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Supreme Court Deals Death Blow to Gitmo
Today's ruling by the Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush delivered a dramatic blow to the President's lawless detention policies and overturned an effort by the previous Congress to eliminate the centuries-old right of habeas corpus. The ruling means that prisoners at the US military base at Guantanámo Bay, who have been held for more than six years without charge, will finally have the opportunity to challenge the accusations against them in a court of law. More broadly, the ruling rejects the premise on which Guantánamo is based: that the President can create a lawless enclave simply by incarcerating people outside the mainland United States. Boumediene marks the culmination of the quest for due process that began in 2002, when the first habeas corpus petitions were filed by Guantánamo detainees in federal court. In 2004, the Supreme Court ruled in Rasul v. Bush that the detainees had a right to habeas corpus under a statute that dated to the nation's founding. The Administration, however, then sought to block any of the cases from going forward, arguing that the detainees had no rights to enforce beyond filing a piece of paper called "habeas corpus" and that any rights they did have were satisfied by the summary military proceedings it had hastily put in place after the Supreme Court's decision.
Congress, in turn, twice tried to eliminate habeas rights for detainees. The Supreme Court rejected the first attempt in 2006, ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that the legislation did not apply to pending cases. So Congress tried again with the Military Commissions Act of 2006 (MCA), which made explicit that the elimination of habeas rights applied to all Guantánamo cases, past, present and future. The issue before the Supreme Court in Boumediene was whether the MCA violated the constitutional guarantee of habeas corpus, known as the "Suspension Clause."
The first question the Court addressed in Boumediene was whether the Guantánamo detainees had a right to habeas corpus. The Administration had argued that because the prisoners were foreign nationals held outside the sovereign territory of the United States, they had no rights under the Constitution. As a result, the President and Congress were free to deny them any access to the courts at all.
The Supreme Court rejected this argument in no uncertain terms. As Justice Anthony M. Kennedy explained in his 5-4 opinion for the Court, formal constructs like "sovereignty" do not and cannot dictate the presence or absence of constitutional rights because they are "subject to manipulation by those whose power it is designed to restrain."
Boumediene thus sounded a death-knell to the idea of Guantánamo itself: that the President can imprison people indefinitely without court review simply by bringing them to a US enclave on an island in the Caribbean. Instead, Kennedy's opinion adopts a more flexible and pragmatic approach under which the Constitution's applicability to those beyond America's shores depends on a practical assessment of the circumstances. And under that approach, the application of fundamental constitutional rights at Guantánamo, where individuals have been detained for more than six years in territory under total US control, is a no-brainer.
The ruling that the Guantánamo detainees are protected by the Constitution, however, did not end the case. The government had also argued that the process Congress created in 2005 in place of habeas corpus satisfied all the rights Guantánamo detainees had. This process had two parts: first, the summary military hearing, known as a Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT); and second, limited review of the CSRT's decision by the court of appeals in Washington, DC, pursuant to the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005.
The Supreme Court made clear that Congress can create a constitutionally adequate substitute for habeas corpus without running afoul of the Suspension Clause if that substitute provides what habeas corpus provides. But the Court also ruled that Congress had unmistakably failed to provide an adequate substitute for habeas corpus for Guantánamo detainees.
The reason, the Court explained, was that the habeas itself requires an opportunity for a prisoner to see the allegations against him, to respond to those allegations with the assistance of counsel, and to a determination by an independent judge. The CSRT, by contrast, relied primarily on secret accusations denied prisoners the assistance of counsel and an opportunity to submit evidence showing their innocence, and lacked neutrality. Any court review limited to such a sham hearing, the Supreme Court said, was tantamount to no review at all.
