The O’Reilly Fear Factor
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
It should come
as no surprise that conservative Fox News commentator
Bill OReilly is praising the military-detention bill that
President Bush recently got through Congress. In a commentary dated September 29, 2006, which was posted on the
Fox News website, OReilly said that the only downside
for the president is that interrogation methods like water boarding
are no longer allowed.
The new detainee
law constitutes the most extreme reordering of Americas criminal-justice system
since our nations founding. It cancels habeas corpus and fundamental
procedural rights of due process that stretch back to Magna Carta.
Federal grand-jury indictments for terrorism are no longer necessary.
Under the new law, criminal prosecutions for terrorism can now be
handled by the military, which is part of the executive branch of
government, rather than by the judicial branch. There will no longer
be any right to a jury trial in which the jury consists of ordinary
citizens. Military personnel will decide the guilt or innocence
of the accused and, unlike in federal-court proceedings, will be
permitted to rely on hearsay evidence and evidence acquired by torture
to convict the defendant. Right to counsel will be limited. There
will no longer be a right to a speedy and public trial. Military
judges, not independent federal judges, will preside over the proceedings.
The military will be free to inflict cruel and unusual punishments
on those judged to be terrorists.
Nevertheless,
OReilly insists that we’re not losing any rights,
even though the rights to a indictment, due process of law, counsel,
a jury trial, a speedy and public trial based on competent evidence,
and protection against cruel and unusual punishments are all enumerated
in the Bill of Rights.
Maybe OReilly
thinks that the new detention law applies only to foreigners, not
Americans. If so, he, along with other Americans, might be surprised
to learn that the new law does not limit the definition of unlawful
enemy combatants to foreigners. After all, don’t forget that
U.S. officials have applied the term to Jose Padilla, an American
arrested in Chicago and accused of terrorism, initially as an enemy
combatant in military custody; and, more recently, as a criminal
defendant in U.S. district court.
But even if
the law did apply only to foreigners accused of terrorism, by creating
a bifurcated legal system in which foreign citizens would get the
military-tribunal treatment, while Americans accused of terrorism
would continue to be prosecuted in federal court, the detainee bill
would entail an abrogation of the long-held principle in U.S. criminal
jurisprudence of equal treatment under law.
Who decides
who the terrorists are under the new terrorism law? U.S. military
personnel, who answer to the president, will make that determination
rather than civilian juries in federal courts. That makes OReilly
happy because he intimates that he trusts the military more than
he trusts civilian juries. He even laments the fact that convicted
terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui received a trial by jury in a U.S.
District Court, as the Sixth Amendment requires, rather than a military
tribunal, because it cost American taxpayers millions of dollars
to prosecute and convict him in U.S. district court.
What about
those terrorists whom the feds prosecuted in Detroit a couple of years ago? You know
the case in which terrorists were either acquitted by
a federal jury or the charges of terrorism were tossed out by an
independent federal judge. That case undoubtedly cost taxpayers
millions of dollars too.
OReilly
didnt talk about the Detroit terrorism case in his commentary.
But undoubtedly, he would regret that those Detroit terrorists
were not sent to the kangaroo military tribunals, where they would
have been easily convicted and executed, rather than to the federal
court system where a jury of ordinary Americans found them not guilty
and where an independent federal judge dismissed other charges against
them.
Why, maybe
OReilly even wants the feds to seek the military extradition
and execution of Canadian citizen Maher Arar, whom U.S. officials
arrested and sent to Syria for torture because they were certain,
erroneously as it turned out, that he was a terrorist.
Why does OReilly
place his faith in the military to determine who is a terrorist,
rather than in civilian juries and the federal-court system that
the Framers established in the Constitution? Well, he says it is
because most Americans are in danger and want the military
to protect them.
Translation:
Im scared to death, my knees are knocking, and Im
willing to surrender rights and freedoms that stretch all the way
back to Magna Carta in the hope that the federal fox will protect
us chickens from those big bad terrorists.
But unlike
Bill O'Reilly, I don't live my life in fear of the terrorists,
and like our American ancestors who enacted the Bill of Rights,
Im not willing to trade our fundamental rights and freedoms
for the pretense of federal security.
October
3, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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