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Dead Constitution
See other Dead Constitution Articles

Title: New target of rights erosions: U.S. citizens
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/g ... 2010/05/13/citizens/index.html
Published: May 20, 2010
Author: Glenn Greenwald
Post Date: 2010-05-20 06:13:04 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 179
Comments: 11

A primary reason Bush and Cheney succeeded in their radical erosion of core liberties is because they focused their assault on non-citizens with foreign-sounding names, casting the appearance that none of what they were doing would ever affect the average American. There were several exceptions to that tactic -- the due-process-free imprisonment of Americans Yaser Hamdi and Jose Padilla, the abuse of the "material witness" statute to detain American Muslims, the eavesdropping on Americans' communications without warrants -- but the vast bulk of the abuses were aimed at non-citizens. That is now clearly changing.

The most recent liberty-abridging, Terrorism-justified controversies have focused on diluting the legal rights of American citizens (in part because the rights of non-citizens are largely gone already and there are none left to attack). A bipartisan group from Congress sponsors legislation to strip Americans of their citizenship based on Terrorism accusations. Barack Obama claims the right to assassinate Americans far from any battlefield and with no due process of any kind. The Obama administration begins covertly abandoning long-standing Miranda protections for American suspects by vastly expanding what had long been a very narrow "public safety" exception, and now Eric Holder explicitly advocates legislation to codify that erosion. John McCain and Joe Lieberman introduce legislation to bar all Terrorism suspects, including Americans arrested on U.S. soil, from being tried in civilian courts, and former Bush officials Bill Burck and Dana Perino -- while noting (correctly) that Holder's Miranda proposal constitutes a concession to the right-wing claim that Miranda is too restrictive -- today demand that U.S. citizens accused of Terrorism and arrested on U.S. soil be treated as enemy combatants and thus denied even the most basic legal protections (including the right to be charged and have access to a lawyer).

This shift in focus from non-citizens to citizens is as glaring as it is dangerous. As Digby put it last week:

The frighting reality is that not even Dick Cheney thought of stripping Americans of their citizenship so that you could torture and imprison them forever --- even right after 9/11 when the whole country was petrified and he could have gotten away with anything. You'll recall even John Walker Lindh, who was literally captured on the battlefield fighting with the Taliban, was tried in civilian court. They even read him his rights.

I think this says something fairly alarming about the current state of our politics.

There is, of course, no moral difference between subjecting citizens and non-citizens to abusive or tyrannical treatment. But as a practical matter, the dangers intensify when the denial of rights is aimed at a government's own population. The ultimate check on any government is its own citizenry; vesting political leaders with oppressive domestic authority uniquely empowers them to avoid accountability and deter dissent. It's one thing for a government to spy on other countries (as virtually every nation does); it's another thing entirely for them to direct its surveillance apparatus inward and spy on its own citizens. Alarming assaults on basic rights become all the more alarming when the focus shifts to the domestic arena.

It is not hyperbole to observe that all of the above-cited recent examples are designed to formally exempt a certain class of American citizens -- those accused of being Terrorists and arrested on U.S. soil -- from the most basic legal protections. They're all intended, in the name of Scary Terrorists, to rewrite the core rules of our justice system in order to increase the already-vast detention powers of the U.S. Government and further minimize the remaining safeguards against abuse. The most disgraceful episodes in American history have been about exempting classes of Americans from core rights, and that is exactly what these recent, Terrorism-justified proposals do as well. Anyone who believes that these sorts of abusive powers will be exercised only in narrow and magnanimous ways should just read a little bit of history, or just look at what has happened with the always-expanding police powers vested in the name of the never-ending War on Drugs, the precursor to the never-ending War on Terrorism in so many ways.

What's most amazing about all of this is that even 9 years after the 9/11 attacks and even after the radical reduction of basic rights during the Bush/Cheney years, the reaction is still exactly the same to every Terrorist attack, whether a success or failure, large- or small-scale. Apparently, 8 years of the Bush assault on basic liberties was insufficient; there are still many remaining rights in need of severe abridgment. Even now, every new attempted attack causes the Government to devise a new proposal for increasing its own powers still further and reducing rights even more, while the media cheer it on. It never goes in the other direction. Apparently, as "extremist" as the Bush administration was, there are still new rights to erode each time the word Terrorism is uttered. Each new incident, no matter how minor, prompts new, exotic proposals which the "Constitution-shredding" Bush/Cheney team neglected to pursue: an assassination program aimed at U.S. citizens, formal codification of Miranda dilutions, citizenship-stripping laws, a statute to deny all legal rights to Americans arrested on U.S. soil.

