."
Bush is sending a corollary message to the world that is particularly dangerous to American citizens arrested by foreign governments on charges of endangering their national securityjournalists reporting "state secrets," travelers talking to native dissenters, or overly curious visiting academics. If the United States can prosecute and even execute loosely identified "supporters" of "terrorism" secretly and swiftly, why can't other countries follow that lawless example in their own interests?
Until now, Attorney General John Ashcroft has taken most of the direct heat for the Bush administration's contempt of both the Bill of Rights and the separation of powers, as well as its ending of lawyer-client confidentiality for dragnet suspects in federal prisons, and its holding of suspects in prisons for days and weeks without releasing their names or the charges, if any, while their families and lawyers search for them.
But now, as the only president we've got, Bush has taken center stage as he further dismantles the Constitution through these military tribunals. In this executive order he has issued as commander in chief, only heour maximum leaderwill decide, in each case, who is to be brought before what in the Old West were called "hanging judges." Then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld will appoint members of the tribunals and set up the rules. Remember, there will be no appeals to United States courts or to international tribunals.
We have already seen on television and elsewhere in the media a parade of apparatchiks of the president. Included are his loyal vassals in the administration and various legal scholars of realpolitik. This is a war, they intone, and these (presumptive) terrorists do not deserve to be judged by our constitutional standards.
Moreover, Bush's good soldiers add, there can't be an open trial, as the Constitution demands, because our intelligence sources would be revealed. Under the once vaunted American system of justice, defense lawyers would have been entitled to see some of that evidentiary background. But in an open court, the president's defenders argue, witnesses against these dread defendants would be in danger of their lives from the terrorists' hidden colleagues among us.
In the November 15 New York Times, Professor Phillip Heymann of Harvard Law School, a former deputy attorney general, was asked about such rationales:
"Mr. Heymann said that some terrorists, notably those charged in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, had been successfully prosecuted in the civilian courts with a law [the Classified Information Procedures Act] that allows classified information to be used in a trial without being disclosed to the public.
"Similarly . . . Mr. Heymann said that countless Mafia and drug-cartel trials had been conducted where both witnesses and jurors were protected."
Then Heymann cut to the duplicitous core of George W. Bush's summoning of the military tribunals:
"The tribunal idea looks to me like a way of dealing with a fear that we lack the evidence to convict these people."
On Ted Koppel's Nightline (November 14), Harvard Law School professor Anne Marie Slaughter reminded the president and the rest of us that this war is being fought to protect and preserve American values.
"One of these values," she said, "is justice. And we have an entire system designed to achieve that. To forsake that now is to betray the cause we're fighting for."
Also, with regard to our pride in the American system of justice, Slaughter pointed out, "We are trying to gain the confidence and the support of people in Muslim countries around the world, as well as in our own coalition. From that point of view, this is disastrous. They're asking us for evidence [of worldwide terrorism]. We're now saying, 'Well, we can't give you evidence.' "
Brushing these counterarguments aside, defenders of the president insist there are historical precedents for these military tribunalsthe trial and hanging of British secret agent John Andre in 1780; the convictions during the Civil War by the Union army of opponents of Abraham Lincoln's policies; and the trials and executions of German saboteurs sneaking into this country during the Second World War.
In response, Georgetown University law professor David Cole emphasized on Nightline, "The only times that military tribunals have been permitted in the past have been in a declared war with respect to enemy alienspeople who are involved in fighting against us in a declared war on behalf of a nation with which we're at war."
Bush asked for an official declaration of war, but Congress declined. So, as Cole said, "We are not in a declared war." Furthermore, "this [Bush executive order] is not limited to people, even to the Al Qaeda people who are fighting against us. This is an extremely broad executive order . . . that's wholly unprecedented."
As the November 15 Washington Post reported: "[This order] would grant the Bush administration complete freedom to set the terms of the prosecution. Defendants could include suspects in attacks on Americans or U.S. interests, and anyone suspected of harboring them." And Ashcroft has "raised the possibility that the government may seek military trials against [the large numbers of] suspects now in custody"not one of whom has been connected to the September 11 attacks.
At one point in the debate over the USA PATRIOT Act (the anti-terrorism bill), the ACLU reminded us that "the president is not above the law." Now the ACLU, in view of the military tribunals Bush has set up, calls on Congress "to exercise its oversight powers before the Bill of Rights in America is distorted beyond recognition."
In view of Congress's yielding most of what John Ashcroft wanted in his and Bush's anti-terrorism billdespite the damage to the Bill of Rightsits members, concerned with being reelected in this time of terrorism, are not likely, with a few exceptions, to rise to the defense of American values and laws.
Justice Louis Brandeis, dissenting in the first wiretap case before the Supreme Court (Olmstead v. United States, 1928), foreshadowed the advent of George W. Bush:
"Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. . . . To declare that in the administration of the criminal law, the end justifies the means . . . would bring terrible retribution. Against this pernicious doctrine this Court should resolutely set its face."
