Habeas Corpus: The Lynchpin of Freedom
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
In the recently
enacted Military Commissions Act, Congress acceded to President
Bushs request to remove the power of federal courts to consider
petitions for writ of habeas by foreign citizens held by U.S. officials
on suspicion of having committed acts of terrorism. While it might
be tempting to conclude that the writ of habeas corpus is some minor
legal procedural device that the president and the Congress have
now canceled, nothing could be further from the truth. The writ
of habeas corpus is actually the lynchpin of a free society. Take
away this great writ and all other rights such as freedom
of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, gun ownership,
due process, trial by jury, and protection from unreasonable searches
and seizures and cruel and unusual punishments become meaningless.
The Framers
considered the writ of habeas corpus so important that they specifically
provided for its protection in the Constitution: The privilege
of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when
in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require
it. As Alexander Hamilton put it, the writ of habeas corpus,
along with the prohibition against ex post facto laws, are
perhaps greater securities to liberty than any others in the
Constitution.
Lets
assume that the president involves the nation in another foreign
war but this time one in which there are significant military reversals
involving the deaths of thousands of U.S. troops. Congress grants
the presidents request to enact a draft to replenish the Pentagons
human coffers. Federal spending, the national debt, income taxes,
and inflation soar. To compound the crisis, terrorist bombs are
exploded in a few American cities.
Assume also
that this time the American people are angry and outraged over the
presidents and Congresss actions. They point out that
the Constitution prohibits the president from starting and waging
a war without an express declaration of war from Congress. They
oppose subjecting themselves and their children to a draft and another
foreign war. They point out that the terrorist bombs are a retaliatory
response to U.S. foreign policy. Newspaper editorials protest the
war. Demonstrations erupt across the nation.
At the height
of the crisis, the president announces that criticism of federal
policy is helping the terrorists. Congress grants his request to
criminalize criticism of the federal government (much as the newly
installed regime in Iraq, which U.S. officials continue to insist
is now a free country, has
done). The president issues an executive order as commander
in chief extending the cancellation of habeas corpus in the Military
Commission Act to U.S. citizens who aid and abet the enemy.
On orders
of the president, FBI agents and U.S. military personnel begin rounding
up recalcitrant newspaper editors, Internet critics, and anti-war
protestors as enemy combatants for giving moral and
intellectual aid to the enemy. The action, the president assures
the nation, is temporary. The detentions will last only until the
war on terrorism is won.
But
they couldnt do that, people might cry. The First
Amendment guarantees freedom of speech.
Granted, but
how is that provision enforced? Editors, critics, and protestors
would be languishing in some military detention center, perhaps
even the one at Guantanamo Bay. What good would it do to point out
that people have the constitutional right to speak their mind, criticize
government policy, and petition the government for redress of grievances?
The president and the military would be in charge. They might listen
politely, but then again they might simply take more people into
custody in order to send a message: Remain silent. The
doors to the cells would remain locked. The prisoners would be unconditionally
subject to whatever treatment their jailers wished to impose. The
prisoners would be prohibited from going to court to complain or
to seek redress.
Thats
where habeas corpus, a legal procedure whose use stretches back
to 14th-century England, comes in. Over the centuries of struggle
against royal tyranny, the English people came to the realization
that rights were meaningless unless they could be enforced against
government officials who jailed them for exercising them.
Moreover,
the English people had learned what our American ancestors had learned
that the greatest threat to peoples fundamental rights
and freedoms lay not with foreign enemies but rather with their
own government officials. After all, dont forget that the
reason that our American ancestors expressly mentioned Congress
in the First Amendment is that they recognized that Congress was
an enormous threat to peoples freedom of speech and other
fundamental rights.
Thus, the
English people demanded and got the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, which
stated that the writ of Habeas Corpus cannot be denied.
A hundred years later, Americans, who had just a few years before
been Englishmen who had revolted against their own government, inserted
a similar restriction in the U.S. Constitution.
In the absence
of habeas corpus, the detainee must continue languishing in prison
for having criticized the government, comforted only by the notion
that he lives in a country in which the Constitution says that people
have freedom of speech. He has no way to get out of jail or force
his jailers to treat him properly, other than to apologize, convince
his jailers that he has reformed, promise that he will never do
it again, and plead for mercy.
With habeas
corpus, there is another alternative. The prisoner files a petition
with the federal judiciary, which the Framers made a separate branch
of government, equal to that of the executive and legislative branches.
In the petition, he tells a federal judge, who is independent of
presidential and congressional control, that he is being held without
just cause. The judge issues a writ of habeas corpus, which commands
the U.S. official who is holding the petitioner to appear in his
courtroom post haste to show cause why he is holding the prisoner.
If the jailer refuses to do so, the judge cites the official for
contempt of court and issues a writ for his arrest. U.S. marshals
are charged with serving the writs and enforcing them.
Under our
system of government, the judicial branchs interpretation
of law, including constitutional law, trumps that of the other two
branches. Once a U.S. district judge issues a writ of habeas corpus
or any other judicial writ, the other two branches must comply.
At the hearing
on the writ of habeas corpus, the judge hears sworn testimony. If
he determines that the prisoner is being held without just cause,
he orders the jailer to release him, and the jailer is required
to comply with the judges order. In our example, the judge
might say, The First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees
the right of people to criticize their government and its policies
and there are no exceptions for crises or emergencies, including
war. The law that converts government critics into aiders and abetters
of terrorism is unconstitutional. You are hereby ordered to release
the petitioner immediately. Absent appeals, the prisoner would
go free at the conclusion of the hearing. In the event of appeals,
petitions for writ of habeas corpus are usually given priority over
most other appellate cases.
In the absence
of the power of federal courts to issue writs of habeas corpus,
all the other rights and guarantees in the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights become dead letters. If there is no way to enforce
the First Amendment, for example, through a writ of habeas corpus
seeking the release from custody of a government critic, critical
speech is inexorably suppressed. After all, how many newspaper editors,
Internet critics, and war protesters would continue their criticism
knowing that other critics were languishing in some dark, perhaps
even secret, detention camp without hope of challenging their detention
in court through a writ of habeas corpus?
Americans
might feel comforted by the fact that the president and the Congress
limited the removal of habeas corpus to foreign citizens and did
not apply it to Americans. If so, they know little about the history
of government oppression. Once people accede to the cancellation
of judicial protections for other people a grave
wrong in and of itself it is just a matter of time before
the cancellation is extended to include them. After all, American
officials would argue at the height of a new crisis, what is the
difference between a foreign terrorist and an American terrorist?
Shouldnt they be treated the same? Arent they equally
dangerous? Of course the suspension of habeas corpus should be extended
to American terrorists, the argument would go. After all, arent
American terrorists also traitors?
Consumed by
fear that the terrorists are coming to get them, conquer
the United States, and take over the federal government, Americans
continue to blithely permit their government officials to erode
their rights. Their indifference to the cancellation of the Great
Writ the writ of habeas corpus, the lynchpin of a free society
is an affront those who struggled for centuries to ensure
its enshrinement and protection. It also constitutes one of the
gravest and most ominous threats to freedom of the American people
in the history of our nation.
October
12, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation. He will be among the 22 speakers at FFF’s
upcoming conference on June 1-4 in Reston, Virginia: “Restoring
the Constitution: Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties.”
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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