Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Published on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 by Jurist
Guantánamo Justice After Seven Years
Since the Bush administration began transporting men and boys to Guantánamo Bay in January 2002, it has tried to prevent them from presenting their cases before a neutral federal judge. Indeed, the naval base was turned into a prison camp precisely to keep the detainees away from impartial courts. The government argued that federal courts had no jurisdiction over men detained on Cuban soil. Twice, the Supreme Court rejected that argument, finding that the United States exercises complete jurisdiction and control over the Guantánamo Bay base.
Finally, on November 20, in a stunning development, U.S. District Court Judge Richard J. Leon ordered the government to release five Guantánamo Bay detainees “forthwith.” Finding that the government failed to prove the men were “enemy combatants,” the judge, in a rare comment, urged senior government leaders not to appeal his ruling. “Seven years of waiting for a legal system to give them an answer . . . in my judgment is more than enough,” he said.
The five detainees the judge ordered released are Lakhdar Boumediene, Mustafa Ait Idir, Hadj Boudella, Saber Lahmar and Mohammed Nechla. Judge Leon did, however, find that a sixth detainee, Belkacem Bensayah, was properly classified an enemy combatant.
It was the Supreme Court’s June 12, 2008 decision in Boumediene v. Bush (see Supreme Court Checks and Balances in Boumediene, JURIST Forum, June 16, 2008) that allowed Judge Leon to review the enemy combatant classifications. The high court upheld the Guantánamo detainees’ constitutional right to habeas corpus and made clear they were “entitled to a prompt habeas corpus hearing.” Judge Leon adopted the definition of "enemy combatant" used by the Combatant Status Review Tribunals, which is “an individual who was part of or supporting Taliban or al Qaeda forces, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners. This includes any person who has committed a belligerent act or has directly supported hostilities in aid of enemy armed forces.”
The six detainees in this case are native Algerians who were residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, over a thousand miles from the battlefield in Afghanistan. All six held Bosnian citizenship or lawful permanent residence as well as native Algerian citizenship. Arrested by Bosnian authorities in October 2001 for alleged involvement in a plot to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo, they were ordered released from prison on January 17, 2002 and then turned over to U.S. personnel who transported them to Guantánamo on January 20, 2002. They have been there ever since.
President Bush had withdrawn the alleged bomb plot as a basis for their detention. He argued instead that the men planned to travel to Afghanistan in late 2001 and take up arms against the United States and allied forces. Judge Leon found the government had failed to prove these allegations by a preponderance of evidence in the cases of all but Bensayah.
The judge said the Justice Department and intelligence agencies had relied solely on a classified document from an unnamed source. He wrote that “while the information in the classified intelligence report, relating to the credibility and reliability of the source, was undoubtedly sufficient for the intelligence purposes for which it was prepared, it is not sufficient for the purposes for which a habeas court must now evaluate it.” He added, “To allow enemy combatancy to rest on so thin a reed would be inconsistent with this Court’s obligation under the Supreme Court’s decision in Hamdi to protect petitioners from the risk of erroneous detention.”
The government did, however, present additional evidence which persuaded Judge Leon that Bensayah was “an al-Qaida facilitator” who planned to take up arms against the United States and facilitate the travel of unnamed others to do the same. That, wrote the judge, “constitutes direct support of al-Qaida in furtherance of its objectives” and “this amounts to ‘support’ within the meaning of the ‘enemy combatant’ definition governing this case.”
Bosnian authorities have indicated they are willing to take the five detainees once they are released.
In October, another federal district judge in Washington, Ricardo M. Urbina, ordered that 17 Uighur detainees be released from Guantanamo. The judge didn’t hold an evidentiary hearing because the government conceded the men were not enemy combatants. But the 17 men from western China languish in custody because the government has appealed Judge Urbina’s ruling.
