ACLU Urges Senate to Reject Draft White House Proposal on Detainees (8/2/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union urged lawmakers to ensure
that any legislation regarding criminal trials of detainees being held
indefinitely by the federal government includes the basic due process
protections valued by all Americans. Both the Senate Armed Services and
Judiciary Committees met today to examine the issue. Top government officials,
including Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon
England and the Judge Advocates General for the four armed services testified
today on the administration's position.
"Even during times of conflict, Americans expect the president and Congress
to uphold and respect the rule of law," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of
the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "The Supreme Court recognized the
military commissions created by President Bush violated the law. Congress must
reject any proposal that fails to meet the recognized legal standards embodied
in the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions."
In late June, the Supreme Court found in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that the
military commissions at Guantanamo created by President Bush were invalid. The
court said that the rules violated Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions
regarding the treatment of detainees being held indefinitely.
The White House has circulated draft legislation that would essentially
ratify the illegal military commissions, and fail to meet the standards
prescribed by the Supreme Court. Specifically, the White House proposal would:
gut the enforceability of important Geneva Convention protections; allow the
use of evidence obtained through cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment during
interrogations; take the unprecedented step of allowing the federal government
to convict a defendant based on secret evidence; bar a defendant from being
present at his own trial; and allow the use of the types of hearsay evidence
banned from every military and civilian court in America.
Even if such legislation
is enacted, the ACLU said, the Supreme Court would likely invalidate it.
In recent testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, the Judge Advocates
General for the four military services urged close adherence to the court-martial
procedures, a system the Supreme Court found provides sufficient due process
protections. Additionally, both the Department of Defense and the Attorney
General stated the protections of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions
must be afforded to detainees held both by the Defense Department and the
CIA.
"After being rebuked by the Supreme Court, the White House finally agreed
that basic Geneva protections apply to all detainees, but now it seeks to
undermine those protections," said Christopher Anders, an ACLU Legislative
Counsel. "As Congress deals with this issue, it must enact changes consistent
with the due process rights that all Americans cherish. Lawmakers shouldn't
waste their time working on proposals that the Supreme Court will overturn."
The ACLU Letter on the draft White House proposal on detainees
is available at:
www.aclu.org/safefree/general/26301leg20060731.html
|