ACLU Applauds Senate Judiciary Committee Action Restoring Habeas Corpus Due Process Rights (6/7/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union applauds the Senate Judiciary
Committee’s action to restore the crucial writ of habeas corpus. Today, the
committee meets to mark up pending legislation, including S. 185 - a bill to
restore habeas corpus for those detained by the United States. The habeas bill
is expected to pass out of committee today and head to the Senate floor within
the month.
The legislation to restore constitutional rights is in response to last
year’s Military Commission Act, which stripped the constitutional right to
habeas corpus from detainees in Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere. The MCA was a huge
setback to civil liberties and was rushed through Congress in the weeks before
the 2006 elections. The habeas bill would begin to undo the wrongs of last
year.
"The Judiciary Committee is acting today to restore one of the most
fundamental rights in America, the great writ of habeas corpus," said Caroline
Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU’s Washington Legislative Office. "It is clear
that the kangaroo court at Guantanamo Bay is not constitutional, as was made
clear by the dismissal of charges against a Canadian citizen by a military judge
on Monday. The process needs to be scrapped and Congress needs to treat the
detainees in the war on terror in a just manner that begins with restoring
habeas corpus."
News was made on Monday, when a United States military judge dismissed all
charges against Omar Khadr of Canada, who was only 15 years old when detained by
the U.S. at Guantanamo Bay. In a separate case on Monday, a different military
judge dismissed all charges against Salim Hamdan, the same detainee whose appeal
of the initial military commission procedures last year resulted in the Supreme
Court invalidating the Bush administration’s initial set of trial
procedures.
"Guantanamo has been one illegal trial scheme after another. But after all of
the chest thumping by President Bush and Congress, there is no escaping the fact
that not one person has been tried and convicted," said Christopher Anders,
legislative counsel for the ACLU. "The latest rulings mean that none of the
detainees will ever be tried under the Military Commissions Act because of
sloppy drafting. After more than five years of people wasting away without being
charged and tried, it’s time to convict the guilty and send the innocent to
countries that don’t torture. The habeas bill is a good first step."
ACLU activists from across the country are gathering in
Washington, DC on June 26 to demand the restoration of our constitutional
rights.
For more information visit www.juneaction.org.
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