Blog of Rights

Ben
Wizner

Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU’s Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving post-9/11 civil liberties abuses, including challenges to airport security policies, government watchlists, extraordinary rendition, and torture. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantánamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law and was a law clerk to the Hon. Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.

Guantánamo: The Road to Closure, Part II

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 12:50pm
Part II: Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Military Commissions Act, and Boumediene v. Bush

The Hamdan case, which reached the Supreme Court in 2006, involved two critical and distinct legal issues. Salim Ahmed Hamdan,

No Books, No Tours, No Hearings

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 3:23pm
We had expected to depart Guantanamo on Tuesday morning, but David Hicks's plea and upcoming sentencing hearing have thrown the schedule out the window, and no one seems to know when the proceedings will be completed. Reporters, human rights observers, and even military escorts have been trading rumors and speculation – but, for the time being, the only certainty is that today will be the th

Coming Soon: More Injustice at Gitmo

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 10:05am
Even as we await proceedings that will likely determine the particulars of David Hicks's return to Australia, we received the dismal news on Monday night that the United States had transferred a new detainee to Guantanamo. He is, the Pentagon maintains, a "dangerous terror suspect" named Abdul Malik who allegedly tried to shoot

A Tailor-Made Guilty Plea

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 9:38am
It was an extraordinary, though typically chaotic, day at the Guantánamo Military Commissions. David Hicks began the proceedings with three lawyers sitting beside him at counsel table. After a series of dubious rulings by the trial judge, he ended the day with only one. Hours later, Read More»

Amid Public Pentagon Doubts, Gitmo Trials Resume

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 8:16am
Today the military tribunals at Guantánamo Bay -- which were halted last June by the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld -- will recommence under flawed new rules authorized by Congress in the disgraceful Military Commissions Act.

Monday's arraignment of Australian David Hicks may well mark the beginning,

Then Things Got Interesting...

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 3:45pm
Although the detainee who appeared in the Commission room today, Saudi citizen Ghassan Abdullah Al Sharbi, speaks fluent English, it has never been more apparent that the detainee and the Commission participants are speaking different languages. In riveting exchanges with Presiding Officer Daniel O'Toole, Al Sharbi made plain that he has fought again

A Day of Firsts

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 7:20pm

One of the unintentional virtues of a legal system operating without clear rules is that it's rarely dull. Today was no exception. It was yet another day of firsts.

The Military Commissions featured their very first witness – a balding and burly officer identified colorfully as "Colonel B." The pseudonym left some seasoned Commission observers, including members of the media, scratching their heads, because Colonel B is no mystery man. He is widely known as the officer in charge of custody operations here and has given media tours under his full name – which remained emblazoned on his uniform throughout today's proceedings.

At issue today were the conditions of confinement to which the accused, Algerian citizen Sufyan Barhoumi, has been subjected for the last month. Mr. Barhoumi, like Mr. Al Qahtani, is accused of conspiracy for his alleged participation in al Qaeda explosives training. He is missing all but one finger on his left hand -- the result, he explained during a so-called "Combat Status Review Tribunal," of an accidental landmine explosion in 1997. During that prior tribunal, he emphatically denied al Qaeda membership and insisted that he traveled to Afghanistan in 1999 to train for battle against the Russians in Chechnya.

Barhoumi's military defense counsel, Captain Wade Faulkner, initiated today's hearing by challenging the transfer of Barhoumi from "Camp 4" to "Camp 5," and Colonel B was called to the stand to explain the circumstances of that transfer. Camp 4, Colonel B explained, is where most of the "highly compliant" detainees are housed. It is a medium security facility where detainees live and eat communally – "like a family picnic" – and have 10 to 14 hours of time outside the block and regular access to sports facilities. Camp 5, in contrast, is a traditional maximum security facility, where detainees are confined to their cells for all but two hours each day, and can communicate with the outside world only through a 12-inch "bean hole" in the door through which meals, mail, and other items are passed. For almost a year, until last month, Barhoumi was housed in Camp 4. Then, without warning or explanation, he was transferred to Camp 5.

Captain Faulkner wanted to know why his client was being subjected to what he reasonably considered to be punitive conditions. Colonel B – a straightforward witness taken to saying "negative" for "no" and "vo co" for "vocal command" – offered two reasons. First, he explained, the detention system was being reorganized, and he needed the space in Camp 4. This produced an exchange rich in tautology. Did Barhoumi's presence in Camp 4, Captain Faulkner inquired, interfere with Colonel B's reorganization plans? Yes, Colonel B replied.

Faulkner: How?
Colonel B: I need the space in Camp 4 for another detainee.
Faulkner: Why not move the other detainee to Camp 5, instead of moving Mr. Barhoumi?
Colonel B: Because the other detainee has been highly compliant and deserves to be in Camp 4.
Faulkner: Hasn't Mr. Barhoumi been highly compliant?
Colonel B: Yes.
The second reason for moving Barhoumi to Camp 5, according to Colonel B, was that Army regulations, as well as the Third Geneva Convention – though they had "not quite caught up with the environment" at Guantanamo – suggested that the separation of "pretrial detainees" from the general population was required. This was exactly backwards. Army regulations, consistent with the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, require that pretrial detainees – that is, those who have not yet been convicted of a crime – be afforded greater rights than those already convicted. Any separation from the general population is effected in order to ensure that detainees awaiting trial are not subjected to any punishment prior to adjudication of guilt or innocence.

Oral Argument Gives No Clear Indication

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 6:12pm

Today's 90-minute oral argument in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld gave no clear indication of how the Court will rule, or even which questions it will choose to answer. Chief Justice Roberts was recused, and Justice Thomas characteristically silent, but the remaining seven justices were active in their questioning, particularly of Solicitor General Paul Clement. Experienced Court observers seem to have concluded that it was a tough day for the government; you can read two interesting accounts on SCOTUSblog and in the LA Times.

What's at Stake in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 9:13am

In August of 2003, in a federal courtroom in San Francisco, a lawyer for the United States made an alarming statement. The court, the lawyer argued, was completely powerless to rule on the legitimacy of the Administration's detention policies at Guantanamo Bay: detainees could be held without charge or trial, without access to lawyers, and without any recognized rights under U.S. or international law. Would this be the case, the judges inquired, "even if the claims were that [the government] was engaging in acts of torture or that it was summarily executing the detainees?" Yes, replied the government lawyer. The judges were incredulous. "To our knowledge," they wrote, "prior to the current detention of prisoners at Guantanamo, the U.S. government has never before asserted such a grave and startling proposition." Gherebi v. Bush, 374 F.3d 727, 738 (9th Cir. 2004). (PDF file.)

Greetings from Guantanamo

By Ben Wizner, Director, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 8:15pm
The Guantanamo Military Commissions will reconvene on Wednesday, January 11 - four years to the day since the arrival of the first detainees at Camp X-Ray. Since then, more than 700 men and boys have been held here, and 505 remain in detention, in nearly complete isolation from the world. (Not so, assures my Visitor Handbook: "To date, the detainees
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