The U.S. already has one of the most pro-government criminal justice systems in the world. That (along with our indescribably insane drug laws) is why we have the world's largest prison population and the highest percentage of our citizenry incarcerated of any country in the Western world. It is hard to imagine a worse fate than being a defendant in the American justice system accused of Terrorism-related crimes. Conviction and a very long prison sentence are virtual certainties. Particularly in the wake of 9/11 and the Patriot Act era, the rules have been repeatedly rewritten to provide the Government with every conceivable advantage. The very idea that the Government is hamstrung in its ability to prosecute and imprison Terrorists is absurd on its face. Decades of pro-government laws in general, and post-9/11 changes in particular, have created a justice system that strangles the rights of those accused of Terrorism. Despite that, every new incident becomes a pretext for a fresh wave of fear-mongering and still new ways to erode core Constitutional protections even further.

It really is the case that every new Terrorist incident reflexively produces a single-minded focus on one question: which rights should we take away now/which new powers should we give the Government? We never reach the point where we decide that we have already retracted enough rights. Further restrictions on rights seems to be the only reaction of which our political and media class is capable in the face of a new attack. The premise seems to be that if we keep limiting rights further and further, we'll eventually reach the magical point of Absolute Safety where there will be no more Terrorism. For so many reasons, that is an obvious myth, one that ensures that we'll reduce rights infinitely and with no discernible benefit. We're not the target of Terrorist attacks because we have too many rights; we're the target because of our own actions, ones that we never reconsider in light of new attacks because we're too busy figuring out which rights to erode next.

As Robert Wright explained (again) in an excellent New York Times Op-Ed this week, as long as we continue to invade, bomb and occupy Muslim countries, there are going to be people (including within our country) who want to return the violence to us. That will happen no matter how repeatedly we re-write our rules of justice and acquiesce to more core liberties being taken away. But not only do we show no signs of slowing down in the behavior that causes us to be Terrorist targets, each new attack causes us to intensify that behavior through the use of the most circular logic imaginable. President Obama said this week that we must continue to fight in Afghanistan because of the recent Terrorist attacks aimed at the U.S.; of course, a primary reason there are Terrorist attacks aimed at the U.S. is because we continue to kill Muslim civilians around the world, including in Afghanistan. It's a never-ending, self-perpetuating cycle: we attack people in the Muslim world, causing Terrorist attacks aimed at the U.S., and then cite those episodes as a reason to further attack people in the Muslim world, etc.

That endless cycle would be bad enough standing alone. But it's accompanied by a relentless and still ongoing transformation of our political system. We never ask what we're doing to cause Terrorism and how we can change our actions to weaken it. We instead ask only one question each time the word Terrorism is uttered: which new rights can we get rid of now? Even after 8 years of Bush/Cheney, Americans are still finding new and creative ways to answer that question, this time by aiming it at themselves.

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#1. To: Ada, Shoonra, all (#0)

Have no fear. I'm sure Shoonra will be along anytime now to explain to us how this is good for the country.

"The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media." ~ William Colby, Director, CIA 1973–1976

Nothing in the State, everything outside the State, everything against the State - Jan Lester, Escape From Leviathan

"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it." - Frederic Bastiat

Good order results spontaneously when things are let alone. - Zhuangzi

F.A. Hayek Fan  posted on  2010-05-20   7:58:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Ada (#0)

What a wonderfully even handed piece from Salon. I'd come to expect them to be little more than mouthpieces for the statists. That this appeared in their publication gives me a sense of hope. They're one of the darlings of the left, so if they're starting to turn, chances are that they're the harbinger of things to come.

MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. Pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

SonOfLiberty  posted on  2010-05-20   8:06:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: SonOfLiberty (#2)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

"You've got to put right and wrong above legal and illegal. Because when tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty; and it is not rebellion at all, it is submission to the higher law that our government is in rebellion to. We're not the rebels, they're the rebels."

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-05-20   8:11:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Eric Stratton (#3)

This kind of obscurity is good though. There is, still, some semblance left in many people of traditional American values, even if they consider themselves left or right most of the time. Sometimes it just takes hard times or scary circumstances to make some people stand up and say "wait a minute, this is wrong no matter who is doing it". The author of the piece seems to be one such person. It's shocking in a way because I rarely ever see this from any writer in the MSM, especially from a source so left biased as Salon. There were some on the right, back when Dubya was at the helm, who soundly criticized him and his actions, both pre and post 9/11. They were odd men out as well, but it's always good to see independent analysis and thought.

MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. Pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

SonOfLiberty  posted on  2010-05-20   8:19:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: SonOfLiberty (#4)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

"You've got to put right and wrong above legal and illegal. Because when tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty; and it is not rebellion at all, it is submission to the higher law that our government is in rebellion to. We're not the rebels, they're the rebels."

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-05-20   8:32:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Eric Stratton (#5)

In good times most people are content to work, raise a family, be decent neighbors and enjoy life. And I honestly cannot blame them for that impulse, it's what I'd like to be able to do as well. There's always a vanguard of folks who in good times are seen as eccentric (or even paranoid) but whose presence is required as well, to act as the bell ringer for when bad times happen. The normal people generally take their cues from us when things start going badly. Eventually after whatever happens, life returns to some kind of "normal" and the cycle starts all over again. I suspect that this is a fairly good way to help the species survive. If everybody were constantly on edge over everything certainly we'd have a very vigilant militant type distrust and action, but it would be exhausting for an entire society to do, and would probably degenerate into open violence far more often than it does now. People just aren't wired for that kind of constant focus, never have been. Even Jefferson was shocked at how hard vigilance went away shortly after 1776.

It's the cards we were dealt. I guess in a way it's kind of an honor to be one of the few who can manage to keep his eyes open and aware, and not go insane in the process. Or maybe I have and don't know it? :)

MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. Pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

SonOfLiberty  posted on  2010-05-20   8:42:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: SonOfLiberty (#6)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

"You've got to put right and wrong above legal and illegal. Because when tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty; and it is not rebellion at all, it is submission to the higher law that our government is in rebellion to. We're not the rebels, they're the rebels."

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-05-20   8:44:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Ada (#0)

We never ask what we're doing to cause Terrorism and how we can change our actions to weaken it.

Ron Paul asked this question during the last election cycle and was crucified for it. Many of us asked it on others forums and were either banned or marginalized as America-hating kooks.

The two party fraud has an agenda and will not allow this question to be seriously analyzed. Sure, those of us on political forums such as this, and "extremists" such as Greenwald or Paul may ask these questions, but they are quickly marginalized. You will never see this discussion take place in the mainstream media in any serious manner. If it is discussed at all it will be in a sneering, sarcastic manner. The talking heads in the media are working together with the two party fraud in pushing the message that anyone who does toe the line somehow "blames America."

"The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media." ~ William Colby, Director, CIA 1973–1976

Nothing in the State, everything outside the State, everything against the State - Jan Lester, Escape From Leviathan

"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it." - Frederic Bastiat

Good order results spontaneously when things are let alone. - Zhuangzi

F.A. Hayek Fan  posted on  2010-05-20   9:23:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: SonOfLiberty (#2)

What a wonderfully even handed piece from Salon. I'd come to expect them to be little more than mouthpieces for the statists. That this appeared in their publication gives me a sense of hope. They're one of the darlings of the left, so if they're starting to turn, chances are that they're the harbinger of things to come.

I wouldn't hold out too much hope for Salon, Greenwald seems to be their token sane person.

I was holding out similar hope until I clicked on the Rand Paul hit piece. I'll look it up if you insist.

“have your last check be made to the undertaker, and have it bounce. ” - Lod

Dakmar  posted on  2010-05-20   19:28:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Ada, SonOfLiberty, All (#0)

