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Just Say "No" to Indefinite DetentionThis week's New Yorker features a story by the incomparable Jane Mayer about the ACLU's case on behalf of Ali al-Marri, which will be heard by the Supreme Court in April, barring any Obama administration actions like dropping the "enemy combatant" classification and reclassifying, charging him as a civilian, and renouncing the asserted executive detention power. Mayer writes of the al-Marri case to frame the larger puzzle the Obama administration now faces: how to handle the detainees left to him by President Bush, and how those actions will (or will not) square with our current president's declarations against indefinite detention: The Obama Administration’s strategy in the Marri case will almost certainly establish legal principles that will have ramifications for future cases, as well as for the two hundred and forty or so similarly designated “unlawful enemy combatants” held in the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. During the Bush years, the designation encompassed not just members of Al Qaeda and the Taliban but also anyone who associated with them, supported them, or supported organizations associated with them, even if unwittingly. In 2004, a Bush Administration lawyer told a judge that, in theory, an enemy combatant could even be “a little old lady in Switzerland” whose charitable donations had been channelled, without her awareness, to Al Qaeda front groups.Mayer discusses the specter of the creation of a national security court to deal with the remaining Gitmo detainees and al-Marri. We're against it, but don't just take our word for it — Mayer gives voice to some excellent rebuttals to the need for such a court: James Benjamin, a former federal prosecutor in the Southern District of New York…co-wrote a review of the Marri case, characterizing the switch to military detention as counterproductive. “Definitely, the criminal-justice system can handle someone like Marri,” he told me. “They caught him under the criminal-justice system. And, based on what we know, they were poised to convict him.” What happened to Marri before he was moved “proves the system was up to it.”Lederman's piece can be found in its entirety here. You can also read 18 friend-of-the-court briefs filed on behalf of al-Marri that argue in favor of the ACLU's position here. When President Obama issued the executive order (PDF) asking the Supreme Court to grant the government a 30-day extension to file its brief in the al-Marri case, we took it as a good sign that the new administration is thoroughly reviewing the previous administration's claim that a U.S. resident can be detained indefinitely without trial. We hope President Obama disagrees with that assertion, and returns al-Marri's case back to a federal court, which is where it started, and where it belongs if the government is going to continue to detain him. Tags: Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, Close Guantanamo, indefinite detention, national security project
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3 Responses to "Just Say "No" to Indefinite Detention" |
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Feb 19th, 2009 at 8:58pm
should begin process on another state to kill the imates who couldnt get the rights and life staighten . usually this term nigger straightens out , who and what ethnic we are disscusing. african american males ,they are to be placed on a firing range anyway according to there own ways .
Feb 21st, 2009 at 4:51am
fred, your post is incomprehensible. On the one hand I seem to see a lot of racism in it against African-Americans. But that was not the subject of the blog post.
So...where is this coming from?
If we do not recognize rights for people we dislike - those rights cease to exist for the rest of us as well. You would be wiser to take heed of that.
May 21st, 2009 at 11:04pm
1st, WTF Fred... if you are going to spout hate at least use proper spelling.
2nd, On the subject… what do you think about the speech Obama gave today, 05/21/2009? While the “rule of law” part was right on the mark, he then went on to outline setting up the law to allow preventive, indefinite detention. SCARY! That’s right, let’s make it legal to imprison people with no evidence, no trial, nothing… but what we think they “may” do.
Well, JUST SAY NO! This is not the change we can believe in!