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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (512901)12/19/2003 10:24:36 AM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
News Analysis: In Debate on Antiterrorism, the Courts Assert Themselves

December 19, 2003
By DAVID JOHNSTON
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 - The broad presidential powers invoked
by the Bush administration after Sept. 11, 2001, to detain
suspected terrorists outside the civilian court system is
now being challenged by the federal courts, the very branch
of the government the White House hoped to circumvent.

The two separate appellate court rulings on Thursday swept
away crucial parts of the administration's legal strategy
to handle terrorist suspects outside the criminal justice
system and incarcerate them indefinitely without access to
lawyers or to the evidence against them.


The rulings are by no means a final judicial verdict on the
administration's approach. But the rulings demonstrated
powerfully the willingness of the courts to challenge the
administration's procedures, which were put in place
without Congressional approval in the tumultuous months
that followed the Sept. 11 attacks.

The issue of whether the administration has gone too far
will not be decided definitively until the cases reach the
Supreme Court. The court has agreed to decide whether
detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, are entitled to access
to civilian courts to challenge their open-ended detention.

Nevertheless, in one sense the administration has already
lost an important point by the courts' willingness to
ignore assertions that the issues are exclusively within
the discretion of the executive branch.

Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch,
said the two decisions were a serious setback for the
administration's legal approach.

"The Padilla decision emphasized the Bush administration's
unilateralism versus Congress," Mr. Roth said, referring to
an appellate court ruling on Thursday in the case of a
United States citizen, Jose Padilla, arrested on American
soil on suspicion of terrorism.

"The Ninth Circuit decision said that you can't create a
legal black hole in territory controlled by the United
States," Mr. Roth added, referring to a second ruling on
Thursday related to noncitizens captured in the Afghan war
and detained at a naval base in Guantánamo Bay.

"Both attacked the Bush administration's view that a war
metaphor can justify restrictions on basic criminal justice
rights away from a traditional battlefield," Mr. Roth said.

The rulings suggested the possibility that the
administration could be forced to redefine its strategy,
possibly by seeking Congressional authorization or by
returning to established legal procedures to deal with
suspected terrorists.

But on Thursday, administration officials gave no sign that
they would retreat from their approach. "Actually these
rulings are an aberration," said a senior Justice
Department official. "The administration has been upheld
time and time again."

The official cited rulings supporting presidential
authority to freeze assets of organizations that help
finance terrorists and allowing the government to close
immigration hearings in cases related to Sept. 11.

The arrangement for detaining terrorist suspects was
developed against a backdrop of fear as American military
planners prepared for war in Afghanistan. Mr. Bush's legal
advisers worried that if terror cases were tried in the
existing civilian and military justice systems, prosecutors
would be forced to give away too much information to
terrorist enemies.

In criminal courts, defendants are entitled to lawyers,
have a right to a speedy trial and must be advised of the
evidence and witnesses against them - concessions that the
Bush administration did not want to grant to combatants in
a war with adversaries who recognized none of the
traditional rules of combat.

In New York on Thursday, a federal appeals court opinion in
the case of Mr. Padilla struck at the heart of that
aggressive strategy. The panel's 2-to-1 opinion said that
the president lacked the authority to exercise such broad
coercive powers against American citizens without the
consent of Congress.

Specifically, the judges attacked the government's
designation of Mr. Padilla as an enemy combatant, a
category of detainee that was created shortly after Sept.
11 to hold suspected terrorists without the rights that
criminal suspects are routinely granted in the civilian
court system.

Mr. Padilla has been identified as a lower-level Qaeda
operative who entered the United States to plan an attack
involving a so-called dirty bomb, which spews radiological
material using conventional explosives.

Government officials have said that it was Abu Zubaydah, a
senior Qaeda operative detained in an unknown location who
provided the information that led to Mr. Padilla's arrest.
Later, officials said that Mr. Padilla was dispatched to
the United States by Khalid Sheik Mohammed, another top
Qaeda operational leader, who was also captured earlier
this year.

The officials said that in a criminal trial they would be
forced to disclose information about Mr. Padilla that Mr.
Zubaydah or Mr. Mohammed had provided to interrogators, a
step that intelligence analysts say would pose a risk to
national security.

In the case in San Francisco, a 2-to-1 panel said on
Thursday that the detention of 660 noncitizens at
Guantánamo Bay without the protection of the American legal
system was unconstitutional and a violation of
international law.

nytimes.com