Supreme Court to Bush: You're Not Above The Law
For the third time in four summers, the U.S. Supreme Court has slammed the Bush administration's detention policies at Guantánamo Bay -- locking up terrorist suspects indefinitely and beyond the law. And this time, some real progress might even come out of it. In a 5-4 decision drafted by Justice Anthony Kennedy, the court ruled in Boumediene v. Bush that Guantánamo detainees have a constitutional right to habeas corpus -- that is, to challenge the legal basis for their detention in a federal court.
Let's be clear, the decision doesn't do a number of things. It doesn't shut down Guantánamo. It doesn't order all detainees who have not been charged with an offense to be released. And besides saying that the detainees are entitled to a "prompt habeas hearing," it doesn't even say what factors the courts should consider when deciding whether the U.S. government can hold them.
But the decision does achieve things that the Bush administration has been fighting against tooth and nail for years.
First, the court upholds the fundamental right to habeas corpus, which has been part of the common-law tradition for centuries and was held dear by America's Founding Fathers. More than any other protection, habeas corpus means that the executive branch cannot arrest and detain you without a legitimate legal reason. The Bush administration wanted to whittle down that right. The Supreme Court said no.
Second, the court makes clear that Guantánamo can't be a law-free zone. The main reason the administration started sending those apprehended in the "global war on terror" to Guantánamo in 2002 was so that it could hold people without intrusive lawyers and courts getting in the way. The court said no; detainees can challenge their cases before the courts.
Third, the court said that laws enacted by Congress at the administration's urging in response to earlier Supreme Court rulings are no equivalent to the right to habeas. Under the Detainee Treatment Act (2005) and Military Commissions Act (2006), detainees who sought to challenge their being held as "enemy combatants" were entitled to bring their claims in special proceedings before the D.C. Court of Appeals. But the court said that this was no substitute for a regular habeas appearance: To require those who have been held for six years to complete this "before proceeding with habeas actions would be to require additional months, if not years, of delay."
Because the Boumediene decision is rooted in the Constitution and not federal statutes (as well as the political realities of the lame-duck administration), it will be much harder for the Bush administration to railroad through Congress new legislation to keep the courts out of the process.
Finally, the ruling may have important implications for the military commissions recently under way at Guantánamo. The administration seems hell-bent on pushing through the military commission trials of several 9/11 suspects, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, before the November presidential elections. The inability of the military commissions to provide anything resembling a fair trial has long been clear. The Boumediene ruling has no direct effect on the commissions, but they might have difficulty proceeding if the very basis for their jurisdiction -- that the defendant is an "unlawful enemy combatant" -- is still subject to litigation.
In the end, Boumediene says that the U.S. president cannot be a law unto himself. It says that anyone held in what is de facto U.S. territory -- no matter what crimes he may have committed or where he is from -- is entitled to challenge his detention. And that's something really worth celebrating.
From Italy, President Bush said Thursday that he disagreed with the ruling but "we will abide by the court's decision" -- as if he believes the administration has a choice in the matter. In the past, the administration has shown an incredible tenacity for seeking to undermine the rule of law. But then again, maybe President Bush will come to realize that his Guantánamo approach hasn't worked. That detaining hundreds of people who were later released without charge causes more harm than good. That trying people before ad hoc military commissions is a doomed process -- and that the federal courts can competently prosecute people for acts of terrorism, as they already do regularly. And that making the U.S. safe against acts of terrorism can be achieved with the help of the law, rather than by riding roughshod over it.
Don't hold your breath.
James Ross is Legal and Policy Director at Human Rights Watch.
© 2008 Salon.com
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23 Comments so far
Show AllSorry, I am not a history buff, nor a professor, so I won't pretend to know about stuff I don't. I could look it up but what is the point? Perhaps you can explain it for me.
I do know the US has imprisoned many innocent "terrorists" and tortured not a few. You can't just kill and torture people you suspect are terrorists. If we did we wouldn't any better than they are.
