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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Judges Say U.S. Can’t Hold Man as ‘Combatant’ The federal appeals court in Richmond, Va., ruled yesterday that the president may not declare civilians in this country to be enemy combatants and have the military hold them indefinitely. The ruling was a stinging rejection of one of the Bush administrations central assertions about the scope of executive authority to combat terrorism. Skip to next paragraph Peoria Journal Star, via Associated Press The ruling came in the case of Ali al-Marri, a citizen of Qatar now in military custody in Charleston, S.C., who is the only person on the American mainland known to be held as an enemy combatant. The court said the administration may charge Mr. Marri with a crime, deport him or hold him as a material witness in connection with a grand jury investigation. But military detention of al-Marri must cease, Judge Diana Gribbon Motz wrote for the majority of a divided three-judge panel. The court, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, said a fundamental principle is at stake: military detention of someone who had lawfully entered the United States and established connections here, it said, violates the Constitution. To sanction such presidential authority to order the military to seize and indefinitely detain civilians, Judge Motz wrote, even if the president calls them enemy combatants, would have disastrous consequences for the Constitution and the country. We refuse to recognize a claim to power, Judge Motz added, that would so alter the constitutional foundations of our republic. In a statement, the Justice Department said it would ask the full Fourth Circuit to rehear the case, which could eventually reach the Supreme Court. The statement added that Mr. Marri represented a danger to the United States. Al-Marri is an individual who trained at Osama bin Ladens terrorist training camp in Afghanistan, the Justice Department statement said. In the summer of 2001, he met with Khalid Shaykh Muhammed, the mastermind of the September 11th attacks, and entered the United States just before September 11 to serve as an Al Qaeda sleeper agent and to explore methods of disrupting the U.S. financial system. The president has made clear, the statement continued, that he intends to use all available tools at his disposal to protect Americans from further Al Qaeda attack, including the capture and detention of Al Qaeda agents who enter our borders. Mr. Marri was arrested on Dec. 12, 2001, in Peoria, Ill., where he was living with his family and studying computer science at Bradley University. He was charged with credit-card fraud and lying to federal agents, and he was on the verge of a trial on those charges when he was moved into military detention in 2003. He has been held for the last four years at the Navy brig in Charleston. Mr. Marris transfer to military custody, Judge Motz wrote, is puzzling at best. The usual reason offered for the indefinite detention without charges of enemy combatants is to immobilize them and prevent them from returning to the battlefield. But Mr. Marri was already held pending his criminal trial. Judge Motz suggested that the governments purpose in moving Mr. Marri to military custody was one the Supreme Court held improper in a 2004 decision, Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, that of subjecting him to harsh interrogation. For his first 16 months in the brig, Mr. Marri was allowed no contact with his family or lawyers. He was, a lawsuit filed on his behalf in 2005 said, denied basic necessities and subjected to extreme sensory deprivation. Interrogators threatened to send him to Egypt or Saudi Arabia, the lawsuit said, where, they told him, he would be tortured and sodomized and where his wife would be raped in front of him. Judge Motz, joined by Judge Roger L. Gregory, wrote that Mr. Marri might well be guilty of serious crimes. But she said the government could not circumvent the civilian criminal justice system through military detention. The court reversed a lower-court decision that had denied Mr. Marris challenge to his detention. Two other men have been held as enemy combatants on the American mainland since the Sept. 11 attacks. One, Yaser Hamdi, was freed and sent to Saudi Arabia after the Supreme Court allowed him to challenge his detention in 2004. The other, Jose Padilla, was transferred to the criminal justice system last year. He is now on trial on terrorism charges in federal court in Miami. All three judges yesterday agreed that a new law, the Military Commissions Act, did not defeat the courts jurisdiction. The law says the federal courts have no jurisdiction to hear challenges from any noncitizen who has been determined by the United States to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant. Unlike the men held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Mr. Marri has not yet received even the cursory review of his designation as enemy combatant, performed by a military panel known as a combatant status review tribunal. The Military Commissions Act, Judge Motz concluded, was not intended to, and does not, apply to aliens like al-Marri, who have legally entered, and