One of Israel's vile torture tactics used to punish Palestinians collectively was to invade their homes with X-rated broadcasts. Something like that is, knowingly/unknowingly, being propagated "under the radar" by "officialdom's" pushers of the handwringing perpetual-blowback meme. A form of war-porn is what it's been called by a reporter who tried to warn of that vice-grip pincerlike manuever against Americans during the "coincidentally-timed" media strike by WikiLeaks at the Big Red One as Passover was ending. It should have been obvious with the Abu Ghraib scandal and again when the nude body scanners were marketed like more "blowback insurance" after the "X-mas" psyop -- like they're just "safety" devices, cancer and pregnancy risks no matter for the sellers and buyers of that malarkey. The cards being dealt to us usually look horridly marked by a perverse bunch of "jokers" who act like they're playing some sort of neverending sado-masochistic game of strip-poker with our rights each time their next "make-believe" extravaganza production is trotted out to petrify Americans into throwing away our Constitution. The Rights Abortionists want us to believe that Muslims/Arabs are more peculiarly prone to seek vengeance than any other people we've ever warred against -- nevermind that Israel hasn't been "driven into the sea" by them for all its horrors against its neighbors. Nope, they even settle families in the territory of those they hype as terrifying and vengeful extremists. The blowback pushers are working to condition us to expect the serpentine shows of the Rights Abortionists to go on generationally until we haven't so much as a fig-leaf of rights to shield us anymore from their constricter-fangs. Let's cut to the chase here. This is not a Western where the offspring of some gunslinger keep showing up periodically to take out the star of the flick who took him out. The Rights Abortionists think they are our "government" instead of covert and overt enemy combatants and that it is an "immortal entity" of power for them to saddle us with their debts and demands for more "entitlements", burden us with unjust laws as if they're deities, and ration out our economy with just enough "manna" for us "mere mortals" to get by day to day if we're "lucky". No matter how much aggrieved foriegners would like to crush that monstrosity by blowback, they can't and undoubtedly know that. Constitutionalists need to overturn the rigged game table and disown the monstrous contraption along with all its adherants as imposter-intruders and replace those hellions with our own rightful system of government.

-------

"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-05-21   5:24:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Ada (#0) (Edited)

On the Miranda issue, recall Coleen Rowley who is still being paraded around as an FBI whistleblower-heroine of sorts, lo these many moons since 9/11. Here is an article by her (printed out below the first linked excerpt from a site on another issue) that should clearly demonstrate her blowback-pusher role to convince us to whittle that expectation down "for the children" and "the geater good" and the sake of convenience and as a lesser evil than the dark side methods of Bush. Notice, too, the name "Liberatore" (Liberator), which is what the allies of the Senatorial-assassins of Ceasar were called who went on to inflict a Civil War that only resulted in another emperor. Note also the name Quarles (circa 1984 -- that's right, 1984, and she even uses the word Orwellian), which has weirdly enough resurfaced around Obama and may or may not have something to do with the recently reported "Iowa 9" storyline:

McCain, Clinton and Obama’s records were breached. So the theory is that the late Lt. Quarles Harris knew something and he was supposedly working with the investigator, but which investigators we don’t know; perhaps just the local cops. And then he ended up being murdered. The only person who had a key to open that door was snuffed out. So that was discussed, and this is material that we had already heard.

_______________

Quarles Public Safety Exception to Miranda: The Ethical, Legal and Effective Answer to "Ticking Time Bombs"

By Coleen Rowley

For OpEdNews: Coleen Rowley - Writer

One spring morning in the mid 1990s, a man whose last name was Liberatore rang a doorbell, pretending to be a delivery person. Threatening a weapon, he gained entrance to the home somewhere in the Quad Cities, Illinois, tying up a teen- aged babysitter along with the young boy the babysitter was watching. Then he left, kidnapping the family's 11 month old baby. Eventually the young boy was able to free himself and call for help. The hysterical parents rushed home and quickly notified the police and FBI.

Later that day, the kidnapper called the parents and made a large ransom demand, threatening the baby's life if the authorities were notified or the money was not paid. After the ransom drop was completed according to the kidnapper's elaborate scheme, FBI agents apprehended the perpetrator. By that time, night was coming, the temperature was dropping and the baby had been missing the entire day. When asked where the baby was, the first words out of the kidnapper's mouth were vulgar but amounted to a "clear legal invocation" of his right to attorney under the Miranda protocol. The FBI agent on the scene, however, reasonably feared that following the Miranda invocation in that circumstance, not asking the kidnapper any further questions, would mean the baby would likely die. So the agent used his persuasive skills without any threats or physical force to convince the kidnapper to voluntarily tell the FBI where he had hidden the baby. After a short time of talking with the agent, Liberatore described having put the baby in a duffel bag and then hiding the bag and baby in the middle of a forest that morning shortly after he had taken the baby. Police and FBI rushed to search the forest that night and were able to find the baby still alive and rescue it, although it had managed to crawl out of the duffel bag.