Unfortunately, for the more impulsive types, a system has been put into place in an attempt to not have innocent people killed based on unproven assumptions. We are supposed to be a nation of laws. Do you have a problem with that?
tailcap, please explain the capture, military tribunals and execution of German sabatuers during the "god of leftists" regime FDR?
1st Shirt June 16th, 2008 5:52 pm
Yes, in this country we don't allow lynch mobs, sorry. We also have this document that is called the Constitution and another called the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights guarantees that you are innocent until you are proven guilty. If a state does not guarantee the rights of citizens that is call an authoritarian form of government. 1st Shirt, Google authoritarian states and see if you find one to your liking. I think you would like living in one because they don't waste their time on civil rights which you consider a nuisance.
Before you move to an authoritarian country you might want to know its definition.
Wikipedia:
Authoritarianism describes a form of social control characterized by strict obedience to the authority of a state or organization, often maintaining and enforcing control through the use of oppressive measure. Authoritarian regimes are generally considered to be highly hierarchical.
In an authoritarian form of government, citizens are subject to state authority in many aspects of their lives, including many matters that other political philosophies would see as erosion of civil liberties and freedom.
There are various degrees of authoritarianism; even very democratic and liberal states will show authoritarianism to some extent, for example in areas of national security.[citation needed] Usually, an authoritarian government is undemocratic and has the power to govern without consent of those being governed.[citation needed]
1st Shirt I hope this helped.
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!"
It's even a bigger problem that our Supreme Court
Court thinks that it's above the law.
Had it not been for their intrusive decision
stopping the vote counting demanded by the Florida
State Supreme Court, we wouldn't have had Bush as
president in the first place!
Gail June 15th, 2008 12:11 pm
Thanks Gail. Please allow me to indulge in another. When I was in high school my mother decided to buy me a car. I wanted a muscle car. The choice came down to a Chevy Camaro or a Pontiac Firebird. Both looked very similar but they had some distinct differences. It mostly had to do with the front headlights and rear taillights. The dash was also a little different. I opted for the Firebird.
I thought the differences went beyond the looks until the first time I popped the hood. I was sorely disappointed to find out that because General Motors makes both Chevrolets and Pontiacs they often put Chevy engines in Pontiacs. My Pontiac had a Chevy engine. Turns out the differences were indeed cosmetic, superficial and designed for marketing purposes only. They looked different, but basically they were the same car.
Mr. Braffit. Are we now to equate "the world" with whatever nutty handle the psychotic monkey applies to himself as a title?
tailcap June 15th, 2008 11:13 am
"The powers that be have two pockets in their trousers. One for the Democrats and another for the Republicans. One is on the right and the other is on the "left", but both are in their pockets."
Nice analogy tailcap but you forgot to mention that pocket on the right is much deeper.
I just had to share this gem from Bush's mouth in an interview to "The Observer", UK Sunday 15th June. See if you can spot any dishonesty:-
QUOTE
He remained, he (GW Bush) said, convinced that Iraq, and the world, was a better place without Saddam Hussein. And he said that while 'Presidents don't get to do re-dos' on issues such as Saddam's lack of weapons of mass destruction, there was one lesson from the run-up to the Iraq war that he felt was hugely relevant to the standoff in Iran.
'We didn't realise, nor did anyone else,' Bush said, 'that Saddam Hussein felt like he needed to play like he had weapons of mass destruction. It may have been, however, that in his mind all this was just a bluff ... that the world wasn't serious.'
UNQUOTE
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jun/15/georgebush.usa
bornfreemen June 15th, 2008 10:46 am
Since 9/11 the hijacking of our country has come close to its completion. The improper investigation of the 9/11 event, the lies that put us in an Iraq war, the USA Patriot Act, Warrantless surveilence on....
