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WSWS : News
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US civil liberties group challenges closed deportation hearings
for detained Muslim cleric
By Lawrence Porter
3 April 2002
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On March 26, a hearing
was held in Detroit federal court on the first lawsuit challenging
the US Justice Departments decision to close immigrant deportation
proceedings to the public and the press. A group of supporters
rallied in front of the courthouse demanding due process for Rabih
Haddad, whose case has sparked the suits. Haddad was arrested
at his home in Ann Arbor, Michigan on December 14, allegedly for
minor visa violations, and has been imprisoned ever since.
At the heart of this case are the wide-ranging attacks on civil
liberties and democratic rights set into motion by the government
in the wake of the events of September 11. The attempt by the
government to close Haddads hearings demonstrates the ominous
growth of governmental secrecy at many levels and the expansion
of special repressive powers passed by executive edict, with no
public debate or Congressional approval.
The case is being closely watched throughout the country for
its political implications. Haddad is the most prominent of the
hundreds of Arab and Muslim immigrants being detained by the US
government in the dragnet over the last six months.
A suit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
after US Representative John Conyers and members of the Detroit
media were barred from attending Rabih Haddads deportation
hearing. Three combined lawsuits were heard before US Federal
Judge Nancy Edmunds at last weeks hearing. The ACLU lawsuit
was heard on behalf of Conyers, the Detroit News and the
weekly Metro Times. Separate arguments were presented by
lawyers for the Detroit Free Press and Rabih Haddad.
The suits oppose the closure of hearings on several grounds
and seek an injunction against a September 21 memorandum issued
by Chief Judge Michael Creppy of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS). Both the INS and Creppy work under the direction
of the Justice Department headed by US Attorney General John Ashcroft.
(The Creppy memo is available at http://www.aclu.org/court/creppy_memo.pdf)
The judges memo, issued under the heading PLEASE
DO NOT DISCLOSE, was a secret directive to all immigration
judges specifying a new set of procedures, at the sole discretion
of the attorney general, to be enforced in selective cases. The
memo stipulated that such cases would be assigned only to judges
who hold a secret clearance; courtrooms in these cases
would be closed, barring visitors, families and press; and the
Record of Proceeding would not be released to anyone but a specified
attorney cleared by the government. All other requests for information
on such cases were to be forwarded as a Freedom of Information
request to the Office of the General Counsel. Restrictions would
even include information on whether or not a case was scheduled.
The ACLU has pointed to the extremely dangerous implications
of the Creppy memo. It disregards decades of legal precedents,
which have consistently granted the media the right to scrutinize
the actions of the government. The directive, moreover, is flagrantly
unconstitutional because it violates the basic American constitutional
right to due process, which entails open hearings.
The brief in support of the press
and Haddad states: It is clear that individuals like Haddad
have due process rights under our Constitution and that immigration
court proceedings implicating those rights accordingly must be
open. A number of legal precedents for the democratic rights
of non-citizens are cited, including the following: Aliens
who have once passed through our gates, even illegally, may be
expelled only after proceedings conforming to traditional standards
of fairness encompassed in due process of law.
Citing a Sixth Circuit Court ruling in the case of Brown
& Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. Federal Trade Commission
the suit further states: [P]ublic access provides a check
on courts. Judges know that they will continue to be held responsible
by the public for their rulings. Without access to the proceedings,
the public cannot analyze and critique the reasoning of the court
... one of the ways we minimize judicial error and misconduct
is through public scrutiny and discussion.
The suit also cites a 1985 ruling by the Sixth Circuit in the
case of Society of Professional Journalists v. Secretary of
Labor, which reads in part: Access to the proceedings,
where feasible, ensures that people realize that justice is being
done.... Moreover, openness ensures that [the agency] properly
does its job.
