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Citizen Padilla: Dangerous precedents.
National Review Online ^ | June 24, 2002 | Robert A. Levy

Posted on 06/24/2002 7:16:31 AM PDT by xsysmgr

Jose Padilla, a.k.a. Abdullah al-Muhajir, supposedly plotted to build and detonate a radiological "dirty bomb." He is a U.S. citizen. Yet he's being detained by the military — indefinitely, without seeing an attorney, even though he hasn't been charged with any crime. Yaser Esam Hamdi is also a U.S. citizen. He, too, is being detained by the military — indefinitely, without seeing an attorney, even though he hasn't been charged with any crime. Meanwhile, Zacarias Moussaoui, purportedly the 20th hijacker, is not a U.S. citizen. Neither is Richard Reid, the alleged shoe bomber. Both have attorneys. Both have been charged before federal civilian courts.

What gives? Four men: two citizens and two non-citizens. Is it possible that constitutional rights — like habeas corpus, which requires the government to justify continued detentions, and the Sixth Amendment, which assures a speedy and public jury trial with assistance of counsel — can be denied to citizens yet extended to non-citizens? That's what the Bush administration would have us believe. Citizen Padilla's treatment is perfectly legitimate, insists Attorney General John Ashcroft, because Padilla is an "enemy combatant" and there is "clear Supreme Court precedent" to handle those persons differently, even if they are citizens.

Ashcroft's so-called clear precedent is a 1942 Supreme Court case, Ex Parte Quirin, which dealt with Nazi saboteurs, at least one of whom was a U.S. citizen. "Enemy combatants," said the Court, are either lawful — for example, the regular army of a belligerent country — or unlawful — for example, terrorists. When lawful combatants are captured, they are POWs. As POWs, they cannot be tried (except for war crimes), they must be repatriated after hostilities are over, and they only have to provide their name, rank, and serial number if interrogated. Clearly, that's not what the Justice Department has in mind for Padilla.

Unlawful combatants are different. When unlawful combatants are captured, they can be tried by a military tribunal. That's what happened to the Nazi saboteurs in Quirin. But Padilla has not been charged much less tried. Indeed, the president's executive order of November 2001 excludes U.S. citizens from the purview of military tribunals. If the president were to modify his order, the Quirin decision might provide legal authority for the military to try Padilla. But the decision provides no legal authority for detaining a citizen without an attorney solely for purposes of aggressive interrogation.

Moreover, the Constitution does not distinguish between the protections extended to ordinary citizens on one hand and unlawful-combatant citizens on the other. Nor does the Constitution distinguish between the crimes covered by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments and the terrorist acts Padilla is suspected of planning. Still, the Quirin Court justified those distinctions — noting that Congress had formally declared war and thereby invoked articles of war that expressly authorized the trial of unlawful combatants by military tribunal. Today, the situation is very different. We've had virtually no input from Congress: no declaration of war, no authorization of tribunals, and no suspension of habeas corpus.

Yet those functions are explicitly assigned to Congress by Article I of the Constitution. It is Congress, not the executive branch, which has the power "To declare War" and "To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court." Only Congress can suspend the "Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus … when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it." Congress has not spoken — except by enacting the USA Patriot Act. And there, we do find authorization for detention of persons suspected of terrorism — but only non-citizens and only for seven days, after which they must be released unless criminal charges are filed or deportation proceedings commenced.

Without either constitutional or statutory authority, the administration has decided that it will set the rules, prosecute infractions, determine guilt or innocence, then review the results of its own actions. That's too much unchecked power in the hands of the executive branch — making a mockery of the doctrine of separation of powers that has been a cornerstone of our Constitution for two-and-a-quarter centuries. Even persons convinced that President Bush cherishes civil liberties and understands that the Constitution is not mere scrap paper, must be unsettled by the prospect that an unknown and less honorable successor could exploit some of the dangerous precedents that the Bush administration has put in place.

In a nutshell, we cannot permit the executive branch to declare unilaterally that a U.S. citizen may be characterized as an enemy combatant, whisked away, detained indefinitely without charges, denied legal counsel, and prevented from arguing to a judge that he is wholly innocent.

That does not mean the Justice Department must set people free to unleash weapons of mass destruction. But it does mean, at a minimum, that Congress must get involved, exercising its responsibility to enact a new legal regimen for citizen-detainees in time of national emergency. That regimen must respect citizens' rights under the Constitution, including the right to judicial review of executive branch decisions. Constitutional rights are not absolute. But they do establish a strong presumption of liberty, which can be overridden only if government demonstrates, first, that its restrictions are essential and, second, that the goals it seeks to accomplish cannot be accomplished in a less invasive manner. When the executive, legislative, and judicial branches agree on the framework, the potential for abuse is significantly diminished. When only the executive has acted, the foundation of a free society can too easily erode.

— Robert A. Levy is senior fellow in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute.


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS: civilliberties; governmentpower
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To: ThomasJefferson
hey @sshole, your posts inspire a great quote from Louis L'Amour- a great American whose shadow you'd recoil from,

"A mind, like a home, is furnished by its owner, so if one's life is cold and bare he can blame none but himself.

It's obvious to many what you inspire. How's the Chicago LP doing lately, Matt?

101 posted on 07/06/2002 8:57:41 PM PDT by DemoSmear
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To: DemoSmear
If you can't tell a follow-on, then you really are in pathetic shape. LOL
102 posted on 07/06/2002 9:34:47 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck
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To: HiTech RedNeck
I suppose in a drunken stupor, your comment makes sense somewhere to someone. oh, and LOL.
103 posted on 07/06/2002 9:45:51 PM PDT by DemoSmear
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To: HiTech RedNeck
A follow-on, oh I get it. One of your multiple choice, idiot "choose me I'm a real post" responses. Yes, I am pathetic for not getting that sooner. Hint, concise and precise. 1 post beats all. Now you're talking. That is, if you're speaking to someone besides yourself...
104 posted on 07/06/2002 10:13:18 PM PDT by DemoSmear
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To: DemoSmear
How's the Chicago LP doing lately, Matt?

Lots of time on your hands you little twit? The thread and your nonsensical threats are now 10 days old, go spank your monkey somewhere else.

PS, I'm not Matt. He wouldn't even bother to engage imbeciles like you.

105 posted on 07/07/2002 7:29:42 AM PDT by Protagoras
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