In 1928, the Supreme Court agreed with the government's subversion of the Fourth Amendment's privacy protectionssetting the initial stage for the current vast expansion of electronic surveillance by the Bush administrationand not only over suspected terrorists. The Court has another chance now to teach the president that he is not above the law. Tell that to your representatives and senatorsnow!
Tell us what you think. editor@villagevoice.com E-mail this story to a friend.
There is no third way. Just take what either has in the way of tenable proposal true to the letter of our Declaration and Constitution and apply them.
(Or, just cut to the chase and follow Henthoff in this instance.)
If the terrorists are guilty, we should be able to prove it in a court of law, and then kill them.
Would you be happy if Clinton signed an EO giving himself these sorts of royal powers?
I don't think it was an EO ...
I agree he is a distinct improvement upon Reno - but that is hardly a viable standard for rational judgement - just about ANYONE would have been an improvement over Reno. I dislike, for example, Ashcroft's attempts to block Oregon's assisted suicide law - that is just as much a violation of the 10th Amendment as Roe v. Wade was in ramming abortion "rights" down the throats of the states. And I think a lot of the stuff tossed into the anti-terrorism legislation had nothing to do with fighting terrorism and everything to do with expanding federal powers in the drug war - and I am opposed to that.
Bush is a vast improvement on Clinton, but it is still crazy to blindly accept everything coming from his administration - and although I agree with the concept of military tribunals, I have become opposed to the use of an executive order creating such - do you want a potential President Hillary to have such a precedent to fall back upon? A stroke of the pen and FR is a terrorist organization...
And Gore is NOT ignorant of basic American principles?
Al Gore speaking on our Founding Fathers' views on diversity: "As we all know, E Pluribus Unum means, 'From the One, came many.'"
Al Gore in Montecello: "Who are these guys? [pointing to the busts on the walls]" Tour guide: "Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Benjamin Franlin, John Adams..."
The Constitution itself realizes that wartime is different - habeous corpus, for example, can be suspended during an invasion, but that power is granted to the legislature, not the executive...
I don't think it was an EO ...
Hentoff says it is by EO in his article:
What Bush has done by executive orderbypassing Congress and the constitutional separation of powersis to establish special military tribunals to try noncitizens suspected of terrorism. Their authority will extend over permanent noncitizen American residents, lawfully living in the United States, as well as foreigners.
After all, as even most freepers seem to believe, what's freedom when you can have the illusion of security? ;~)
Not totally, but in this case perhaps only partially. (fractionally, LOL)
I saw "Nat Hentoff" and I thought "wait, I thought he was one of the good guys but I must be mistaken because look at this harshly worded liberal rant."
Whatever respect my mind was remembering initially, I take it back because I think the tone of this article says as much as the words.
I am happy for you that you love him so much. Perhaps you should marry him.
Well, Bush IMO is in a difficult position. For example, the blind Egyptian mullah (I forget his name at the moment) continued to direct terrorist attacks from jail - so I can see the need to monitor ALL of his communications from prison, and agree with that particular action, to monitor attorney communications with those particular suspects or inmates. But military tribunals? We need to look past this particular war, and remember who is waiting in the wings - Hillary, Daschle, and any number of Dem fascist wannabees who would not hesitate to expand upon the concept of an E.O. to declare both who is a terrorist and how they should be tried - and, quite frankly, upon further reflection, the notion of President Hillary with these powers terrifies me far more than Al Queda. So the only way to check such powers is to revert them back to the legislature, and I am now in favor of Congress authorizing this, not Bush...
(Your "mea culpa" admissions need work.)
Eavesdropping
Ashcroft Got It Just Right
By Ann Coulter
The Week of November 19, 2001
What this country needs right now is a real civil liberties crackdown to give liberals something serious to worry about.
Im leaning toward an emergency suspension of the 1st Amendment. My reasoning is this: Most newspapers last week carried yet another breathless report on how liberals might have finally discovered some method of counting the Florida ballots that would have made Al Gore the winner.
On the basis of every recount either requested by Gore or ordered by any court, George Bush still won. But, evidently, if the country had allowed liberal Democrats in the media one full year to engage in unsupervised ballot counting, Gore could be our Commander in Chief right now! As if the country werent scared enough, newspapers are putting that on their front pages.
When not being sore losers to the point of self-parody, liberals are on red alert for any government meddling that might prevent another terrorist attack. Rifling through the personal effects of Americans who have done nothing to raise suspicion except try to board a commercial airplane is of no concern to civil libertarians. Only close scrutiny of imprisoned terrorists raises the hackles of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
Messengers of Jihad
In addition to the widely reported ACLU fantasy that the FBI was torturing terror suspects, liberals are upset with Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft for allowing the Bureau of Prisons to monitor terrorists communications from prison.
