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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Pre-Emptive Lawsuit Challenges Bush Plan For Detainees Published: October 2, 2006 WASHINGTON Attorneys for 25 men being held in Afghanistan launched a pre-emptive strike Monday against President George W. Bush's plan to prosecute and interrogate terror suspects. Court documents they filed demanded that the men be released or charged and allowed to meet with attorneys. Such a filing, known as a habeas corpus petition, would be prohibited under the legislation approved by Congress last week. That bill says the military may detain enemy combatants indefinitely and, if officials choose to bring charges, the cases would be heard before a military commission, not a civilian judge. Bush has not signed the bill but is expected to soon. Supporters say it is a necessary tool in Bush's campaign against terror. Monday's filing initiates what is likely to be a drawn-out legal fight similar to the one about detainees at a military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Detainees there have dozens of petitions pending. Under the U.S. Constitution, the government is required in civilian courts to tell people why they are being held and allow them access to attorneys. People accused of crimes are then afforded speedy trials before juries of their peers. "With the move that Congress made, the capitulation it made to the president, those rights are in danger of being curtailed," said Vincent Warren, executive director for the Center for Constitutional Rights, which filed the lawsuit. The new law protects detainees from blatant abuses such as torture but does not require that they be granted lawyers' services. It also allows prosecutors to use evidence, such as hearsay, that would not be allowed in civilian courts. Although the petition was filed before the bill was signed, the law was written retroactively, so a judge would have to strike down at least some of the law for the detainees represented by the center to prevail. The case was assigned to U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, who, in a Guantanamo Bay case last year, ruled that Congress had authorized the president to order the detention of "enemy combatants" for the duration of the war on terror. Leon did not set a hearing date in the new case. The detainees named in the case are being held at Bagram Air Base north of Kabul, Afghanistan's capital, according to court papers.
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