FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - As the House Armed Services Committee met today to consider the
procedures for criminal trials of detainees held by the federal government, the
American Civil Liberties Union urged lawmakers to ensure that any resulting
legislation include the most basic due process protections valued by all
Americans.
"The Supreme Court rightly recognized that the rule of law is vital, even
during times of conflict," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU
Washington Legislative Office. "The military commissions created by President
Bush do not provide a fair trial under any recognized set of legal standards,
and that includes the Constitution, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and
the Geneva Conventions. As Congress deals with this issue, it must create a
system that provides basic due process of law and will withstand judicial
scrutiny."
Congressional review of the detention issue was sparked by the Supreme
Court’s recent ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that President Bush
overstepped his authority when he created military commissions to try detainees
held at Guantanamo. The military commission rules did not conform with federal
law because they violated the basic protections of Common Article 3 of the
Geneva Conventions.
Specifically, the military commissions did not allow the defendant to see the
evidence against him, did not prohibit the use of coerced testimony, allowed the
use of hearsay evidence that would never be allowed in a typical criminal trial,
and did not require prosecutors to provide exculpatory evidence to the
defendant. Without these basic protections, there would be little certainly
about a defendant’s actual guilt or innocence.
The ACLU argued, and the Supreme Court decided, that this system failed to
provide the basic procedural safeguards guaranteed by the Geneva Conventions,
which are part of American law. However, some administration officials have
urged Congress to "ratify" the illegal military commissions, with the New
York Times reporting today that the White House has drafted such language.
The ACLU urged the Committee to question the witnesses from the Defense
Department on the pervasive problems with the draft White House bill.
In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee two weeks ago, the
Judge Advocates General for the four services urged close adherence to the
court-martial system that the Supreme Court found provides sufficient due
process protections. There is more agreement on the application of the Geneva
Conventions as both the Department of Defense and the attorney general stated
the protections of Common Article 3 must be afforded to detainees held both by
the Defense Department and the CIA.
"The administration is veering back and forth between complying with and
violating the requirements set out by the Supreme Court last month," said
Christopher Anders, an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "To its credit, the
administration reversed course and is now applying basic Geneva Conventions
protections to all detainees, but its latest proposal would gut the Geneva
Conventions and violate the due process rights that all Americans cherish. It’s
time for Congress to insist the federal government follows the rule of
law."
The ACLU Letter to the House Armed Services Committee is
available at: www.aclu.org/safefree/detention/26243leg20060726.html