Concerned that certain terrorists could be plotting more attacks from their jail cells and using their attorneyswittingly or unwittinglyas messengers to jihad-minded colleagues on the outside, the Department of Justice has decided to listen in on certain inmates conversations. The attorney generals rule authorizing the eavesdropping makes no exception for conversations with attorneys.
Lawyers believe this spells the end of civilization.
The president of the American Bar Association, Robert E. Hirshon, railed against this unspeakable violation of the attorney-client privilege, saying: "No privilege is more indelibly ensconced in the American legal system than this privilege."
Lawyers think they should be above petty concerns such as the potential murder of thousands of Americans. They believe the attorney-client privilege should trump all rules of societyexcept the payment of lawyers.
Among the many, many exceptions to the attorney-client privilege is one that allows lawyers to breach it themselves if the client refuses to pay. But you never hear lawyers complaining about that exception to this sacrosanct, deeply ensconced privilege.
Another exception to the attorney-client privilege, analogous to the national security exception recognized by Ashcrofts rule, is the crime-fraud exception. For ongoing or future crimes, "the privilege takes flight," as the Supreme Court said in Clark v. United States.
In fact, Ashcrofts new regulation is extremely limited and bristling with protections for the precious attorney-client relationship. It permits the attorney general to authorize monitors only if he has received intelligence information creating a reasonable suspicion that a particular inmate is currently plotting acts of terrorism.
So far, the regulation has been applied to only 13 imprisoned terror suspectsamong them, sheik Omar Abdul Rahman, the blind Egyptian cleric convicted in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center.
To protect the attorney-client privilege, there is a firewall between the monitors and the prosecutors. Government officials listening in on the inmate communications are prohibited from communicating with criminal investigators. Indeed, the monitors are forbidden from disclosing the contents of the suspected terrorists communications for any reason other than preventing an act of terrorism. Even that requires a court order.
The governments only interest in these communications is to prevent future terrorist attacks.
These are not secret wiretaps. The suspected terrorists and their lawyers are clearly advised that their conversations are being monitored. Since the terror suspects are given advance notice of the government surveillance, they can have no expectation of privacy in those conversations and no court order is required.
There are already all sorts of limits to the constitutional rights of prisoners and pre-trial detainees, inasmuch as they are in prison. They cannot, for example, leave. The attorney generals new rule places another limit on the freedom of some inmates: Certain terror suspects can no longer expect privacy on the prison phone.
The new rule allowing terror suspects conversations to be monitored from prison serves a quasi-military function. Its purpose is solely to prevent another attack on American citizensnot to gather evidence for civilian trials, which would implicate due process concerns. There are procedural safeguards to separate the governments national security interest from the inmates interest in confidential attorney-client communications.
Naturally, therefore, liberals have responded with their typical overwrought hysteria.
American Civil Liberties Union official Laura W. Murphy said the regulation sets "a terrifying precedent." Sen. Patrick Leahy (Vt.), Democrat chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, called the monitoring of terrorists prison communications "deeply troubling."
In a snippy letter to the mediatechnically addressed to Atty. Gen. AshcroftLeahy rambled on and on about "the better angels of our nature" and instructed the attorney general that "[t]rial by fire can refine us, but it can also coarsen us." In addition to the maudlin clichés, Leahy cited a series of irrelevant cases, the Japanese internment and, generally, the Nixon era.
But most importantly, Leahy expressed his annoyance with the attorney general for being too busy preventing another terrorist attack to show up for a Judiciary Committee hearinga hearing that would likely be broadcast on C-SPAN.
Thus, in the very first paragraph of his letter, Leahy complained that Ashcroft has "declined several requests to appear before the committee to answer questions." But Leahy vowed that the committee would persevere with its little hearing even without the attorney general in attendance. Perhaps C-SPAN would still be interested.
In a touching bleat, Leahy told Ashcroft: "I have felt a growing concern that the trust and cooperation Congress provided is proving to be a one-way street." It would be interesting to know what valuable service the Senate thinks it has provided the Justice Department on this "one- way street." Thus far, the only evident contribution Congress has made to the war effort has been to blab classified information to the press.
Perhaps the attorney general should look into monitoring senators phones. C-SPAN would probably come to a hearing on that.
Yes..thank you..I've been a Hentoff fan for longer than I've read FR.
To the rest of the attack hounds here:Disagreeing with this issue does not consititute non-support of the President. My fears regarding these secret tribunals have to do with the next Bill Clinton that manages to slither into office. I wish everyone would think about whether they'd support this if Clinton were still in office. Somehow I think NOT....then think about how this will be used as a precedent during some future crisis. Yes...it makes me nervous.
It's amazing what some people are willing to sacrifice for a false sense of security.
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