President-elect Barack Obama has pledged to close the Guantánamo prison when he takes office. The National Lawyers Guild has urged Obama to ensure that the prisoners are released, repatriated, resettled, or brought to trial (if there is probable cause to believe they have committed a crime) in strict accordance with international human rights and humanitarian law, and the principles of fundamental justice pertaining to criminal proceedings. This includes but is not limited to, the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, the Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The United States has ratified all of these treaties which makes their provisions binding U.S. law under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution.
The Guild opposes the creation of national security courts to try the detainees. Although Obama said in August, "It's time to better protect the American people and our values by bringing swift and sure justice to terrorists through our courts and our Uniform Code of Military Justice,” three Obama advisers told the Associated Press that the President-elect is expected to propose a new court system to deal with “sensitive national security cases.”
Concerns have been cited about disclosure of classified information in civilian courts and courts-martial. However, the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA) provides an adequate method of protecting classified information in existing U.S. courts. CIPA allows a judge to assess the importance of sensitive evidence before it is disclosed in open court and, if necessary, create a nonclassified substitute for use at trial. Former federal prosecutors Richard B. Zabel and James J. Benjamin, Jr. studied the 107 post-9/11 cases and prepared a 171-page white paper for Human Rights First called In Pursuit of Justice: Prosecuting Terrorism Cases in the Federal Courts. They wrote, “[w]e are not aware of a single terrorism case in which CIPA procedures have failed and a serious security breach has occurred.” National security courts, they write, “would give the government more power and make it easier for the government to secure convictions.”
President-elect Obama should send those prisoners he intends to try to U.S. civilian and military courts, which are well-suited to protect national security concerns. He should eschew the creation of a new system of courts with reduced due process, which will raise many of the same concerns as Bush’s dreaded military commissions.
Finally, on November 20, in a stunning development, U.S. District Court Judge Richard J. Leon ordered the government to release five Guantánamo Bay detainees “forthwith.” Finding that the government failed to prove the men were “enemy combatants,” the judge, in a rare comment, urged senior government leaders not to appeal his ruling. “Seven years of waiting for a legal system to give them an answer . . . in my judgment is more than enough,” he said.
The five detainees the judge ordered released are Lakhdar Boumediene, Mustafa Ait Idir, Hadj Boudella, Saber Lahmar and Mohammed Nechla. Judge Leon did, however, find that a sixth detainee, Belkacem Bensayah, was properly classified an enemy combatant.
It was the Supreme Court’s June 12, 2008 decision in Boumediene v. Bush (see Supreme Court Checks and Balances in Boumediene, JURIST Forum, June 16, 2008) that allowed Judge Leon to review the enemy combatant classifications. The high court upheld the Guantánamo detainees’ constitutional right to habeas corpus and made clear they were “entitled to a prompt habeas corpus hearing.” Judge Leon adopted the definition of "enemy combatant" used by the Combatant Status Review Tribunals, which is “an individual who was part of or supporting Taliban or al Qaeda forces, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners. This includes any person who has committed a belligerent act or has directly supported hostilities in aid of enemy armed forces.”
The six detainees in this case are native Algerians who were residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, over a thousand miles from the battlefield in Afghanistan. All six held Bosnian citizenship or lawful permanent residence as well as native Algerian citizenship. Arrested by Bosnian authorities in October 2001 for alleged involvement in a plot to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo, they were ordered released from prison on January 17, 2002 and then turned over to U.S. personnel who transported them to Guantánamo on January 20, 2002. They have been there ever since.
President Bush had withdrawn the alleged bomb plot as a basis for their detention. He argued instead that the men planned to travel to Afghanistan in late 2001 and take up arms against the United States and allied forces. Judge Leon found the government had failed to prove these allegations by a preponderance of evidence in the cases of all but Bensayah.
The judge said the Justice Department and intelligence agencies had relied solely on a classified document from an unnamed source. He wrote that “while the information in the classified intelligence report, relating to the credibility and reliability of the source, was undoubtedly sufficient for the intelligence purposes for which it was prepared, it is not sufficient for the purposes for which a habeas court must now evaluate it.” He added, “To allow enemy combatancy to rest on so thin a reed would be inconsistent with this Court’s obligation under the Supreme Court’s decision in Hamdi to protect petitioners from the risk of erroneous detention.”
