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US appeals court approves secret roundup of immigrants
By John Andrews
23 June 2003
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A panel of the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit has given another green light to the Bush administrations
attacks on democratic rights. It voted 2-1 to reverse a lower
court order compelling Attorney General John Ashcroft to identify
hundreds of people from the Middle East rounded up by the government
in the immediate aftermath of September 11. None of those imprisoned
in the course of this dragnet has been charged with any crime
relating to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
The decision in Center for National Security Studies v.
United States Department of Justice was handed down June 17.
It is the latest in a series of rulings by right-wing judges who,
like the Bush administration itself, are using the war on
terrorism as a pretext to cloak the government in secrecy
and dismantle the constitutional framework of checks and balances.
Other court rulings have expanded government power to conduct
secret surveillance, upheld secret immigration hearings, denied
basic due process rights to detainees at Guantánamo Bay
in Cuba, and granted Bush the power to deem US citizens enemy
combatants, who can then be held indefinitely on no charges
and without access to a lawyer. The cumulative effect of these
decisions is to create an executive branch with near-dictatorial
powers.
The case decided June 17 arose after Ashcroft announced on
October 25, 2001, that his anti-terrorism offensive
had arrested or detained nearly 1,000 individuals as part of the
September 11 investigation. Several public interest and media
organizations quickly filed requests for details about the arrests
pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The FOIA is
a Watergate-era law that compels federal agencies to respond to
requests for information about their activities, unless they can
establish that disclosure would fall within one of the FOIAs
narrow exceptions. The law provides that anyone disagreeing with
an agency decision to withhold information can file suit in a
US district court and obtain judicial review.
When Ashcrofts Justice Department refused to provide
requested information, the public interest groups filed suit to
compel disclosure. In that litigation, the government acknowledged
detaining 751 individuals on immigration violations over the course
of its investigation, but by June 2002 most had been released,
many having been cleared of wrongdoing altogether and others having
been deported for immigration violations or non-terrorism-related
offenses.
While allowing many details of the investigations to be kept
secret, US District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered the government
to identify those detained as well as their lawyers. She rejected
government claims that release of the information would threaten
national security. Unquestionably, the publics interest
in learning the identity of those arrested and detained is essential
to verifying whether the government is operating within the bounds
of law, Kesslers disclosure order reads.
Kessler grounded her decision in what have been, at least until
recently, generally accepted principles of a democratic society:
Difficult times such as these have always tested our fidelity
to the core democratic values of openness, government accountability,
and the rule of law. The Court fully understands and appreciates
that the first priority of the executive branch in a time of crisis
is to ensure the physical security of its citizens. By the same
token, the first priority of the judicial branch must be to ensure
that our Government always operates within the statutory and constitutional
constraints which distinguish a democracy from a dictatorship.
The June 17 opinion overturning Kessler was written by Judge
David B. Sentelle, a protegé of the arch-reactionary former
North Carolina senator Jesse Helms. Sentelle was appointed to
the DC Circuitconsidered second only to the Supreme Court
in influenceby Ronald Reagan in 1987.
Sentelle was on the appellate panel that in 1990 voided the
felony convictions of Lt. Col. Oliver North and Reagans
national security adviser, retired admiral John Poindexter, who
had directed the illegal arms trafficking operation that became
known as the Iran-Contra affair. Two years after Clintons
election, Chief Justice William Rehnquist chose Sentelle over
11 more senior judges to chair a three-judge Special Division
charged with the responsibility of appointing, if requested by
the Justice Department, an independent counsel to investigate
allegations of presidential misconduct. His first order of business
was to replace special prosecutor Robert Fiske, who had found
no wrongdoing relating to the Whitewater affair, with Kenneth
Starr, a right-wing Republican and office-holder in the first
Bush administration. Starr turned the investigation into an open-ended
legal witch-hunt, culminating in the Monica Lewinsky scandal and
impeachment of Clinton.
In his June 17 decision, Sentelle condemned Judge Kessler for
not giving deference to the Bush administrations
determination that release of the information about the detainees
would damage national security. America faces an enemy just
as real as its former Cold War foes, with capabilities beyond
the capacity of the judiciary to explore, Sentelle wrote.
