Tags: rule of law

06/18/08

Permalink 12:18:43 am, Categories: GWOT , Tags: boumediene v bush, detainees, guantanamo, habeas corpus, rule of law

Originally Published June 18, 2007; Updated and Republished June 18, 2008:

Please read, study, and cherish the United States Supreme Court (US) fragile opinion1 of Boumediene v Bush (06-1195 pdf 650K)—it repels a coordinated constitutional usurpation that make the Nixonian usurpation and abuses look like a grade-school exercise.

"The [Habeas Corpus Suspension] Clause is designed to protect against cyclical abuses2 of the writ by the Executive and Legislative Branches." --US, 06-1195, 553 U. S. ____ (2008), dicta--

Web:

  • UPDATED 06/18/2008 Audio, Diane Rehm discusses Boumediene v Bush with Shayana Kadidal (managing attorney Guantanamo Global Justice Initiative), Glenn Sulmasy, John Hutson, Kori Schake

    It is amazing that McCain would criticize Boumediene, a decision which will lessen the likelihood of unjust or illegal or torturous detentions, which characterizes his own Vietnam detention.

    Those in the administration who wrongfully and cynically tried to shoehorn terrorism into a war paradigm in order to justify their cruel, inhumane, and torturous behavior ought not to be heard to complain when they're latter jerked up short by our United States Supreme Court and the Rule of Law.

    Most of us are still wondering how it is that that it takes $2 trillion dollars (and growing), alienation of the entire world, starting two wars (and maybe a third) to fetch and jail several thousand terrorists (most then centralized in Afghanistan and Pakistan but now fully decentralized and dispersed).

    The administration's cynical abuse of the war paradigm has increased the number of terrorists while decentralizing and dispersing them, thereby making us more unsafe. It has also made law enforcement’s job much more complicated and difficult. Furthermore, it has reduced the multinational cooperation we so desperately need to reduce and eliminate terrorism.

Res:

-----notes-----

1. The constitutional usurpers (many working behind the scene) are unlikely to pay more than lip service to this opinion.

Only their complete removal and restricted access to power will repel further attacks on our powerful, majestic Constitution and its pluralistic representative form of government.

2. We owe a great debt of gratitude to organizations like Center for Constitutional Rights, ACLU, and NACDL all persistently worked to mitigate these “cyclical abuses”. Individuals like Michael Ratner, Joseph Margulies, Charles Swift, Linda Greenhouse, Neal Katyal, Norman Reimer, Anthony Romero, Karen Greenberg, and many more were early into the fight and haven't left, yet...just in case the administration reads the Supreme Court dicta "cyclical abuses" as "cynical abuses"!

05/12/08

Originally Published April 30, 2008; Updated and Republished May 12, 2008:

UPDATED 05/12/2008 "One of the charges against King George III in the Declaration of Independence was 'altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments.' The oath of Allegiance for New Citizens requires: 'I will support and defend the Constitution and the laws of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic ... and bear true faith and allegiance to the same.' But how can that oath be honored if American citizens, new and old, do not know 'the legal standards under which the government is actually operating at any given moment?'

...Among the enormous responsibilities of the next president and Congress will be to restore the rule of law, and not incidentally, the Constitution on which it stands — and let the sunshine in!"--Nat Hentoff, May 2008 (see below for entire article)--

Today, the Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Constitution held hearings on “Secret Law and the Threat to Democratic and Accountable Government”.

According to Rivkin liberty balances order—a dubious proposition—not receiving an answer to a question may be a strong indication that the wrong question is being asked.(see Rivkin's testimony)

Congressional Hearing Room Pic
Click for Video

In any event not getting an answer to a question most certainly does not indicate that you've asked a correct question.

It's time to objectively examine whether secrecy equates to candid advice and whether candid advice is preferable to impartial, accurate, and accountable advice (see Elwood's testimony).