are seized while legally residing in, the United States. The majority and the dissenting judge, Judge Henry Hudson, visiting from the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, differed mainly on whether civilians may ever be classified as enemy combatants. Because Mr. Marri was not alleged to have fought with the Taliban or the armed forces of any enemy nation or to have engaged in combat with United States forces, Judge Motz wrote, Mr. Bush was powerless to have the military detain Mr. Marri any more than he could have ordered the military detentions of the Unabomber or the perpetrators of the Oklahoma City bombing. In dissent, Judge Hudson wrote that Mr. Bush had the authority to detain al-Marri as an enemy combatant or belligerent because he is the type of stealth warrior used by Al Qaeda to perpetrate terrorist acts against the United States. Judges Motz and Gregory were appointed by President Bill Clinton, and Judge Hudson by Mr. Bush. Jonathan Hafetz, one of Mr. Marris lawyers and the litigation director of the Liberty and National Security Project of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, said a contrary ruling could have had devastating consequences. Under the administrations theory, Mr. Hafetz said, the executive could effectively disappear people by picking up any immigrant in this country, locking them in a military jail and holding the keys to the courthouse. This is exactly what separates a country that is democratic and committed to the rule of law from a country that is a police state. The decision appears unlikely to have any immediate effect on the men held at Guantánamo. Judge Motz emphasized that the courts analysis was limited to those with substantial connections to the United States who had been seized and detained within its borders. Still, White House critics said the ruling was only the latest in a series of setbacks for the administration. Last Monday, two military judges handpicked to preside over the Guantánamo Bay trials rejected the claim that a presidential order alone was sufficient to give the courts jurisdiction over the detainees, said Jennifer Daskal, advocacy director of the United States Program of Human Rights Watch. And today, one of the nations most conservative courts squarely rejected the presidents unprecedented assertion that he, alone, could hand out the label of enemy combatant without any sort of independent court review. The appeals court yesterday ordered the trial judge in the case to issue a writ of habeas corpus directing the secretary of defense to release Mr. Marri from military custody within a reasonable period of time to be set by the district court. The government can, Judge Motz wrote, transfer Mr. Marri to civilian authorities to face criminal charges, initiate deportation proceedings against him, hold him as a material witness in connection with a grand jury proceeding or detain him for a limited time under a provision of the U.S.A. Patriot Act. But the military cannot hold him, Judge Motz wrote. The president cannot eliminate, she wrote, constitutional protections with the stroke of a pen by proclaiming a civilian, even a criminal civilian, an enemy combatant subject to indefinite military detention.
Poster Comment: "In dissent, Judge Hudson wrote that Mr. Bush had the authority to detain al-Marri as an enemy combatant or belligerent because he is the type of stealth warrior used by Al Qaeda to perpetrate terrorist acts against the United States. One judge still believes that Bush may simply conjure this authority, and the judge offered no constitutional justification for such a ridiculous assertion. The DOJ is going to ask for an en banc review now. If these people aren't in open rebellion then there is no such thing.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#1. To: HOUNDDAWG (#0)
does this make it a done deal?
I'm sure it will be ignored.
*Farmfriend* I'm sure it will be ignored. As long as he has the power of the pardon we can assume that the forgive list he springs on us (and the list of those he springs from prisons) will make Clinton's seem modest. And if he sees impeachment looming he'll initiate Plan Milhous. The only leverage we have (since Nancy Pelosi took impeachment off the table, mainly because that would impede another priority agenda and a lobby that wishes to avoid the American people meddling in our own foreign policy) is that life members of the congressional blue suit pachyderm club can be mortally wounded by Bush's arrogance, so, for this reason he's not completely free to do as he pleases. But, he can no longer order MP's or uniformed service members to carry out orders that they know are unlawful. They have grounds to refuse now, and George and Dick ain't going to do their own dirty work. This may not result in the expedited release of prisoners, but it will likely prevent additional unlawful arrests and detentions, assuming that (most of) the same political hacks who helped Bush kife two elections uphold the lower courts' wisdom.
#7. To: HOUNDDAWG (#3)
Presidential pardons don't work against criminal charges under state law, civil suits in any jurisdiction, or charges in international courts.
Interesting analysis.
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