Sentelles comparison of the Cold Warwhere the US
for over 40 years faced a superpower armed with nuclear weaponsto
the current war against scattered, stateless bands
of religious fanatics is, on its face, absurd. However, if one
were, for the sake of argument, to accept the judges analogy,
it would only underscore the arbitrary and legally perverse character
of his ruling.
Never, even at the height of the anti-communist hysteria of
the late 1940s and 1950s, did the federal government claim such
sweeping powers to detain and hold suspects without any judicial
process and under conditions of total secrecy as does the current
administration. As Sentelle well knows, any such claims would
have met a generally hostile response in the federal courts throughout
most of that period.
Indeed, in the late 1950s and 1960s the federal judiciary handed
down rulings strengthening the enforcement of constitutionally
mandated civil liberties, generally protecting the rights of the
accused to due process, including the right to legal counsel,
as well as the right of the public to scrutinize the actions of
the government. The Freedom of Information Act itself was passed
in 1975 precisely to lift the veil of secrecy and
check government abuses.
Sentelles assertion that courts lack the capacity...to
explore the legitimacy of governmental secrecy claims repudiates
the constitutional powers of both the legislative and judicial
branches of the federal government. The FOIA is an act of Congress
that includes explicit provisions for strict judicial review of
government agency denials. It expressly places the burden on the
government to demonstrate that requested information falls within
an exception to disclosure, rather than directing the courts to
defer to agency determinations. Judicial review itself lies at
the foundation of the American three-branch constitutional form
of government, and the recognition of the publics right
to know, which animates the FOIA, is indispensable to the
democratic process.
By disregarding both a law of Congress and the constitutional
system of checks and balances, Sentelles decision gives
lie to the claim that conservative judges are strict constructionists
who apply constitutional provisions and statutes literally, while
liberal jurists engage in judicial activism.
Another Republican-appointed judge, Karen LeCraft Henderson
(also from North Carolina), joined Sentelles opinion. Judge
David S. Tatel, appointed by Clinton, dissented, slamming the
decisions uncritical deference to the governments
vague, poorly explained arguments for withholding broad categories
of information about the detainees. The ruling eviscerates
both FOIA itself and the principles of openness in government
that FOIA embodies, Tatel wrote.
The dissent further declared that the ruling ignored the
publics interest in knowing whether the government, in responding
to the attacks, is violating the constitutional rights of the
hundreds of persons whom it has detained in connection with its
terrorism investigationby, as the plaintiffs allege, detaining
them mainly because of their religion or ethnicity, holding them
in custody for extended periods without charge, or preventing
them from seeking or communicating with legal counsel.
Tatel added, Just as the government has a compelling
interest in ensuring citizens safety, so do citizens have
a compelling interest in ensuring that their government does not,
in discharging its duties, abuse one of its most awesome powers,
the power to arrest and jail. He concluded, History,
moreover, is full of examples of situations in which just these
sorts of allegations led to the discovery of serious government
wrongdoingfrom Teapot Dome in the 1920s to the FBIs
COINTELPRO counterintelligence program in the 1960s to Watergate
in the 1970s.
The decision was issued within weeks of a report from the Justice
Departments inspector general that found significant
problems in the way people were arrested and treated during
the post-September 11 roundup. The report concluded that authorities
made little effort to distinguish terrorist suspects from those
who became ensnared by chance in the investigation. Many people
were jailed for months, often without ever being formally charged
or given access to a lawyer, and some were physically and verbally
abused before they were cleared of any terrorist ties, the report
said.
This reactionary ruling, like the others sanctioning the Bush
administrations constitutional abuses in the name of the
war on terrorism, are bound up with the systematic
stacking of the federal judiciary at the highest levels with political
right-wingers, who contrive rulings in accordance with a partisan
agenda that is deeply hostile to democratic rights, exhibiting
barely concealed contempt for the Constitution, laws enacted by
Congress to protect individual rights, and legal precedent. This
process of transforming the federal courts into a bastion of reaction
has been proceeding for more than two decades, in line with the
general shift of the entire political establishment to the right
and its ongoing assault on the social conditions and democratic
rights of the working class.
See Also:
US prepares for military tribunals at
Guantanamo Bay
[4 June 2003]
Federal appeals court upholds
indefinite detention of US citizen
[14 January 2003]
US intelligence appeals
court sanctions increased domestic spying
[22 November 2002]
Ashcroft defends Bushs
war against the Constitution: Tells Senate hearing that critics
aid terrorists
[12 December 2001]
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