The government did, however, present additional evidence which persuaded Judge Leon that Bensayah was “an al-Qaida facilitator” who planned to take up arms against the United States and facilitate the travel of unnamed others to do the same. That, wrote the judge, “constitutes direct support of al-Qaida in furtherance of its objectives” and “this amounts to ‘support’ within the meaning of the ‘enemy combatant’ definition governing this case.”
Bosnian authorities have indicated they are willing to take the five detainees once they are released.
In October, another federal district judge in Washington, Ricardo M. Urbina, ordered that 17 Uighur detainees be released from Guantanamo. The judge didn’t hold an evidentiary hearing because the government conceded the men were not enemy combatants. But the 17 men from western China languish in custody because the government has appealed Judge Urbina’s ruling.
President-elect Barack Obama has pledged to close the Guantánamo prison when he takes office. The National Lawyers Guild has urged Obama to ensure that the prisoners are released, repatriated, resettled, or brought to trial (if there is probable cause to believe they have committed a crime) in strict accordance with international human rights and humanitarian law, and the principles of fundamental justice pertaining to criminal proceedings. This includes but is not limited to, the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, the Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The United States has ratified all of these treaties which makes their provisions binding U.S. law under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution.
The Guild opposes the creation of national security courts to try the detainees. Although Obama said in August, "It's time to better protect the American people and our values by bringing swift and sure justice to terrorists through our courts and our Uniform Code of Military Justice,” three Obama advisers told the Associated Press that the President-elect is expected to propose a new court system to deal with “sensitive national security cases.”
Concerns have been cited about disclosure of classified information in civilian courts and courts-martial. However, the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA) provides an adequate method of protecting classified information in existing U.S. courts. CIPA allows a judge to assess the importance of sensitive evidence before it is disclosed in open court and, if necessary, create a nonclassified substitute for use at trial. Former federal prosecutors Richard B. Zabel and James J. Benjamin, Jr. studied the 107 post-9/11 cases and prepared a 171-page white paper for Human Rights First called In Pursuit of Justice: Prosecuting Terrorism Cases in the Federal Courts. They wrote, “[w]e are not aware of a single terrorism case in which CIPA procedures have failed and a serious security breach has occurred.” National security courts, they write, “would give the government more power and make it easier for the government to secure convictions.”
President-elect Obama should send those prisoners he intends to try to U.S. civilian and military courts, which are well-suited to protect national security concerns. He should eschew the creation of a new system of courts with reduced due process, which will raise many of the same concerns as Bush’s dreaded military commissions.
- Posted in
Comments are closed



7 Comments so far
Show AllPerhaps some patriotic bureaucrat will 'forget' to send the yearly 'rent' cheque to Cuba.
Guantanamo "Justice"?? It's quite a stretch to call this "justice". Justice remains elusive as long as the real terrorists in our government remain free.
I know, I know, YOU HATE OBAMA SOOO MUCH!
Stupid Obama freeing the prisoners of Guantanamo! Who does he think he is?
It's going to be okay, Mister Chips. I know you are terrified of Obama. He makes progressives look bad by accomplishing what they never could. But let me assure you, it's okay, your guns are safe. Obama will not establish a caliphate. And after Obama rolls back the abuses of the Bush years, and you find yourself wondering what to do once you no longer have anything to whine about, you can still waste your time studying 911 conspiracy theories. For example, did Bush work with the aliens to blow up building 7 or is Bush himself a galactic alien overlord? Is "Xenu" the "real terrorist"?
Your gibberish is still embarrassing to read. Hey, haven't you called yourself a progressive a number of times, as in "liberal, Democrat, progressive". Besides, I said nothing about Obama this time. There is something compelling about your posts, however--like being drawn to a mental trainwreck.
