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What Constitutes a Fair Trial?
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: The
President’s Private War
The trial of
the alleged masterminds of 9/11, which began last week at the U.S.
Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, will address some of the most
profound issues of our era. Are natural rights truly inalienable,
as Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence, or
can the government take them away from those it hates or fears?
Does the Constitution protect the rights of all persons who come
in contact with the government, or does it protect only certain
Americans, as the government argues? Can the government deny a person
due process by changing the rules retroactively, or is the Constitution's
guarantee of due process to all persons truly a guarantee?
These are all
questions that the government does not want to answer. But it should
know better, because by structuring the trial after the crime was
committed and by establishing retroactive rules – which are prohibited
by the Constitution – that have never before been used in any American
civilian or military court, Congress has created and the Obama administration
will conduct a trial that will resemble none in our history.
The trial is
being held in Cuba because President Obama caved to political pressure
from New York City politicians who did not want the trial at the
location where the murders took place. In one of the few rules of
criminal procedure laid down in the Constitution itself, the Framers
required all trials to be held in the same judicial district where
the alleged crime took place. They were familiar with the British
practice of trying colonists in London for alleged crimes committed
in New York. But today New York politicians and their allies in
Congress and the president think they can pick and choose which
parts of the Constitution to uphold and which parts they can ignore.
The Constitution
guarantees the right to confront evidence and witnesses. The colonists
were all too familiar with Star Chamber, a British trial system
in which evidence against an accused was summarized by a clerk of
the court, rather than presented by witnesses with personal knowledge
or revealed in documents for all to see. In trials at Gitmo, the
government may summarize evidence for the court, and it may keep
documents it plans to use away from the defendants.
The rules for
this trial also permit hearsay: basically, anonymous accusations
that were also the hallmark of Star Chamber. They permit the Secretary
of Defense, who is the boss of both the prosecutors and the judge,
to replace the judge if the secretary is displeased by his rulings.
This is a procedure that is taken right out of the Communist Party
playbook in Stalinist Russia.
Perhaps the
most radical departure from American due process and pronounced
return to Star Chamber is the congressional authorization for the
admission of evidence obtained under torture. There is no question
that these defendants were tortured. The CIA has admitted publicly
that it waterboarded one of them 183 times and then destroyed the
videotapes of the torture so jurors could not see how horrific this
procedure is.
Torture is
so abhorrent to American values that its use by rogue cops has resulted
in what is known as the "shocks the conscience of the court" rule.
This principle, which has been in place since colonial times, permits
the court to dismiss the charges – no matter how grave – when the
government's behavior shocks the conscience of the court. And all
intentional torture is in that category.
I understand
the emotions that are fueling these prosecutions, and I understand
the pain and loss suffered by those whose loved ones were murdered
on 9/11, and I understand the horrific nature of the crimes for
which these defendants have been charged. But in America, we still
have the rule of law. And that means that no one is above the law
and no one is beneath it. Everyone is subject to the law, and the
government may not exclude anyone from its protections. That is
the essence of our system of justice. It is mandated by the Declaration
of Independence and the Constitution, and its preservation is the
reason we have fought our just wars.
This trial
may have dire unforeseen consequences. From the president who opposed
all this when he was a senator but now effectuates it, to members
of Congress who enacted the Military Commissions Act that authorizes
incarceration after acquittal (a procedure even the Soviets
did not utilize), to the victims' families who surely would not
want this rough justice visited upon their children; all these people
now crying for blood could one day see the ruination of due process
in America, with this case as precedent.
What constitutes
a fair trial is the due process of American justice, which is guaranteed
and required by the Constitution itself. If we deviate from the
moral values of that system for the people we hate, woe to us for
making law retroactively and based on hatred.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
May 11, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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