The natural tendency of governmental officials is to
hold their meetings in secret. They can thereby avoid criticism
and proceed informally and less carefully. They do not have to
worry before they proceed with the task that a careless remark
may be splashed across the next days headlines. But it is
exactly that type of public awareness and opportunity to criticize
that is the very foundation of our democracy.
At the Detroit hearing, government lawyers defended the Creppy
memorandum with the ominous claim there is no First Amendment
right to public access in administrative cases, such as immigration
hearings. Government lawyer Brenda OMalley claimed that
the local immigration judge had the independent right to make
decisions, such as granting Haddad bond, and that Haddad and the
media had the right to appeal the case at the end of the trial.
In a telling remark, Judge Edmund interjected, stating, The
immigrant judge has no discretion. The directive came from John
Ashcroft. Lets get real about appeals here.
Leonard Gelernt, national immigrants rights director
for the ACLU, opposed the Creppy memorandum on the grounds that
it was an individual edict, not reviewed by any court, whereas
the right to open hearings for immigrants has a long history and
tradition supported by Congress.
Lawyers for the government claimed that the Constitution does
not grant the media access to court hearings. In the course of
the hearing Judge Edmund acknowledged that the media has long
had the right to cover trials unless there is a justifiable issue
of national security. Significantly, the government lawyers at
no point attempted to justify the secrecy of Haddads hearings,
stating only that at some point during his deportation hearing
something might arise involving national security.
Herchel Fink, the attorney for the Detroit Free Press,
defended the right of the press to independently review the actions
of the government, and cited the unconstitutional internment of
Japanese immigrants during World War Two. It is vital that
the public knows what the government is doing to combat terrorism,
Fink said. What justification has the government put forward?
National security is involved, Fink said. They are
saying terrorists might learn from the open proceeding.... I think
this is silly. Just as silly as when John Ashcroft said that if
the public hears the Osama bin Laden video that this would badly
influence the public.
Fink added, Mr. Ashcroft overlooks the fact that Congress
said in the 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act explicitly that trials should
be open to the public.
Rabih Haddads lawyer, Jonathan Martel, pointed out that
the government has not said why it is holding Haddad. Martel said
his client wants an open hearing because he has nothing to hide.
Kary Moss, executive director of the Michigan ACLU, reiterated
the undemocratic nature of the Creppy memo: If Congress
wanted to pass that law, they could have done so, but didnt.
Ashcroft just made his own rule, without Congressional approval
or anything. What we are saying is that while he has the right
to issue the directive, it is in violation of the Constitution.
In addition to calling for an injunction of the Creppy memorandum,
the ACLU is requesting transcripts of all the proceedings involved
in the Haddad case.
The next immigration hearing for Rabih Haddad is scheduled
for April 10. Judge Edmund promised the plaintiffs that she would
have a judgment before the hearing.
This is the first challenge on the Ashcroft ruling and will
set the basis for further decisions. There is another ACLU suit
pending over closed hearings in New Jersey on behalf of the North
Jersey Media Group.
Pete Woiwode traveled to Detroit from Ann Arbor to join the
protest at the court hearing. He told the WSWS, I think
what is happening is absolutely frightening. They are going against
American ideals and violating constitutional rights and getting
away with it. Unfortunately there has been a resurgence of patriotism.
Many cant see that they are exploiting patriotism to blind
people to what they are doing.
I hesitate to say that what is happening is a blatant
abuse of power. However, I also hesitate to say they are completely
naive. I am confused. Once you get into this case, the falsehoods
keep piling up. It is amazing how quickly talk of Osama bin Laden
has faded from public view.
They only thing they could stick to [Haddad] was the
visa violation. INS policy has been not to prosecute people who
are in the process of reapplication. This is unprecedented.
See Also:
Interviews with supporters
of Rabih Haddad
Muslim cleric the target of Bush anti-terror dragnet
[26 March 2002]
Amnesty International report
condemns US treatment of immigrant detainees
[26 March 2002]
Bush expands voluntary
interviews of Middle Eastern immigrants
[29 March 2002]
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