Regarding closure of GITMO, there exists a want of comment as to the disposition of the remaining network of secret prisons, and more to the point, the entire process of extraordinary rendition.
Offering up GITMO and little else evokes memories of the SEC's attempts to clean up Wall Street's junk bond mess in the 1980's by offering up Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken. A couple of sacrificial trials to quell an irate public. Yet, as is evidenced by recent events, little else was done to eliminate that which continued to fester within the system.
.
Where are the rights of individuals who are being tortured domestically 24/7 , so Law enforcement and Infragard can build nation wide spy networks.
The dark secret of America, the stazi police are here and taking our country from us.
Well , I wonder how much money the government , local authorities, Infragard, the local air force base, local community watch groups , the DHS, IAFF, FBI , have spent to keep me under surveillance 24/7 for 2 years.
Gang stalking torture, noise campaigns around my house , mobbing me using their cars plastered with IAFF stickers, Support Trooper stickers, Sheriff stickers, Jesus symbols, Army-Navy-Marine stickers and of course McCain/Palin stickers.
You think I am making this stuff up, I knew after three months of strange events and reading online about organized gang stalking that what I was experiencing was an attempt to destroy my life by state and local law enforcement through community watch gang stalking torture.
They wanted to drive me crazy, that's how gang stalking works. But the real goal is to build their network, bring on recruits and training.
I work in Tampa, near Mccdill Air force base. I believe that I was labeled a potential Terrorist suspect. Lets make something real clear, I am not a Terrorist , I am an American citizen that loves his country. They labeled me because of the type of work I do and where my work takes me.
My work has taken me through the best of Florida's vacation spots,DHS military contractors and Tampa Bay big corporate offices downtown.
Hillsborough, Manatee, Pinellas, Lee, Charllote , and Sarasota county's.
Why so much attention? First of all , I bought a high speed motor cycle so they had to find a way to keep up and ahead of me.
Second of all, when I was not working putting 250-300 miles a day traveling through these county's, I went on a personal campaign of driving 200 miles a day on my own time, forcing them to double up on their surveillance.
They loved it, they were bringing their buddies down to Florida from all over the USA, because I was such an interesting and mobile suspect. I drove 12000 miles in my spare time on that bike over 10 months all over the west coast of Florida.
They found all my hot buttons and had me hopping during the day on weekends, and intimidated me in the evenings with heavy tail gating and crazy drivers to keep me home and off the road so they could party in the bars and hang on our beautiful beaches.
I could easily prove everything I am saying with some very good legal support and of course a lot of money.
My case may be unique, but I say , just follow the money of where heavy investigation of Terrorist Suspects occur. It would not be surprising if a good numbers of suspects are in Florida, for the beaches, Colorado for the skiing, Vegas for gambling, and etc , etc, etc you get my point. You wont find any suspects in the middle of the most vacant states.Thats no fun.
Where is my day in court for the slander, and torture that was perpetrated on me by these agency's and my local community so they could make money and gain power.
Every time I stepped out the front door , I wondered if some over zealous cop wanna hero type was going to shoot me just because he thought I was a really bad guy. And of course I was worried about my three sons , Mom,DAD and family.
So , this is where I stand after two years, they are still out there, probably because the economy is so bad in Florida, the spy network can afford to hire and grow their ranks. They are not going to allow me to find legal help, they will not allow me to expose their spy ring of torture and they will pursue me to break me down , prove me delusional , and protect the local agency's and business that tortured me.
I will not be allowed to have justice.They will not allow their torture network to be exposed by me.
My hopes lie in the hands of insider whistle blowers. Without protection and reward money for the purpose of restoring checks and balances , whistle blowers will not step up.
I will die a slow and painful death quietly, with the exception of having written about my story here, at Common Dreams.
Thank you for reading all my posts, it will help prove what happened to me should the truth ever be told by insider whistle blowers.
BornFreeMen
Save the Constitution, Live Free or Die.