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US chief justice signals support for White House assault on
constitutional rights
By John Andrews and Don Knowland
24 July 2002
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William Rehnquist, chief justice of the United States, on June
15 gave a speech before a gathering of federal judges in which
he condoned the suppression of democratic rights in wartime.
Rehnquist told a national judicial conference in Virginia,
One is reminded of the latin maxim, inter arma silent
leges. In times of war, the laws are silent.
The Supreme Court justice said he was offering only a
historical perspective, but his choice of topic and what
he had to say about it were obviously intended to bolster the
Bush administrations attack on constitutional guarantees
of free speech, assembly, privacy and due process, which is being
carried out under the cover of the governments war
on terrorism.
Rehnquists speech elaborated on themes developed in his
1998 book All Laws But One: Civil Liberties in Wartime.
The title refers to President Abraham Lincolns 1861 speech
to Congress justifying his suspension of habeas corpus, a legal
procedure for a person in custody to obtain court review of the
detention. Rehnquists seizing on this historical precedent
to justify the current attacks on civil rights turns history upside
down.
Article 1, Section 9 of the US Constitution provides that the
Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases
of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.
After the Confederate states seceded and commenced an armed insurrection
with an attack on Fort Sumter, Lincoln suspended the writ along
the Philadelphia-Washington railroad line in response the efforts
by Baltimore public officials to bomb the railroad so that federal
troops could not arrive to defend the US capital.
The federal judiciary was replete with judges sympathetic to
the slave owners, including Chief Justice Roger Taney, infamous
for his majority opinion in Dred Scott v. Sanford, which
upheld the right of owners to travel throughout the United States
with their slaves, and denied that persons of Negro
descent could be citizens of the United States with standing to
bring suit for their own freedom. The effect of the Dred Scott
ruling was to overturn all Congressional actions limiting the
extension of slavery into the territories, and, arguably, to legitimize
the institution in the free states as well.
After the Confederacys attack on the North, Taney interfered
with Lincolns efforts to suppress the rebellion by issuing
a habeas corpus writ ordering the release of a Maryland official
arrested for openly supporting the Confederacys war effort.
Lincoln ignored Taneys writ, rhetorically asking Congress
why all laws were rendered ineffective by virtue of
the rebellion but one, i.e., habeas corpus.
Lincolns action was dictated by the exigencies of a war
waged for the defense of the Union and the preservation of democracy
against the slave-owning planter class in the Southan entirely
progressive cause that led to the liberation of millions of slaves
and an unprecedented extension of democratic rights in the United
States. Rehnquist, on the other hand, will go down in history
as the chief justice who presided over the Supreme Court responsible
for rolling back the gains of the post-World War II civil rights
struggles and associated legislation and court decisions recognizing
and expanding basic rights.
In his speech, Rehnquist also reviewed the Supreme Courts
upholding of President Woodrow Wilsons use of sedition laws
to incarcerate opponents of World War I, including the Socialist
leader Eugene Debs, its approval of Franklin Delano Roosevelts
secret military tribunals for Nazi saboteurs in 1942, the use
of military tribunals to try civilians in Hawaii for crimes unrelated
to war, an action later deemed unconstitutional by the Court in
1946, and the Courts noxious approval in 1943 of the internment
in California concentration camps of persons of Japanese ancestry.
These cases suggest that, while the laws are surely not
silent in time of war, courts interpret them differently than
in time of peace, Rehnquist told the assembled judges. In
the guise of an academic lecture, his speech signaled that his
Court would similarly support a drastic curtailment of democratic
rights, including the detention, interrogation and incarceration
of people without charges being brought against them and in violation
of normal court procedures. His remarks could only have the effect
of intimidating those judges more inclined to uphold constitutional
liberties.
By making such a speech while many important cases are working
their way through the federal judiciary and are ultimately headed
for his court, Rehnquist violated American Bar Association Code
of Judicial Conduct Canon 4, which prohibit judges from extra-judicial
activities that cast reasonable doubt on the judges
capacity to act impartially as a judge.
Rehnquists remarks echoed a speech made by Associate
Justice Sandra Day OConnor in New York last September, where
she declared that because of the September 11 attacks, Were
likely to experience more restrictions on our personal freedom
than has ever been the case in our country. [US
Supreme Court Justice OConnor says personal freedom
will be curbed] OConnors speech was the
first time a justice of the Supreme Court has ever gone public
with an open-ended assertion that individual rights should be
curtailed in the name of national security.
Prisoners whose cases might be affected by Rehnquists
remarks include the purported dirty bomb suspect,
Jose Padilla, a US citizen whom the government is holding incommunicado
in military detention, and Yasser Esam Hamdi, another US citizen
who was born in Louisiana to Saudi parents. On July 12 the right-wing
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court order that
the government was obliged to allow Hamdi to consult a lawyer.
The Supreme Court itself is already acting in accord with Rehnquists
remarks. In its first decision involving a post-September 11 anti-terrorist
action, the high court granted an emergency request by Attorney
General Ashcroft to stay a lower court injunction against the
Immigration and Naturalization Services post-September 11
policy of closing all hearings it deemed to be related to terrorism.
The injunction, issued by a New Jersey federal judge and allowed
to stand by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, provided that
the government had to allow media access to immigration proceedings
unless it first demonstrated that national security justified
closing a specific hearing.
True to form, Rehnquists June 15 speech received almost
no coverage in the mainstream media and evoked no protest or criticism
from Democrats or civil liberties organizations, again demonstrating
the prostration of the so-called liberal establishment to the
unprecedented assault on democratic rights.
See Also:
US Supreme Court Justice
OConnor says personal freedom will be curbed
[10 October 2001]
Another step towards presidential
dictatorship: Bush orders US citizen held indefinitely by military
[12 June 2002]
The case of Yaser Esam
Hamdi
Bush claims right to jail US citizens indefinitely, without charges
or hearing
[24 June 2002]
Divided US Supreme Court ruling
bans execution of the mentally retarded
[27 June 2002]
US Supreme Court authorizes school vouchers:
a simultaneous assault on freedom of thought and public education
[2 July 2002]
US Supreme Court Justice Scalia on capital
punishment: Death is no big deal
[5 July 2002]
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