In another decision issued today, the Court reaffirmed the right of American citizens to habeas corpus no matter where they are held. The Court ruled in Munaf v. Geren that two American citizens detained in Iraq have a right to habeas corpus. In so doing, the Court rejected the government's argument that the President could avoid the reach of habeas corpus by claiming that the United States was holding the prisoners under "international authority"--in that case, a UN Security Council Resolution. While the Court agreed with the government that the prisoners could not obtain review of their transfer to Iraqi custody, it made clear that American citizens have the right to habeas corpus as long as they are held by their government, no matter where they are detained or what label is attached to their detention.
Today's ruling in Boumediene does not require the release of any prisoner at Guantánamo. Instead, it merely mandates that the 275 prisoners who are still there must receive what they should have received long ago: an opportunity to challenge their imprisonment in court. In a country committed to justice and the rule of law nothing less is acceptable. While it has taken almost seven years to vindicate this most modest principle, late is better than never. Jonathan Hafetz directs litigation for the Liberty and National Security Project of the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law. He is the author of a forthcoming book on post-9/11 detentions, to be published by NYU Press.
© 2008 The Nation
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15 Comments so far
Show AllThe author describes the court as speaking in "no uncertain terms" as though 4 out of 5 on the conservative bloc (also coincidentally the Catholic bloc) did not have completely different ideas about this. I don't normally spam posts (in this case, a paragraph) from one article to another, but this I feel so strongly about as to do so:
Catholics of America, please take note that four of your five guys on the Court (Thomas, Scalia, Roberts, Alito) would have happily put Bush above the law. Only your man Kennedy did not buy the nonsense and was able to swing a decision for individuals over oppressive government. If you agree more with Kennedy than the others, then please ask all in your parish to write disapproval letters to the other four. We non-Catholics are now depending on you guys to moderate your bloc of justices over time. That's because they're on for life and no one but you can ever hope to influence them. (Thanks)
Go ahead, I can repeat too: DD YOUR DIMS VOTED OVERWHELMINGLY FOR EVERY ONE OF THOSE OPUS DEI ANIMALS. EVERY ONE. EVERY TIME. No demur. Not a wrinkle furrowed their botoxed brows. They think those guys are just fine. NOTHING CHANGES WITH DIMS. NOTHING. "…then please ask all in your parish to write disapproval letters to the other four." Yeah, Scalia can put them with the rest of the "letters". Piss weak Dims.
VOTE FOR THE PSYCHOTIC MCCAIN. BRING DOWN THE EMPIRE NOW! No more incrementalist FAILURES.
Hey Daniel, you've been posting consistent quality and PRAGMATIC observations! I saw postings on another article yesterday blasting the ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center. What those yaks forget is that they have many battles to fight against well funded institutions (govt and corporations). Just recently, ACLU won a huge decision in Fresno regarding treatment of the homeless, and SPCL is working to fight contractors and "hands off" companies that use them for their dirty work (pun intended). But yes, while the DEM voted Alioto and Roberts, they seem to be growing a spine, though Pelosi and Reid make me puke!!! Oh, well. Obama better close the deal and fix our foreign policy and end the iraqi occupation and fix the Supreme Court. What mess for the next President, it won't be easy no matter who is elected. Get out get active.
Joe Toxic June 14th, 2008 1:57 pm -- Hey Daniel, you've been posting consistent quality and PRAGMATIC observations!
Well, no one could possibly disagree about their consistent quality.
As for the pragmatism, I suppose that depends largely on what (if any) practical results one believes are to be obtained. As I said elsewhere, voting for Obama and his party might work for those who want nothing more than the false comfort of being able to revert to previous illusions and hypocrisy about their country, its governance and its place in the world. As a solution, pragmatic or otherwise, for any other purpose it appears quite dubious however.
Arvy, electing Obama - or anyone else, for that matter - is not a solution. It might be, however, an opportunity to get some progress towards a solution. In other words, if Obama is elected, it doesn't men the work is done; it just means that maybe the work can start.
