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Rights and Liberties

News You Might Have Missed: Court Confirms President's Dictatorial Powers

By Andy Worthington, Andy Worthington's Blog. Posted July 22, 2008.


A 5 to 4 ruling in the case of Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri legitimizes the president's right to indefinitely imprison "enemy combatants."
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Wake up, America! On July 15, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled by 5 votes to 4 in the case of Al-Marri v. Pucciarelli that the President can arrest U.S. citizens and legal residents inside the United States and imprison them indefinitely, without charge or trial, based solely on his assertion that they are "enemy combatants." Have a little think about it, and you'll see that the Fourth Circuit judges have just endorsed dictatorial powers.

In the words of Judge William B. Traxler, whose swing vote confirmed the court's otherwise divided ruling, "the Constitution generally affords all persons detained by the government the right to be charged and tried in a criminal proceeding for suspected wrongdoing, and it prohibits the government from subjecting individuals arrested inside the United States to military detention unless they fall within certain narrow exceptions … The detention of enemy combatants during military hostilities, however, is such an exception. If properly designated an enemy combatant pursuant to legal authority of the President, such persons may be detained without charge or criminal proceedings for the duration of the relevant hostilities."

As was pointed out by Judge Diana Gribbon Motz, who was steadfastly opposed to the majority verdict (and whose opinion was endorsed by Judges M. Blane Michael, Robert B. King and Roger L. Gregory), "the duration of the relevant hostilities" is a disturbingly open-ended prospect. After citing the 2007 State of the Union Address, in which the President claimed that '[t]he war on terror we fight today is a generational struggle that will continue long after you and I have turned our duties over to others,'" Judge Motz noted, "Unlike detention for the duration of a traditional armed conflict between nations, detention for the length of a 'war on terror' has no bounds."

The Court of Appeals made its extraordinary ruling in relation to a habeas corpus claim in the case of Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, whose story I reported at length. To recap briefly, al-Marri, a Qatari national who had studied in Peoria, Illinois in 1991, returned to the United States in September 2001, with his U.S. residency in order, to pursue post-graduate studies, bringing his family -- his wife and five children -- with him. Three months later he was arrested and charged with fraud and making false statements to the FBI, but in June 2003, a month before he was due to stand trial for these charges in a federal court, the prosecution dropped the charges and informed the court that he was to be held as an "enemy combatant" instead.

He was then moved to a naval brig in Charleston, South Carolina, where he has now been held for five years and one month in complete isolation in a blacked-out cell in an otherwise unoccupied cell block. For the first 14 months of this imprisonment, when he received no visitors from outside the U.S. military or the security agencies, he was subjected to sleep deprivation and extreme temperature manipulation, frequently deprived of food and water, and interrogated repeatedly.

In August 2003, representatives of the International Red Cross were finally allowed to visit al-Marri, and two months later he was permitted to meet with a lawyer, when he finally had the opportunity to explain that his interrogators had "threatened to send [him] to Egypt or to Saudi Arabia where, they told him, he would be tortured and sodomized and where his wife would be raped in front of him."

Based on advice given to Donald Rumsfeld by Defense Department lawyers regarding the use of isolation at Guantánamo, when the lawyers warned that it was "not known to have been generally used for interrogation purposes for longer than 30 days," al-Marri has now been held in solitary confinement for 66 times longer than the amount of time recommended by the Pentagon's own lawyers (this figure includes the six months that he spent in isolation in Peoria County Jail and the Metropolitan Correction Center in New York, before being transferred to Charleston).

It is, therefore, unsurprising that his lawyer, Jonathan Hafetz of the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law, has explained that he is suffering from "severe damage to his mental and emotional well-being, including hypersensitivity to external stimuli, manic behavior, difficulty concentrating and thinking, obsessional thinking, difficulties with impulse control, difficulty sleeping, difficulty keeping track of time, and agitation."

So what is Ali al-Marri supposed to have done to justify being held in solitary confinement for almost as long as the duration of the Second World War? The presidential order declaring him an "enemy combatant" stated simply that he was closely associated with al-Qaeda and presented "a continuing, present, and grave danger to the national security of the United States." Elaborating, in subsequent statements, the government has claimed that he was part of an al-Qaeda sleeper cell, who had been instructed to carry out further terrorist attacks in the United States, targeting reservoirs, the New York Stock Exchange and military academies.


