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US court upholds presidents power to detain Americans
as enemy combatants
By Bill Van Auken
17 July 2008
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The Bush administrations contention that the president
has the power to detain anyone, including US citizens, indefinitely
without charges or trial by declaring them enemy combatants
received judicial backing from a sharply divided appellate court
in Richmond, Virginia Tuesday.
The 5-to-4 decision by the US Court of Appeals for the 4th
Circuit made it nearly certain that this assertion of dictatorial
powers by the presidency will be part of the Bush administrations
dark legacy handed on to a future administration.
The ruling by the full appellate court effectively overturned
a decision reached by a three-judge panel of the same court issued
in June of last year, which held that the Bush administration
did not have the legal authority to detain people without charges
and compared its assumption of such sweeping powers to military
rule and the oppression of the American colonies by King George
III.
That panel had itself reversed a lower courts denial
of habeas corpus for Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri. A Qatari national,
al-Marri was a legal resident of the US and a graduate student
in Peoria, Illinois, before the Bush White House declared him
an enemy combatant in 2003 and ordered the military to throw him
into a Navy brig in Charleston, South Carolina, where he has been
held for the last five years.
While the three-judge panel ordered the military to release
him into civilian custody to be either tried or deported, the
full court ruling means that al-Marri will remain imprisoned without
charges in the Charleston brig.
In a companion ruling, the same full court, also by a 5-to-4
decision, held that al-Marri has the right to a limited appeal
of his designation as an enemy combatant based on a civilian courts
review of the evidence against him. It found that a previous court
proceeding, in which a defense intelligence agent issued a sworn
statement asserting Marris alleged ties to al-Qaeda, supposedly
based on second and third-hand sources, did not provide an adequate
review of the governments contention that he was not entitled
to further due process.
This meager concession notwithstanding, the Justice Department
hailed the ruling as a victory, declaring that it upheld a
vital tool in protecting the nation and recognized the
presidents authority to capture and detain al-Qaeda agents
who, like the 9/11 hijackers, come to this country to commit or
facilitate warlike acts.
Al-Marri arrived in the US on September 10, 2001 to pursue
a masters degree in computer science at Peorias Bradley
University, where he had earned an undergraduate degree 10 years
earlier. He was seized from his home by the FBI and dragged away
in front of his wife and five children to be held as a material
witness in the September 11 terrorist attacks.
He was subsequently charged with credit card fraud and other
offenses, accusations that he vehemently denied. Eighteen months
after he was detained and on the eve of an evidentiary hearing
in which he was going to challenge evidence to be used against
him in an upcoming trial on the grounds that it was extracted
through torture, President Bush signed a statement declaring al-Marri
an enemy combatant. He ordered the military to seize
him from civilian authorities and imprison him in the Navy brig.
While the government claimed that he is an Al Qaeda sleeper
agent, not a shred of evidence has ever been presented to
substantiate this allegation.
He was held in the brig incommunicado for over a year and subjected
to torture. He has been denied the right to see his family for
five years, most of which have been spent in solitary confinement.
Al-Marris lawyers report that this cruel and inhumane treatment
has left him mentally unstable.
The government has claimed that the Authorization to Use Military
Force (AUMF) resolution passed by Congress in 2002 gives the president
the power to carry out such detentions. Alternately, it has asserted
that the commander in chief has unchallengeable authority
to imprison anyone without charges for the duration of a global
war on terror, which the administration itself asserts will last
for generations. These unconstitutional and dictatorial claims
were essentially upheld by the appellate court majority.
Al-Marri is the sole remaining person detained on US soil who
is being held as an enemy combatant. It had previously held Jose
Padilla, a US citizen detained at Chicagos OHare International
Airport in May 2008, under the same conditions, but then charged
him criminally in late 2005 to preempt a Supreme Court review
of his case. Another US citizen detained in Afghanistan, Yasser
Esam Hamdi, was also held as an enemy combatant until 2004, when
he was released to Saudi Arabia on condition of giving up his
US citizenship.
While in both the Padilla and Hamdi cases, the government claimed
that they could be designated as enemy combatants because they
had supposedly fought alongside the Taliban in Afghanistan, in
al-Marris case there was no such allegation. In his case,
the assertion of unrestrained power of executive detention was
extended further, to encompass anyone, including citizens and
legal residents in the US itself, on the sole say-so of the US
president that they are terrorist conspirators.
The decision of the 4th Districtconsidered the most right-wing
federal appeals court in the countrytracks closely a September
2005 ruling by another three-judge panel from the same court in
the Padilla case, which also upheld the power of the president
to arrest and indefinitely detain US citizens arrested on American
soil without charges or a trial. Because the US Supreme Court
refused to review the decision after the Bush administration charged
Padilla criminally, that ruling still stands.
