Jose Padilla and the Military Commissions Act
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
Anyone who
hoped that U.S. military detention of Americans accused of terrorism
expired with the transfer of American citizen Jose Padilla from
military custody to Justice Department custody have seen their hopes
dashed by the Military Commissions Act that the president signed
into law yesterday. Although the act limits to foreign citizens
the use of military tribunals and the denial of habeas corpus, any
person, including American citizens, can still be labeled and treated
as an unlawful enemy combatant in the war on terrorism.
What does that
mean for the American people? It means the same thing it did for
Jose Padilla. Youll recall that Padilla was arrested in Chicago
for terrorism and transferred to military custody, where, according
to Padilla, he was tortured and involuntarily injected with drugs.
The governments
position is that since the entire world is a battlefield in which
the war on terrorism is being waged, U.S. officials now have the
power to arrest any American suspected of terrorism, place him in
military custody, and subject him to the same unlawful enemy
combatant treatment that Padilla received, until the war on
terrorism has finally been won, no matter how long that takes.
Youll
recall that the governments position was that Padilla, as
an unlawful enemy combatant suspected of having committed
terrorist acts, was not entitled to the procedural rights guaranteed
to criminal defendants in the Bill of Rights, including the rights
to counsel, due process, and trial by jury.
The district
court ruled in favor of Padilla at his habeas corpus hearing, but
the Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that decision, upholding
the governments unlawful enemy combatant argument
for Padilla and, by implication, all other Americans.
Before the
Supreme Court could rule on Padillas appeal from the Second
Circuits decision, the government announced that it wished
to transfer him from military control to federal-court control on
the basis of a grand jury indictment charging him with terrorism.
The Supreme Court permitted the transfer and declined to hear Padillas
appeal because the case was now moot, given that Padilla
was no longer being held by the military but instead was being held
by the Justice Department as a criminal defendant. That left the
Second Circuit decision upholding the unlawful enemy combatant
designation intact.
Even if Padilla
is acquitted in the federal-court action, there is little doubt
that the Pentagon will immediately take him back into military custody
as an unlawful enemy combatant in the war on terrorism,
requiring Padilla to once again embark, in a habeas corpus proceeding,
on a long legal journey to the Supreme Court.
Currently,
under the Second Circuits decision in Padilla, and now also
under the Military Commissions Act, the president has the power
to order the military arrest and incarcerate any number of Americans
suspected of terrorism. Americans would still have the right to
file a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court because
the Military Commissions Act cancelled that right only for foreigners,
not Americans. Keep in mind, however, that a habeas corpus hearing
is not a full-blown trial to determine guilt or innocence but is
simply designed to determine whether the government has legal justification
for holding a prisoner. All the government would have to do at the
habeas corpus hearings is provide some evidence that the Americans
it is holding in military custody have engaged in some act of terrorism
and then cite the Second Circuit opinion and the Military Commissions
Act in support of its power to continue detaining them.
Of course,
the cases would ultimately go to the Supreme Court, but that would
inevitably entail a lengthy delay, a period of time during which
lots of Americans could be tortured, abused, and even accidentally
killed, just as foreign unlawful enemy combatants in
U.S. military custody have been. Moreover, there is no guarantee
that the Supreme Court will rule against the government.
How does an
American who is labeled an enemy combatant ultimately get tried?
Answer: he doesnt. Under the Military Commissions Act, trial
by military tribunal is limited to foreigners. So, even though Americans
still have the use of habeas corpus (so far) to test whether their
detention is lawful, if the Supreme Court ultimately upholds the
unlawful enemy combatant designation for people accused
of terrorism, Americans will be returned to indefinite military
custody as unlawful enemy combatants if the government
has provided some evidence of terrorism at the habeas corpus hearing.
The irony is
that while foreigners will be accorded the kangaroo tribunal treatment,
Americans accused of terrorism will continue to languish in military
prison indefinitely without the benefit of a trial. Of course, given
that the tribunals will have the power to impose the death penalty,
Americans might do well not to complain about their indefinite detention.
October
19, 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 14 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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