Fwd: [T3] showdown on Habeas Corpus:
From: Patty Guerrero (pattypaxearthlink.net)
Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2006 16:50:59 -0700 (PDT)
If some of you missed cspan today and Sen. Leahy's speech, it was great. I pass it on to you. There are good people in congress. He is one. patty

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From: Patty Guerrero <pattypax [at] earthlink.net>
Date: Thu Sep 28, 2006  6:53:41 PM US/Central
To: Patty Guerrero <pattypax [at] earthlink.net>
Subject: Fwd: [T3] showdown on Habeas Corpus:



Begin forwarded message:

Showdown Over Habeas

Sen. Patrick Leahy

September 26, 2006

Sen. Patrick Leahy is the ranking Democratic member of the Judiciary
Committee. This is the text of his statement to the panel from Monday,
September 25, 2006.


For weeks now, politicians and the media have breathlessly debated the
fine points and political implications of the so-called "compromise"
on proposed trial procedures for suspected terrorists . In doing so,
we have ignored a central and more sweeping issue. Important as the
rules for military commissions are, they will apply to only a few
cases. The administration has charged a total of 10 people in the
nearly five years since the president declared his intention to use
military commissions, and it recently announced plans to charge 14
additional men. But for the vast majority of the almost 500 prisoners
at Guantánamo, the administration’s position remains as stated by
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld three years ago: It has no interest in
trying them.


Today we are belatedly addressing the single most consequential
provision of this much-discussed bill, a provision that can be found
buried on page 81 of the proposed bill. This provision would
perpetuate the indefinite detention of hundreds of individuals against
whom the government has brought no charges and presented no evidence,
without any recourse to justice whatsoever. That is un-American, and
it is contrary to American interests.


Going forward, the bill departs even more radically from our most
fundamental values. It would permit the president to detain
indefinitely—even for life—any alien, whether in the United States or
abroad, whether a foreign resident or a lawful permanent resident,
without any meaningful opportunity for the alien to challenge his
detention. The administration would not even need to assert, much less
prove, that the alien was an enemy combatant; it would suffice that
the alien was "awaiting [a] determination" on that issue. In other
words, the bill would tell the millions of legal immigrants living in
America, participating in American families, working for American
businesses, and paying American taxes, that our government may at any
minute pick them up and detain them indefinitely without charge, and
without any access to the courts or even to military tribunals, unless
and until the government determines that they are not enemy > combatants.


Detained indefinitely, and unaccountably, until proven innocent. Like
Canadian citizen Maher Arar . As the Canadian government recently
concluded in a detailed and candid report, there is no evidence that
Mr. Arar ever committed a crime or posed a threat to U.S. or Canadian
security. Yet, while returning home to Canada from a family vacation,
he was detained, interrogated, and then shipped off to a torture cell
in Syria by the Bush-Cheney administration. While the Canadian
government has now documented that the wrong thing was done to the
wrong man, the Bush-Cheney administration has, as usual, evaded all
accountability by hiding behind a purported state secrets privilege.

The administration’s defenders would like to believe that Mr. Arar’s
case is an isolated blunder, but it is not. Numerous press accounts
have quoted administration officials who believe that a significant
percentage of those detained at Guantánamo have no connection to
terrorism. In other words, we have been holding for several years, and
intend to hold indefinitely without trial or any recourse to justice,
a substantial number of innocent people who were picked up by mistake
in the fog of war.


The most important purpose of habeas corpus is to correct errors like
that. It is precisely to prevent such abuses that the Constitution
prohibits the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus "unless when in
Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it." I
have no doubt that this bill, which would permanently eliminate the
writ of habeas for all aliens within and outside the United States
whenever the government says they might be enemy combatants, violates
that prohibition. And I have no doubt that the Supreme Court would
ultimately conclude that this attempt by the Bush-Cheney
administration to abolish basic liberties and evade essential judicial
review and accountability is unconstitutional.


It would be utterly irresponsible for Congress to neglect our oath to
the Constitution and the American people and pass this
unconstitutional legislation in the hope that the court will
ultimately rescue us from our folly. Doing so would only undermine the
War on Terror by prolonging the legal limbo into which the
administration has dragged the entire regime of military detentions.


We should have put military detentions on a solid legal footing and
established military tribunals four years ago. I introduced a bill in
2002 to authorize military commissions. So did Senator Specter. But
the White House and the Republican leadership ignored us, choosing
instead to roll the dice and hope that it could prevail on its radical
go-it-alone theories of presidential power.


The Bush-Cheney administration got a rude awakening earlier this year
in the Hamdan case. The Supreme Court—which happens to include seven
Republican appointees in its nine justices—affirmed what we had told
it all along: when the terrorists brought down the Twin Towers on
9/11, they did not bring down the rule of law on which our system of
government is founded. They did not supplant our republican form of
government with one in which an unaccountable executive can imprison
people forever without trial or judicial review.

On its way to losing that case, the administration wasted four years.
Actually, it did more than waste four years. Just yesterday the press
reported what the administration has been misrepresenting to the
American people and what was apparently confirmed in a National
Intelligence Estimate: That the invasion and continuing U.S. military
presence in Iraq has created a new generation of anti-American
terrorists, that the terrorist threat against the U.S. has grown and,
according to intelligence officials, that the Iraq war has "made the
overall terrorism problem worse." Meanwhile, having failed to try a
single detainee, and having failed to secure a conviction of a single
terrorist offense, the administration is demanding that we pass a bill
it drafted last week before the end of this week.


The administration’s sudden and belated haste to move ahead makes no
sense, other than as a matter of crass electoral politics. We are
taking a first look at a bill that the administration claims is
central to the decisive ideological battle of the 21st Century, a bill
that would suspend habeas corpus for the first time since the Civil
War, and a bill that, if enacted, will almost certainly be used by
America’s enemies as a pretext for the torture and indefinite
detention without judicial review of Americans abroad.


If the administration and the Republican leadership of the Senate
believe that suspending the writ is constitutional and justified, they
should grant the joint request that Chairman Specter and I made last
week for a sequential referral of the bill. Constitutional issues
involving the writ of habeas corpus are at the center of this
Committee’s jurisdiction. We can and should review this legislation
thoroughly, and if a few habeas petitions are filed in the meantime,
we will not lose the War on Terror as a result of those filings. If
this Congress votes to suspend the writ of habeas corpus first and ask
questions later, liberty and accountability will be the victims.




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