Repukes consistently appoint Catholics to the Supreme Court in hopes of overturning Roe v Wade. At all other times they are useless to them; most fundamentalist Christians equate The Pope with Satan and Catholics with devil-worshippers. Without their "guaranteed" anti-abortion vote the Repukes wouldn't piss on them if they were on fire. Most Catholics in my neighborhood might as well be fundies, voting for Bush over the Catholic Kerry in 2004. My mother and her family, staunch Catholics who are against abortion, are lifelong Democrats who never voted for Bush due to his obvious incompetence and unfitness for office. So it's difficult to pigeonhole Catholics.
The appointment of those supreme court judges primarily because they are Catholic is yet another example of the religification of all branches of our government, to the detriment of Democracy. In my opinion Scalia and Alito, at least, are Mussolini corporate fascists anchoring what is possibly the most fascist legal body in the world.
redstatelefty June 14th, 2008 3:29 pm -- 'It might be, however, an opportunity to get some progress towards a solution.'
It might be many things. But I've seen nothing here or elsewhere that would cause me to regard the outcome you propose as being, in any way, a likely one. All indicators, both historic and current, and not excluding the typical post-election behavior of 'Joe Average American', seem to suggest the contrary.
Greetings Joe Toxic and thanks for kind words. I do think that Obama is going to help the Dems "grow a spine" over time-----if we can get him elected. You're right we should all get active.
Regarding the Catholics of the Court, I am not anti-Catholic nor do I believe they were put there BECAUSE they are Catholic. They indeed were put there to oppose Roe, but the hardcore four (Scalia, Thomas, Roberts and Alito) were put there mostly to favor corporations and government as you see them doing in nearly every case.
I don't believe most parishoners agree with them except for the Roe part, and I hope to keep asking parishoners to notice their rulings and attempt to moderate them.
The observation about the theological orientation of the 'nay' block on SCOTUS makes me wonder about the influence of Constantine's imperialism on the Catholic church structure. At times apparently reflecting roots in Plato, 'unum est totem'(the One is the All). If 'other' is perceived as different, it must be brought into a state of similarity (confession), and if that is not possible (or not desired), defendant is not of the 'One' and therefore 'not'. Other is then punished by denial of existential beneficence granted to those within the sanctioned state of unity.
In administration challenges both rhetorically and legally, the press was to 'put outside' any concept of unity (rule of law) by every means possible. As a result, defense arguements occur within a perpetually ratcheted environment. Charges are not only not proven, but with each defense challenge responded to by administration creation of perceptions of irresolvables in repeated 'hail mary passes' (security, terrorism, loss of records, denial and redaction of records, no HC, lawless detention center). As a consequence, the rule of law obtains the appearance of a semi-halucinatory ritual based in babel 'fortified' by executive equivocation.
You know what the really sad thing is? Knowing that we lie to our children so badly when we teach them in school that the Supreme Court is some honorable, "justice is blind", institution vital to the United States. When you hear the utterly ideological crap from Scalia, it really is just sad.
The Supremes won out, this time. Antonon could give a shit, the lard ass. Let's just ignore the Great Writ established by the Magna Carta, forget about Article.I.Section.9. Clause 2, The Geneva Convention, Part III, Article 99 of the Judicial while we're at it. Enemy Combatants my tush! PO-damn-W's.
First the Supremes involve themselves in the Florida debacle, against the Constitution Amentment.XII., in a Presidential election in case of a tie the STATES shall count their votes....
Screw them all, children imprisoned, this country is on it's last leg.
I hate to be a cynical SOB, but Turce seems right.
Our justice system is a joke.
The Supreme Court has ruled that terrorists have rights!
I suggest they have the right to be released amongst our "progressive" friends who support and stand for everything that Jihadiis hate in America!
The last sound our "progressive" comrades will hear is blood gurgling from their necks and the screams of "Allah Ahkbar!"
OLD GOAT: Brilliant erudition, although the bottom line is authoritarians follow a credo of authoritarianism and it ain't real good for democracy, worse still for progressives!