The majority opinion written by Judge William Traxler, who
was appointed to the bench by President Clinton, acknowledged
that the US Constitution affords all persons detained by
the government the right to be charged and tried in a criminal
proceeding and bars the government from subjecting
individuals arrested inside the United States to military detention
unless they fall within certain narrow exceptions.
Such an exception exists, Traxler contended, if an individual
is properly designated an enemy combatant pursuant to legal
authority of the President.
Traxlers decision further spelled out that such power
extends not just to foreign residents of the US, but to US citizens
as well. He wrote, The constitutional rights our court determines
exist, or do not exist, for al-Marri will apply equally to our
own citizens under like circumstances. This means simply protections
we declare to be unavailable under the Constitution to al-Marri
might likewise be unavailable to American citizens.
In other words, all a US president has to do is sign his name
to a sheet of paper and any American citizen can be thrown into
a military prison and detained indefinitely without being charged
with a crime or given the right to a trial.
Denying the obvious, the decision claimed that upholding al-Marris
detention as an enemy combatant did not constitute part of some
pattern of surrender by a co-equal Congress and judiciary to a
rampaging executive branch. To support this contention,
it pointed to the congressional approval of various pieces of
legislation that embodied capitulation to the Bush White House,
including the AUMF blank check resolution for war, the US Patriot
Act and the Protect America Act of 2007.
Those who think these acts ceded too much power to the
executive may be right or they may be wrong, the decision
states. Whatever the case, it contends, they were produced by
votes in Congress.
Finally, the majority essentially threw up their hands in the
face of a secretive government and a supposedly omnipotent terrorist
threat. We may never know whether we have struck the proper
balance between liberty and security, because we do not know every
action the executive is taking and we do not know every threat
global terror networks have in store, the decision states.
The four justices voting in the minority supported a dissent
by Judge Diana Gribbon Motz, another Clinton appointee who authored
the three-judge panel decision last year upholding al-Marris
right to habeas corpus.
Beginning by affirming that the US Constitution has provided
a guarantee for over two centuries that in the United States,
no one will be deprived of liberty without due process of law,
Motzs opinion spells out the gross violation of basic rights
in the case of al-Marri since he was seized by the military more
than five years ago:
He has been held by the military ever sincewithout
criminal charge or process. He has been so held, despite the fact
that he was initially taken from his home in Peoria, Illinois,
by civilian authorities and imprisoned awaiting trial for purported
domestic crimes. He has been so held, although the Government
has never alleged that he is a member of any nations military,
has fought alongside any nations armed forces, or has borne
arms against the United States anywhere in the world. And he has
been so held, without acknowledgment of the protection afforded
by the Constitution, solely because the Executive believes that
his indefinite military detentionor even the indefinite
military detention of a similarly situated American citizenis
proper.
Motz insists: No existing law permits this extraordinary
exercise of executive power. Even in times of
national peril, we must follow the law, lest this country cease
to be a nation of laws.
Continuing with an implicit warning that the governments
actions and their validation by the appeals court decision pose
the threat of a dictatorship in the United States, Motz writes:
To sanction such presidential authority to order the
military to seize and indefinitely detain civilians, even if the
President calls them enemy combatants, would have
disastrous consequences for the Constitutionand the country.
For a court to uphold a claim to such extraordinary power would
do more than render lifeless the Suspension Clause, the Due Process
Clause, and the rights to criminal process in the Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth, and Eighth Amendments; it would effectively undermine all
of the freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution.
It is that powerwere a court to recognize itthat
could lead all our laws to go unexecuted, and the government
itself to go to pieces. We refuse to recognize a claim to
power that would so alter the constitutional foundations of our
Republic.
The lawyer representing al-Marri, Jonathan Hafetz, said that
the courts decision effectively allows the president
to seize any person in the United States, a citizen or noncitizen,
and detain them indefinitely without trial. The courts
action, he continued, cripples the most important constitutional
right of all, the right to be charged and tried if suspected of
wrongdoing. He said he was considering an appeal of the
ruling.
By ordering a new hearing on the evidence supporting al-Marris
detention as an enemy combatant, Hafetz said, the courts
majority had rejected the presidents most sweeping
claims of unchecked and unreviewable executive detention power.
However, the rights granted al-Marri by the decision are extremely
circumscribed and far less than those enjoyed by any criminal
defendant in the US. The court found that he is entitled under
the so-called burden-shifting scheme laid out in the Supreme Court
decision in the Hamdi decision to contest the governments
contention that the balance of the competing interests weighs
on the side of lessened due process protections. The appeals
court majority found that al-Marri had been denied the right to
contest these diminished protections, which were imposed by a
lower court as a matter of course.
See Also:
US appeals court emphatically overturns
military tribunal ruling
[2 July 2008]
A travesty of justice:
Jose Padilla found guilty
[17 August 2007]
Supreme Court shirks
Padilla appeal against enemy combatant detention
[5 April 2006]
Court upholds power
of White House to jail citizens as enemy combatants
[13 September 2005]
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