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See more stories tagged with: torture, waterboarding, war on terror, donald rumsfeld, jonathan hafetz, diana gribbon motz, william b. traxler, guantánamo, fourth circuit, jose padilla, ksm, khalid sheikh mohammed, ali saleh kahlah al-marri

Andy Worthington is a writer and historian, and author of The Guantánamo Files.

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How Have We Fallen So Far??
Posted by: QQOblivion on Jul 22, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Torture, suspension of habeas corpus, domestic spying, wars based on lies (with all the deaths of innocents that come with them), constant violations of the rule of law by our own government, political arrests, war-crimes, crimes against humanity, on and on.

How could America have ended up here where we are today? How?!

Here's how: Fewer than 500 people in Florida that couldn't figure out their "butterfly ballots" correctly, and a Supreme Court beholden to ultra-conservative principles, to politically-motivated rulings, and possessing no concern for the integrity of America's voting system.

And if you think that Al-Marri's appeal to the Supreme Court has any chance of being successful, remember that that Supreme Court has only moved much farther to the Right since it first ruled in George Bush's favor.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» even the kennedy SCOTUS.... Posted by: Annapurna1
» RE: How Have We Fallen So Far?? Posted by: HillbillyBob
» RE: Tar baby effect! Posted by: Cybershaman
» The real question Posted by: photon's feather
» RE: The real question Posted by: Cybershaman
» Don't forget... Posted by: photon's feather
Maybe it WON'T be...
Posted by: jvaljon1 on Jul 22, 2008 4:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...John McCain's Supreme Court? Ever give a thought to ELECTION DAY, when you can vote for his OPPOSITE NUMBER? OBAMA???

No matter what our thoughts are on the disgusting shafting of Hillary Clinton by the Superdelegates--Obama's now the last best hope for America to even begin to hang onto the last of the Founding Father's principles which once made us the greatest country in the world.

Bush recently made quite clear, in one of these Gitmo cases, his contempt for the US Constitution: the document which his oath of office states solemnly that he is to "protect and defend, against ALL ENEMIES--foreign AND DOMESTIC" (caps mine)

"What's the Constitution?" he asked one of his questioners, who allowed that keeping people imprisoned like a gulag was, maybe, uh, a teeny bit un-Constitutional-- "it's just a goddam piece of paper..."

America's enemies have dug deep into our government. The Speaker of the House refuses to impeach these thugs, and thus becomes herself an accessory after the fact to all their wrongdoing. And all remember:

"First, they came for the Jews. The Jews were short, dark-haired people whose men wore funny hats with long curls and who all were circumcises. We were told that they had done terrible things to the Fatherland, so we said, Fine.

"Then, they came for the Friends of the Jews--those who had spoken out against the glorious Thousand-year Reich. Those people were of all persuasions, and could not like the Jews be readily identified. Nobody objected--though some of us, did grumble, citing possible illegality charges by World Courts."

"After that, they came for the Gypsies, who everyone knows as thieving liars. Not only did no one object--some, even cheered."

"But by then, the danger to our Republic and our Freedom was obvious. The dissident voices grew--and, one by one, were not heard from again. I raised my voice to object!"

"So, finally they came for me--and there was nobody left to object--nobody at all..."

This is my own paraphrase to a very famous essay. It's still as true as it was when I read it as aa child--and, smug in the knowledge of my own freedom,--thought that, well, that was the Nazis--nothing like that, could ever happen here.

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» RE: Maybe it WON'T be... Posted by: beautifulady2003
» RE: Maybe it WON'T be... Posted by: Dboy
» EXCEPT... Posted by: photon's feather
» What "opposite" number? Posted by: halg
WE ARE IN DEEP TROUBLE
Posted by: bryangalt on Jul 23, 2008 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a free nation, this ruling by one of our courts is not only baffling, it is down right terrifying. It is unimaginable that we live side-by-side with those who are raised in the same nation with us, yet would do our country more harm than any terrorist could ever imagine.

Who could have truly believed that Bin Laden could bring down the US Government? Anyone beside that stupid ass Bush? Well, apparently this seems like it was Bush's plan (if he is truly even capable of formulation of something this diabolic), a plan to scare enough people, even those in the legal field, into believing that "Dear Leader" knows best, so that they hand down illegal authority to a man who is a criminal, a murderer and a liar, to arrest at will those who he believes are "enemies of the state."

Well, I hope that the dip shits out there that voted for Bush in 2004 should be the first people rounded up as special thanks (in the same fashion that Hitler destroyed the paramilitary groups that helped him get uncontrolled powers).

