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New US decree expands power to detain immigrants
By Kate Randall
1 December 2001
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In the face of growing criticism, the Bush administration continues
to defend its authorization of military tribunals to try terrorist
suspects and other domestic measures attacking basic democratic
rights in the wake of the September 11 events. In a speech before
a group of federal prosecutors in Washington on Thursday, George
W. Bush commented: Were an open society, but were
at war.
Bush continued: Non-US citizens who plan and/or commit
mass murder are more than criminal suspects. They are unlawful
combatants who seek to destroy our country and our way of life.
And if I determine that it is in the national security interests
of our great land to try by military commission those who make
war on America, then we will do so.
By this reasoning, the fundamental judicial principle that
a defendant is innocent until proven guilty is turned on its head.
Once an individual is identified by the government as a terrorist
suspect, he is considered guilty, denied his basic civil liberties
and subject to the rash of anti-democratic measures that have
been put into effectfor the most part by executive fiatsince
September 11.
The latest affront to basic rights is the move by Attorney
General John Ashcroft to expand the power of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) to detain immigrants rounded up in
the governments anti-terror dragnet since the terror attacks.
Authorities can now keep detainees behind bars even after a federal
immigration judge has ordered the individual released for lack
of evidence.
The new rule was signed by Ashcroft on October 26 and went
into effect on October 29. Like numerous other anti-terror
regulations, the ruling was made with no public notice or consultation
with Congress, and was enacted by executive decree.
Other measures, in addition to the authorization of military
tribunals, have included:
* a ruling allowing the Justice Department to monitor conversations
between immigrant detainees and their lawyers;
* a directive to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to carry
out voluntary interviews of more than 5,000 mostly
Middle Eastern men living in the US, ages 18 to 33, ostensibly
to gather information concerning future terrorist attacks;
* a new policy on visa applications affecting men, ages 16
to 45, from 25 Middle Eastern and African countries, who will
face intense investigation and delays in processing their visa
requests;
* closing hearings to the public in certain cases
when the attorney general considers secrecy to be in the national
interest;
* a memo from the Justice Department to government agencies
amending provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
Whereas in the past agencies were obliged to release requested
information unless it posed foreseeable harm, the
government may now withhold information if it claims to have a
sound legal basis for doing so.
The new ruling on detaining immigrants allows the INS to set
aside any release order issued by an immigration judge in cases
where the agency claims the detainee is a danger to the community
or a flight risk. In order to overrule the judge, the INS only
has to file a form indicating it plans to appeal the decision
to the Board of Immigration Appeals. If this board orders the
immigrant released, the INS can still appeal directly to the attorney
general, who can halt the detainees release.
Thus, the appearance of a detainee before an immigration judge
is effectively a formality and a release order can be nullified
on the personal instructions of the attorney general. David W.
Leopold, an immigration lawyer from Cleveland, commented: With
this rule change, the government can lock someone up on very little
or even no evidence and throw away the key until they decide to
let them go.
INS officials reportedly objected to the rulings of several
immigration judges who have ordered the release of detainees due
to lack of evidence against them. The 220 immigration judges are
Civil Service employees of the Justice Department, and were separated
from the INS in 1993. Studies show that while these judges generally
side with the INS on deportation cases, they often impose lower
bail than the service requests in detention cases.
In those cases where the governments evidence against
a detainee consists entirely of classified information that it
chooses not to reveal at a hearing, an immigration judge might
order the detainee released. Under the new regulation the INS
is under no obligation to prove its case that an immigrant should
continue to be detained, as the agency can simply appeal to the
attorney general if it fails to get the ruling it seeks.
According to the latest figures released by the Justice Department,
more than 1,100 people have been rounded up by law enforcement
agencies since September 11 as part of its anti-terror probe.
Earlier this month the government announced that it would no longer
release a running tally of the number of detainees. Having come
under criticism for refusing to release the identities of the
detainees, where they were being held, and what charges, if any,
had been brought against them, Ashcroft announced that the government
would simply suspend giving out any figures.
On the eve of Congressional hearings on the Bush administrations
authorization of military tribunalsand failing to diffuse
criticism of the governments detention policyAshcroft
last Tuesday released the names of 93 individuals who face criminal
charges. About 60 of these suspects remain in custody. He also
released a list of 548 others charged with immigration violations,
identifying them only by their countries of origin and the date
they were arrested, but not their names.
In addition, there are 10 to 15 defendants who are still being
held as material witnesses, most at a federal detention center
in Manhattan. Among them is Zacarias Moussaoul, 33, a French citizen
of Moroccan descent, who was arrested on August 17 in Minnesota.
According to the New York Times, Bush administration officials
are reportedly debating whether to designate Moussaoul the first
defendant to be tried on terrorism charges in a military tribunal.
Attorney General Ashcroft has defended the nationwide dragnet,
declaring, Those associated with terrorists, and who are
involved with terrorists, should not escape incarceration.
But according to documents released to Congress over the last
week, none of those facing criminal charges have been accused
of direct complicity in the September 11 hijackings.
An examination of the limited information released by the government
on the 93 named detainees in fact shows the tenuous nature of
the charges being levied against most of them. These include allegations
of credit card fraud, making false statements when applying for
passports, and obtaining fraudulent licenses to drive commercial
trucks, among other relatively minor charges.
One of those arrested, Osama Awadallah, a 21-year-old Jordanian
college student, has been charged with lying before a grand jury
when he denied knowing Khalid al-Midhar, one of the men suspected
of hijacking the plane that crashed into the Pentagon. His name
was reportedly found in a car of one of the suspected hijackers
at Dulles Airport.
Mr. Awadallah has acknowledged knowing a second suspected hijacker,
Nawaf Alhazmi, saying he saw him 35 to 40 times last year in San
Diego, California. A prosecutor in his case claimed that Awadallahs
alleged perjury promoted terrorism, and urged he be
held without bond.
But Federal District Court Judge Shira A. Scheindlin disagreed,
noting that Mr. Awadallah casually knew two of the terrorists
involved in the September 11 attacks, and that prosecutors
had not argued that he was involved with [the terrorists]
illegal activities or had any part in the planning or preparation
of their attacks or any advance knowledge of those attacks. She
ruled Awadallah could be released on $500,000 bond, commenting,
This defendant is charged with making false declarationsnot
with terrorism, or aiding and abetting terrorism, or conspiring
with terrorists.
Also included in the governments list are 21 Iraqis charged
with falsely obtaining trucking and hazardous materials licenses
in Pennsylvania, despite the fact that authorities have publicly
cleared them of any links to the September 11 events.
The names of three other menNasser Abuali, Hussein Abuali
and Rabi Ahmedare also included in Ashcrofts list.
The men are charged with embezzlement in connection with the theft
of $45,000 worth of stolen cereal products in Newark, New Jersey
in May 2000. No charges were brought against the men until September
19, eight days after the terror attacks. While court documents
in their case make no mention of suspected terrorism or the hijack/bombings,
they were included among the 93 criminal defendants named by the
attorney general as part of the September 11 investigation.
See Also:
Arab residents denounce government
witch-hunt at Detroit-area forum
[29 November 2001]
New attacks on academic free
speech in US
[22 November 2001]
Military tribunals, monitoring
of lawyers: Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
Bushs war at home: a
creeping coup détat
[7 November 2001]
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