American Civil Liberties Union

There has never been a more urgent need to preserve fundamental privacy protections and our system of checks and balances than the need we face today, as illegal government spying, provisions of the Patriot Act and government-sponsored torture programs transcend the bounds of law and our most treasured values in the name of national security.


ACLU Legacy Challenge Military Commissions Act

Freedom Files - Season 2
Ideological Exclusion

ACLU NewsfeedsACLU News Feed
ACLU Blog
ACLU Podcasts
ACLU Denounces Bush Administration's Efforts to Keep Lawyers out of Guantanamo (4/26/2007)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org

LEARN MORE
> The Military Commissions Act and Habeas Corpus
> Habeas Corpus FAQs

NEWS
> ACLU Continues Monitoring Illegitimate Guantánamo Hearings This Week (3/12/2008)
> ACLU to Monitor Guantánamo Military Hearing Wednesday (12/4/2007)
> ACLU Names Inside-the-Beltway 'Best and Worst' for Civil Liberties in 2007 (1/3/2008)
> Military Commission Judge Rebuffs Bush Administration and Applies Geneva Conventions to Guantánamo Detainee (12/18/2007)
> Special U.N. Rapporteur on Human Rights Calls for Granting of Habeas Corpus Rights to Prisoners and an End to Indefinite Detentions (12/12/2007)
> Citing Destruction of Torture Tapes, ACLU Asks Court to Hold CIA in Contempt (12/12/2007)
> ACLU Cheers House and Senate Intel Bill Conferees for Including Provision Prohibiting Torture and Abuse (12/6/2007)
> ACLU Responds to CIA's Destruction of Harsh Interrogation Tapes (12/6/2007)

GET INVOLVED
Day of Action: Watch a Webcast of the Rally >>
FINDHABEAS.COM >>

THE FACTS
> About the Military Commissions Act
> About Detention

NEW YORK – Today the American Civil Liberties Union decried the Justice Department’s effort to restrict lawyers who represent detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from accessing their clients and evidence in their cases.

The following statement can be attributed to Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU:

"Rather than closing Guantanamo and restoring the rule of law, the President now wants to close Guantanamo to lawyers, to outside scrutiny, and to the bedrock protections of habeas corpus. If it remains open, the Guantanamo prison needs more openness, not less.”

“Creating a legal black hole where rights are denied is as un-American as it is illegal. Depriving detainees of the right to meet with lawyers and monitoring mail communication between attorneys and their clients are not the actions of a proud democracy.  It is time to close Guantanamo once and for all, and to either charge or release the detainees held there."

More information on the ACLU’s efforts to restore due process rights is at: www.aclu.org/mca or www.findhabeas.com.

Click to show/hide issues list
Your Local ACLUcongressional scorecardmultimediaforumspublicationssupport usstorecontact