What investigation? You mean the whitewash? All done with the aid of the "opposition party", Democrats. The powers that be have two pockets in their trousers. One for the Democrats and another for the Republicans. One is on the right and the other is on the "left", but both are in their pockets.
Its about time the US Supreme court used its authority to strike checks and balance in our hijacked republic.
The Repulican Neocons and its vast religiuos right wing lunitic fringe elemnets have hijacked our demaocracy.
Of the last 40 years , the white house hs been controlled by repulicans for 28 years. Cinton was a Nafta, Gat supporter, so he might as well have been a republican.
Enough is enough, traitors all of them for selling America out to capitlistic corporate greed. With 43000 registered lobyists in washington "We The People" didn't have a chance.
They have put the US enconomy on a course of destruction since and including the great Ronald Reagan. The man that single handly started deregulation and the destruction of Labor Unions in this country.The Father of the re-birth of capatilistic slave wage labor.We are now reaping the results of Republican Neocon politics and complicit Democratic policys. NAFTA , GAT , stagnent wages over the last 15 years, loss of high paying jobs an benifits, mortgage forclosures,high gas prices, runaway stock market crimes , Enron , Oil specultion. The list goes on and on.
Since 9/11 the hijacking of our country has come close to its completion. The improper investigation of the 9/11 event, the lies that put us in an Iraq war, the USA Patriot Act, Warrantless surveilence on Americans , Habeas Corpus suspention, 90 Billion dollars a year to private contractors to spy on Americans,
Ctizen Corp,Nieghborhood Watch Groups, IAFF ( International FireFighter Association ) organized stalking and suveilence of innocent Americans so they can build there spy networks.
Yes thats right, this administration have turned our trusted public serrvants into government and local spys.
Warrantless surveilence of our phones and emails are the tip of the iceburg. The reason you don't hear about the local level of Warrenltess Harrasment, using Cointel pro tactics , is beacuse your local who's who in each community is involved. You can't launch law suits in the county you live in for harrasment because all the lwayers and busniness men have been recruited by the Community Organized Watch Groups.
So my final words are this , NO IMMNUITY for organiszations and corporations that practice warrantless surveilence on Americans.
The Supreme Court must fully protect the constitution from these runaway illegal organiztions, restore checks and balance to the executive and legeslative branchs. Law suits must fly and people must go to jail to preserve our constitution.
Let this be a lesson to all future Prestdients,politicians,law enforement agencies and citizens that the constitution defines who and what we are as a Americans.
It is Not a negotible bunch of words.
I am not afraid of anything except a government that can ignore the foundation for which America was born.
THE CONSTITUTUION.
This ruling opens the door, at least a crack, to future prosecutions by holding that, contrary to the in-house shysters Yoo, Addington, Libby, Ashcroft and Gonzales, Guantanamo is legally US territory.
I am sure no one with an IQ above room temperature would confuse anything Lindsay Graham says with the truth, but his assertion that the Court has given the detainees rights "even the Nazis did not have" is histrionic, over-the-top nonsense. Unlike today, the US at that time respected the Geneva Conventions and Nazi captives were held under those rules. They were not criminal suspects, not put on trial--except for a few top officials at Nuremburg under an international ad hoc tribunal--and not systematically tortured. We never build an execution chamber for POWs. They actually had far more rights than any US criminal suspect.
The man with the coprophagous smirk and all his satanic helpers need to be sent to the fiery pits of the ICC. Law and justice are no longer American values.
I have the greatest respect for what DK did in the House the other night and for what he plans in the months to come. Also, after having seen Vincent Bugliosi on DN, I am convinced this man will not rest until Bush indicted, tried and hung. I also have no doubt he's in grave danger. He's yet to lose a case. Sure wish these two could somehow team and and pool their resources. Either way, after having watched DK and Bugliosi and the Veterans for Peace speaking to DK and Conyers, I have renewed faith that this despicable creature will receive justice during or after his "reign". When this occurs, we have folks to thank like the those mentioned above who are not afraid to speak out and spend time and resources to demand the Constitution be upheld and that justice prevail! Thank you all!