The story above is based on a true case and would have made for one of the rare happy endings in law enforcement had it not been for an Illinois state judge who, months later, was unable to put himself into that sort of tense life and death situation facing law enforcement. The judge failed to recognize how the "loaded gun in the grocery store" emergency, that led the U.S. Supreme Court to carve out its Quarles "public safety exception" in 1984 to the Miranda requirements, should govern (even more so) the situation of this kidnapped baby's life hanging in the balance. As I documented a couple weeks ago here, similar befuddlement as exhibited by the Liberatore judge was to repeat itself during (and for years after) the attacks of 9-11. I unsuccessfully asked on the afternoon of 9/11/01 and renewed my pleas the next morning. Although there was speculation for days as to whether more hijacked planes were heading our way, Department of Justice officials turned down my request to use the Quarles "public safety exception" to conduct an interview of an Al Qaeda suspect already in custody in Minnesota. The failure to appreciate that there was already a legal, ethical and effective mechanism by which to interview someone in these exceptional emergencies, was very costly. It meant giving up the chance of learning about shoe-bomber Richard Reid who came perilously close to bringing down an airliner three months later.

I couldn't believe no one viewed the 9-11 attacks as a more compelling emergency than the circumstances of the loaded gun left in the grocery store that the Quarles decision was based on. Consequently the first legal memo in the FBI's investigation of 9-11 is the one I wrote on this issue. I repeated my complaint in footnote 8 of my so-called "Bombshell Memo" leaked to the media in May 2002. And the pertinent excerpt from my statement on June 6, 2002, before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary "Oversight Hearing on Counterterrorism" read as follows:

The second legal issue, involving the "Quarles public safety exception," is something that I attempted to call in to some of your staffers on the eve of the Patriot Act becoming law. I also alluded to the issue in one of the footnotes to my letter. In a nutshell, here's the issue. There was a Supreme Court decision almost two decades ago, in 1984, New York v Quarles 467 U.S. 649. wherein the Court decided that an exception to the Miranda rule should exist when the questioning was designed to protect the public safety. In that ease, the Court found that a police officer who was concerned that a criminal subject may have left a loaded gun in a grocery store, was permitted to question the subject without first providing Miranda warnings nor obtaining a Miranda waiver. Although this 'public safety exception" is taught to new FBI agents at the FBI Academy, it seems to have been largely ignored and/or forgotten by prosecutors and courts. Some courts limit the Quarles decision strictly to its facts -- that is, you have to have a possibility of a loaded gun in a grocery store in order to fall under the Quarles exception when any number of other situations could pose equally dangerous consequences. There is actually a decision by a state appellate court in Illinois that refused to apply the Quarles, exception to a situation wherein a kidnapper had left an 11 month old baby in a duffel bag in the middle of a forest. The baby would probably have died if the FBI agents had not deliberately disregarded the dictates of Miranda in favor of interrogating the kidnapper, but the court was apparently not convinced and refused to apply the Quarles exception to the case. As I said in the earlier footnote, with the focus now on preventing acts of terrorism, the law in this area needs to be clarified. It may be possible to enact legislation amending 18 U.S.C. 3501 on the admissibility of confessions by at least providing a defense from civil liability for federal agents who must, under these types of situations, violate the Miranda rule in good faith, in order to protect public safety.

Instead of exploring the narrow legal emergency exception that already existed under the Constitution, however, which would have been conducted under the transparent auspices of criminal court mechanisms, including determining whether any further clarification and/or creation of a statutory defense from civil liability was in order to make the Quarles exception usable, the Bush- Cheney Administration simply went the route of trying to remove their actions from all judicial (and ethical) parameters and oversight.

Fantastical "ticking time bomb" plots from Jack Bauer TV inspired the Bush Gang to jump over the legal and ethical methods and go immediately to the "dark side", entailing serious legal departures from not only the constitutional rights to due process, against self-incrimination, the right to attorney, the right against unreasonable detentions and searches, etc, but in violation of the international and national legal protections against the use of torture and cruel and inhumane punishments. Even more telling is the fact that Bush apologists and utilitarians still extensively rely on the "ticking time bomb hypothetical" to falsely argue that public security and efficacy are compromised by adherence to ethics and law. New terrorist attacks and attempts elicit continuing outcries for more dark side "war powers" to conduct targeted assassinations, send suspects to black sites, places like Guantanamo and prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, where no law or judicial mechanism can seemingly reach them.

Those on the civil libertarian side, on the other hand, who reflexively criticize the public safety exception to Miranda should note that in the true case above, the judge suppressed Liberatore's statements NOT because he found them to be involuntary and therefore unreliable for courts to accept as evidence due to the well known probability that anyone will make a false confession if under enough pressure (for instance if they are waterboarded). There is long-standing, clear 5th Amendment jurisprudence, codified in Title 18 US Code 3501 setting forth the factors to evaluate 5th Amendment voluntariness. No such pressures were exerted overcoming Liberatore's voluntariness.

