FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union expressed distress as the
Senate adopted S.3930, the Military Commissions Act of 2006. That bill is
identical to legislation adopted by the House yesterday, and removes important
checks on the president by: failing to protect due process, eliminating habeas
corpus for many detainees, undermining enforcement of the Geneva Conventions,
and giving a "get out of jail free card" to senior officials who authorized or
ordered illegal torture and abuse.
"This legislation gives the president new unchecked powers to detain, abuse,
and try people at Guantanamo Bay and other government facilities around the
world," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office. "Unfortunately for America, the Senate chose not to deliberate today.
Instead, it joined the House and President Bush in jamming through a hastily
written bill before running home to try to campaign."
Senators rejected several amendments that would have corrected shortcomings
in the legislation. The bill gives the president license to weaken enforcement
of the basic protections in Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions. As
passed, the president would have new power to decide much of the scope of
authorized conduct and the severity of punishment, giving him unparalleled power
to unilaterally determine whether the government can carry out cruelty and
abuse.
Additionally, the bill undermines the American value of due process by
permitting convictions based on evidence literally beaten out of a witness or
obtained through other abuse by either our government or other countries.
Government officials who authorized or ordered illegal acts of torture and abuse
would receive retroactive immunity for many of these acts, providing a "get out
of jail free" card that is backdated nine years.
In the closest vote today, the Senate rejected by a 51-48 vote an amendment
by Senators Arlen Specter (R-PA) and Patrick Leahy (D-VT) to preserve minimal
protections of the courts in their historical and constitutional role as a check
on the executive branch, through habeas corpus.
"Nothing could be less American than a government that can indefinitely hold
people in secret torture cells, take away their protections against horrific and
cruel abuse, put them on trial based on evidence that they cannot see, sentence
them to death based on testimony literally beaten out of witnesses, and then
slam shut the courthouse door for any habeas petition," said Christopher Anders,
an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "But that’s exactly what Congress just
approved."
The ACLU’s letter on S. 3930, the Military Commissions Act of
2006, is up at: www.aclu.org/natsec/gen/26861leg20060925.html