Was it really candid for John Yoo to opine that torture equates with major organ failure and anything you do short of organ failure is not torture? Were David Addington, Richard Cheney, and William Haynes really looking for candid advice or setting up their patsy?

  • Steven Aftergood - director, Project on Government Secrecy, Federation of American Scientists

    “...Secret law that is inaccessible to the public is inherently antithetical to democracy and foreign to the tradition of open publication that has characterized most of American legal history...”--Aftergood--

  • Bradford Berenson - partner, Sidley Austin LLP

    "...Recent advances in information technology have made more information available to more people than ever before in human history, and this has greatly magnified the advantages accruing to a society such as ours that values openness, criticism, and debate.

    Because openness is such a venerable American strength, we all have an understandable tendency to regard secrecy of any sort, and especially governmental secrecy, with suspicion and distrust. This conventional wisdom was well expressed recently by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit when it said, “Democracies die behind closed doors.” Detroit Free Press v. Ashcroft, 303 F.3d 681, 683 (6th Cir. 2002)..."--Berenson--

  • Dawn Johnsen - professor, Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington, Ind., and former acting assistant attorney general for the office of legal counsel

    “...Excessive executive branch secrecy undoubtedly threatens the proper functioning of our constitutional democracy...”--Johnsen--

  • Heidi Kitrosser - associate professor of law, University of Minnesota Law School, Minneapolis, Minn.

    “...over the past several years, we have seen a disturbing trend whereby the executive branch has taken its structural capacities to secretly implement law and abused them to secretly make new law and to circumvent established law. The damage of this trend is exacerbated by the fact that the executive branch has circumvented not only substantive law but also procedural law, such as statutory mandates to share information with Congress.”--Kitrosser--

  • J. William Leonard - former director, Information Security Oversight Office, Leonardtown, Md.

    "...The March 14, 2003 memorandum on interrogation of enemy combatants was written by DoJs Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) to the General Counsel of the DoD [John Yoo’s tragic torture memo]. By virtue of the memorandum’s classification markings, the America people were initially denied access to it. Only after the document was declassified were my fellow citizens and I able to review it for the first time. Upon doing so, I was profoundly disappointed because this memorandum represents one of the worst abuses of the classification process that I had seen during my career, including the past five years when I had the authority to access more classified information than almost any other person in the Executive branch.”--Leonard--

  • David Rivkin - partner, Baker Hostetler

    “...In my view, modern democracies are not capable of sustaining protracted military engagements without the legitimacy afforded by the laws of war...I frequently pose the following question: If you don’t like how the Bush Administration has altered the peacetime balance between liberty and order, how would you alter the balance? I have never received a serious answer...”--Rivkin--

  • John P. Elwood, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel

    "...Protecting the confidentiality of OLC opinions helps ensure that decision makers will be willing to seek legal advice before they act. Indeed, without confidentiality, officials may be reluctant to seek our advice at precisely those critical times when it is most needed.

    Confidentiality also helps to ensure that the legal advice that policymakers receive will be completely candid..."--Elwood--

Web:

05/03/08

Originally published on March 07, 2008; Updated and Republished on May 03, 2008:

FBI Director Muller, appeared before Congress this week promising there will be no more mea culpa for the FBI’s misuse of National Security Letters (NSL)—the "Ouantico Circuit" has been working better than expected.

Web:

  • UPDATED 05/03/2008 Seattle Post-Intelligence, Expectation of privacy a precious right (opinion by Babak Pasdar) Turns out Muller has more data than he knows what to do with—only one problem he needs a way to legally use it.

    NSLs have likely been nothing more than cover for using already intercepted data, but what if an NSL cannot provide cover?

    Look for Muller et al. to propose legislation "blessing" the current method of intercepting data, without probable cause, AND to grandfather in the billions of bits already illegally intercepted!

  • WP, FBI Data Transfers Via Telecoms Questioned What a great article by Ellen Nakashima. Describes the issues on a topic of great interest and ramification in a short, precise, and readable way.
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