Not only the Constitution and Bill of Rights he fucked with the Geneva Convention Article 99 of the Judicial Section, concerning, THEY ARE NOT ENEMY COMBATANTS, POW's having the right to not say a thing that would jeopardize their defense, NOT TO BE TORTURED and to be represented by an Advocate or counsel of their choice.
Fat Ass Antonon will soon tell us, "Get Over It!" and cheney will say, "SO?" and the Sociopath in Chief will just mispronounce nuclear with that shit eating smirk.
What date can I get in the betting pool for when the Democrats in Congress pass a bill that says "Yes, Bush is above the law"?
That's been the Dem track record. On FISA and wiretapping and torture and war and etc and etc and etc. Just today I was reading where the Dems are putting together a 'compromise' bill on unconstitutional wiretapping that gives Bush everything he wants and the big telecom companies a path towards immunity for the crimes they committed.
Face it, when you vote Democrat, this is what you are voting for. The Dems consistently support Bush's polices, then only pretend to be an opposition to con people into voting for them. If you like Bush, then vote Dem.
Of coures Bush is above the Law. I know this to be so, because that is what Pelosi told me when she took impeachment off the table. When are the sheeple going to hold the Dims to the same standard by their culpability?
The Supreme Court rules - 3x - that Cheney/Bush have broken, and continue to break, the LAW.
So... they haven't been arrested why again?
There's a law prohibiting bank robberies. I rob a bank, because I feel that law is restricting my ability to buy food. The court finds me guilty of violating the bank robbery law. I go to jail - I do not tell the judge to f**k off and go rob another bank. But somehow Cheney/Bush are "allowed" to go out and keep robbing banks?
Apparently, they still are above the law, or they would right at this moment be awaiting arraignment.
I have just heard a most amazing statement by a US judge. She opined that the whole debate had been about the "minimum conditions" for habeas corpus. I am not a lawyer but I hope for my sake that the correct statement is: "Poopdeck, you either do or do not have the right of habeas corpus." The first is always your right unless there is a rebellion or invasion in or country in which case the president must, however, first suspend HC. When the rebellion is over or the invaders are driven out you will have HC rights again. You do not need HC in the case that the rebels or invaders win because they will release you from jail anyway.
__ EXCELLENT __ S C O T U S __ AWAKENING __
This is AS IF
__ the wooden stake of JUSTICE wanting
__ has found the neoCON's dismal heart.
Do not be surprised if the jackA$$ stream media never mentions it, as it would be difficult for them to see themselves in the MIRROR of truth.
It would be tantamount to admitting to shameful power grubbing FAILURE, and far be it for them to encourage more of the SAME, by letting the public know how vital a strike this actually is.
Be assured that this is CELEBRATORY and exuberant opportunity to be thankful of the long established moral compass of most Americans.
But nonetheless, the barbarians are "well" inside the gate. Someone mentioned recently a point that many politicians go to Washington DC to do "_g o o d_", and then just end up doing "_w e l l_".
Namaste
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
Good!!!
Mr. Spam: YOUR ANIMAL DIMS VOTED FOR EVERY ONE OF THESE CREATURES AND DID SO WITHOUT HESITATION. You are NOT here to inform or share opinions with ANYONE. You are here to SEll your cyanide Kool-Aid for the people who pay you. THAT'S ALL.
"...please ask all in your parish to write disapproval letters to the other four." Yeah, then we can all sit around and sing "We shall overcome" while we wait for your Dim Masters to send the trucks to take us away. But DO write letters.
If Bush had had an opportunity to put on just one more Supreme Court Justice, then he WOULD have been above the law. If McCain gets to do one or two or three, then same result----Republicans get to go above the law, perhaps permanently. It really is that narrow and that simple.
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)