Murder
Inc.
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: Nuremberg,
Eichmann, and Extra-Judicial Murder
Murder Inc.
was the nickname of organized crime groups in the 1930s that murdered
for the Mafia. Although many of the organization’s killers ended
up dead or in prison, their modern-day counterparts are free to
come and go as they please, play with their dogs, and vacation with
their families. They are even lauded by many Americans as heroes.
The difference now, though, is that they work for the CIA and murder
for the government.
It has now
come to light that, like the Commission that governed the American
Mafia, the Obama administration has a secret
panel of senior government officials that places the names of
individuals on a hit list and then notifies Obama the capo di tutti
capi. There is no congressional oversight or judicial review.
This very
real death panel was behind the decision to add American citizen
Anwar al-Awlaki to the hit list and take him out by CIA drone strike
in Yemen last month.
The evidence
that al-Awlaki actually killed anyone is nonexistent, unlike the
following Americans who actually kidnapped, tortured, raped, and
killed other Americans.
John Couey,
a convicted sex offender, abducted Jessica Lunsford, aged nine,
from her home in Florida in 2005, raped her, and buried her alive.
He was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to death for kidnapping,
rape, and murder. He died in prison before the sentence could be
carried out.
Timothy McVeigh
detonated a truck bomb in the Oklahoma City Bombing in 1995, killing
168 people. He was tried on eleven federal offenses, convicted,
and sentenced to death. He was executed in June of 2001.
Charles Manson
and his "family" committed the brutal Tate/LaBianca murders
in California in 1969. Except for Linda Kasabian, who was given
immunity in exchange for her testimony against the "family,"
Manson, Patricia Krenwinkel, Charles Watson, Leslie Van Houten,
and Susan Atkins were tried for murder, found guilty, and sentenced
to death. Their death sentences were commuted to life imprisonment
in 1972.
Ted Bundy was
a serial killer who confessed to murdering thirty people in seven
states from 1974-1978. In Florida, he was charged with killing two
FSU students and a twelve-year-old girl. He was tried, found guilty
and sentenced to death. He was executed in January of 1989.
John Wayne
Gacy raped, tortured, and killed thirty-three young men in Illinois
between 1972 and 1978. He buried twenty-six of his victims in the
crawlspace of his house. He was tried, found guilty, and sentenced
to death. After spending fourteen years on death row, he was executed
in May of 1994.
Jeffrey Dahmer
killed fifteen young men between 1978 and 1991 after raping many
of them. This was followed by dismemberment, necrophilia, and cannibalism.
He was tried, and found guilty of fifteen counts of murder, and
sentenced to fifteen life terms. He was beaten to death by a fellow
prisoner in November of 1994.
None of these
Americans – as reprehensible as their actions may have been – were
executed without trial even though there was no doubt as to their
guilt.
When Lee Harvey
Oswald was suspected of killing the president of the United States
in 1963, he was captured and held for trial before being killed
by Jack Ruby, a private citizen.
And then there
is Jared Loughner, who publicly killed six people and shot Rep.
Gabrielle Giffords in the head in a shooting rampage in Tucson,
Arizona, earlier this year. He is awaiting trial even though fifty
people saw him commit murder.
Heck, even
in wartime, if an enemy soldier – who may have been trying to kill
you for days – comes out of the woods waving a white flag or raising
his hands above his head, he is supposed to be taken prisoner, not
killed.
And then, according
to Article 5 of the Third Geneva Convention, POWs are protected
from the time of their capture until their final repatriation. And
if there is any doubt as to whether an "enemy combatant"
is in fact a legitimate POW, he is to be treated as such until his
status can be determined. In Article 3 is prohibited "the passing
of sentences and the carrying out of executions without previous
judgment pronounced by a regularly constituted court, affording
all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable
by civilized peoples."
Twenty-four
Nazis were put on trial in Nuremberg, Germany, from 1945 to 1946,
for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Twenty-two of them were
found guilty. Twelve defendants were sentenced to death by hanging,
which was carried out in October of 1946.
Nazi war criminal
Adolf Eichmann, who had escaped to Argentina, was captured by Israeli
intelligence in 1960, taken to Israel, tried with defense lawyers
and witnesses for both sides, convicted after deliberation, and
allowed to appeal before he was hanged in 1962.
If the perpetrators
of World War II and the Holocaust were tried before their executions,
then any American who commits any crime should be tried likewise.
Was Anwar al-Awlaki
a bad guy who inspired and motivated others to want to commit acts
of terrorism against America and Americans? Certainly. Should he
have been killed by a CIA drone pilot acting simultaneously as prosecutor,
judge, jury, and executioner? Certainly not.
The killing
of an American citizen without trial sets a terrible precedent.
As Congressman Ron
Paul has well said: "If the law protecting us against government-sanctioned
assassination can be voided when there is a ‘really bad American,’
is there any meaning left to the rule of law in the United States?"
Dozens
of U.S. citizens are thought to be on the government’s hit list.
Will you be next?
October
24, 2011
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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