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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: paul_philp who wrote (59867)12/4/2002 4:27:15 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 281500
 
And the United States of America continues to incarcerate it's own citizens without ANY legal representation....
UNTIL THE COURTS STEP IN.....
Ashcroft got his bell rung by his own boss W over this.....and it's been going on since JUNE!
Dirty-Bomb Suspect Can Meet With Lawyers

By LARRY NEUMEISTER
Associated Press Writer

December 4, 2002, 2:22 PM EST

NEW YORK -- A federal court has the authority to
decide whether a former Chicago gang member
accused of plotting with terrorists to detonate a
radioactive "dirty" bomb was properly detained as an
enemy combatant, a judge ruled Wednesday.

Until he makes that decision, U.S. District Judge
Michael Mukasey said, Jose Padilla may meet with his
lawyers. Padilla, a U.S. citizen, had been barred from
meeting with attorneys since he was declared an
enemy combatant in June.

The ruling was a blow to the government, which had
argued that Padilla, a U.S. citizen, had no right to
challenge its actions in court because of the enemy
combatant status.

However, the judge did agree that the government has the power to detain
unlawful combatants.

President Bush's spokesman, Ari Fleischer, said White House lawyers were
studying the voluminous ruling to determine the administration's position.

"I do note the court did uphold the president's constitutional authority to direct
the military to detain unlawful enemy combatants in order to protect the
American people in this war on terrorism," Fleischer said.

The government has maintained that Padilla has no rights as an enemy
combatant. It also said he could use contact with his lawyers to unwittingly pass
messages to coconspirators, but Mukasey said rules could be crafted to avoid
that possibility.

According to the government, Padilla twice met with senior al-Qaida operatives in
Pakistan in March and discussed a plot to detonate a radiological weapon in the
United States.

He was arrested May 8 at Chicago's O'Hare airport on a material witness warrant
issued by a grand jury. He has been held in a Navy brig since he was declared
an enemy combatant in June. The government says that declaration allows it to
hold him without formal criminal charges.

Padilla's lawyers, Donna Newman and Andrew Patel, say he is being held
illegally. Newman said Wednesday she was pleased with Mukasey's ruling.

"It is a significant decision. It's certainly a thorough decision," the defense lawyer
said. "I need to review it."

Although the opinion opened a legal window for lawyers to fight on Padilla's
behalf, the judge wrote supportively of the government's powers.

"The president ... has both constitutional and statutory authority to exercise the
powers of commander in chief, including the power to detain unlawful
combatants, and it matters not that Padilla is a United States citizen captured
on United States soil," Mukasey wrote.

He said he would later resolve the issue of whether Padilla was lawfully detained
and whether President Bush has evidence to support his finding that Padilla was
an enemy combatant.