What happened is that the judge confused "Miranda Rights" originally created only as a means to an end -- the big word for that is "prophylaxis" -- with what the prophylactic Miranda rule was created to guard against: true violations of the 5th and 6th Amendments. (It should be noted that the Miranda Rule has come to encompass "legal prophylaxis upon prophylaxis" (as one judge described it) with absolute bars and technicalities over and above what the rule was originally designed to protect against -- the actual coercing of (inherently false or unreliable) statements or confessions from suspects.

It's also been forgotten that Miranda was devised years before police routinely videotaped their interrogations (as a superior method of proving they are not overcoming a person's will or overstepping the Constitutional voluntariness standards). After more than 40 years, the Miranda protocol (custody plus interrogation = warnings plus waiver) and its legal progeny comprising numerous legal technicalities, constitutes one of the most complicated areas of criminal procedure. My FBI legal counsel colleagues and I probably devoted half of our teaching time to the various intricacies of the Miranda rule.

It's therefore disingenuous to suggest that the public safety exception which, despite its constitutional status, judges have rarely recognized and largely ignored all these years, "would swallow the rule". Certainly the Bush Administration seemed to forget and ignore it! By contrast, it is the Miranda prophylaxis which, since its creation in 1966, has swallowed the well-founded jurisprudence governing voluntariness.

Narrow exceptions to general legal principles like the "exigent circumstances" exception to the search warrant requirement and the "public safety exception" to the Miranda rule of interrogation, actually work to strengthen the broader legal principles. The several hours of legal training mandated annually by the FBI and by most professional peace officer standards on custodial interrogation issues, and more importantly the officers' knowledge that they stand to be grilled by defense attorneys and forced to justify their actions in compliance with the Constitution to the satisfaction of a judge is the critical factor. The all-important key to maintaining the narrow justification for a true life and death emergency is to keep authorities' actions subject to public and judicial oversight through the court process so that, in fact, it can be appropriately reviewed and curtailed if need be. Just as the age-old "exigent circumstances" exception to the warrant requirement has never swallowed or even threatened to swallow the requirement for police to obtain a warrant before conducting a search in non-emergency situations, neither will the "Quarles public safety exception" swallow the Miranda Rule.

Perhaps the worst interpretations that have stretched the Miranda doctrine to negatively impact on public safety were decisions that came down just a little before 9-11 finding officers could face potential civil liability for violation of somebody's "Miranda rights". Then in 1999, Republican Congressman Joseph McDade (thinking he was getting even with Janet Reno's DOJ who had unsuccessfully prosecuted him for corruption) pushed the "attorney no-contact aspect" even further as his "swan song" before he retired from Congress. Even though Eric Holder opposed McDade and got a six month delay implementing "McDade's Law", it went into effect in 1999, effectively hurting investigations and sacrificing public safety while strengthening the defense (and the entire attorney) bar by making the "no contact" rule (originally designed for civil litigation so one attorney could not take unfair advantage of an opposing attorney's clients) along with other state legal ethics rules applicable to federal government attorneys supervising criminal investigations.

I've been objecting to torture and "dark side" methods since we became aware of their use -- here's an example -- as not only illegal and unethical but also as ineffective measures. To begin with, the "ticking time bomb" scenario is more than rare; it's mostly false as it's based on a number of hypothetical premises. That means the "ticking time bomb -- torture saves lives" utilitarian rationale is nothing short of Orwellian. That doesn't mean, however, that unique situations don't arise from time to time when kidnap victims are buried alive or stuffed in duffel bags in the middle of forests. Aside from the more common criminals hiding their loaded guns in grocery stores, "terrorists" and/or plain extortionists have occasionally done things like plant poison in breakfast cereal boxes. The Quarles court recognized that it would make no sense to force police to decide between public safety (i.e. an attempt to locate the tainted cereal before anyone ate it) and the goal of obtaining admissible evidence. The criminal justice goal of detecting and stopping ongoing crimes is not disconnected or opposed to the other criminal justice goal of prosecution of past crimes. Both are important and both uphold the integrity of the court system. Law enforcement professionals don't need any of the "dark side" extrajudicial methods begun by the Bush Administration but they do need to use the legal exception to the Miranda Rule in those rare but actual public safety emergencies when lives hang in the balance.

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"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-05-21   6:23:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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