As for the 4th Court, and to Pelosi, who is UNFIT FOR OFFICE, I don't know if you realize that you are the true risks to our National Security when you no longer do your fucking jobs to protect our Constitution from the very abuses that it was designed to prevent. I hope karma finds you in the way you deserve for destroying us all.

Finally, where is the outrage of the Media? They are clearly untrustworthy any more. I am ashamed and saddened at the great gift this society was given in our Constitution, a gift that made us the richest, proudest and best country on Earth. And now, we all stand by while "religious jihadists Christians" tear it apart.

What's next...?

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Trading Saddams Iraq for America?
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 23, 2008 5:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Was this the plan all along- to give Iraqi's a democracy and US a tyrannical oppressive leadership?
this admin has made hostile invasions and overtures towards other nations, captured our economic resources, eliminated our constitutional Rights and Freedoms, encouraged Torture,'black prisons and indefinite confimement, spied on Citizens and is in the process of attempting to destroy our envirnoment ( biolgical& Chemical Warfare on our own people with further use of Fossil Fuels and Off shore Drilling- treason and a crime against Humanity)
Perhaps it is time we incorporate the same Legal system used by those in the M.E.who have suffered under such dictatorships and corrupt Gov't Bodies.
If Congress and SCOTUS do not begin immediate prosecution of this Admin and their Corp Sponsors, They can consider their names on the list of those who acted as Accomplices and wil face the same sentencing as the 'masterminds' of these Treasonous acts, War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity. Pelosi and Reid are beyond Redemption, How many others will continue to follow their blatantly Corrupt leadership? Since they have failed in their Duty to protect & defend Us and Our Constitution then They should be arrested and Prosecuted for their complicity.

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I'm confused...
Posted by: tulugaq on Jul 23, 2008 9:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought the Hamdan case determined that even "enemy combatants" had the right of habeas corpus?

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» RE: I'm confused... Posted by: beautifulady2003
Why wouldn't the Hamden decision apply here?
Posted by: Snowpuppy on Jul 23, 2008 10:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We may have to wait for the next administration to push this one back, but I don't hear any cries of "foul" from the current political leadership. THAT's what's scary.

We have a government of fascist enablers. Groovy, man.

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Don't cry for Ali
Posted by: CalKid on Jul 23, 2008 10:21 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ali's brother, Jarallah al-Marri, is in Guantanamo for being an active jihadist, captured in Pakistan when coming from Afghanistan.

Ali himself spent over one year in Al Queda training camps in Afghanistan.

Although he was arrested for felonious acts, subsequent discoveries of his possessions in the US led to his being named as an enemy combatant. An enemy combatant does not have to hold a rifle; it is sufficient to hijack an airplane and crash it into an iconic structure, or poison a reservoir.

Both of the al-Marri brothers have been brainwashed by Islamic extremists to believe that their eternal glory will come from destruction of the evil Satan of Western civilization.

Like it or not, we are in a very serious religious war against those who abhor freedom from the power of clerics to control mankinds thoughts and actions through claims to commune with "God", the "Prophet", or whomever.

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» RE: Don't cry for Ali Posted by: beautifulady2003
» RE: Don't cry for Ali Posted by: manderson
» Calkid for Ali Posted by: zipper696
The Decider
Posted by: beautifulady2003 on Jul 23, 2008 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So our Dictator-in-Chief, the Great Decider, can throw anyone into prison, torture them, and not bother to charge them with a crime. All he has to do is say they are an "enemy combatant." Whatever the hell that means. We have become a fascist state. While people were too busy watching TV, drinking Starbucks, driving their SUV's, and running up their credit cards, our beloved president, the dear leader, has destroyed our democracy. Who can we blame for this except ourselves? We allowed it. We turned our backs on our responsibility as citizens in a democracy. We forgot that democracy, in order to survive, requires participation. Complacency does not protect us, neither does trusting blindly in the politicians who essentially run our lives. We became spoiled by having so much, that we forgot to protect it. Only about 30 percent of eligible citizens actually vote. Most people try like hell to get out of jury duty (if we all got out of it, who would be left to sit on our juries? How do we expect to maintain the right to a trial by a jury of our peers, if all our peers got out of it?). We avoid helping others because we "don't want to get involved." We are a nation of children who want to be taken care of. That's why the worst president in our history had an approval rating of over 90 percent in the weeks after 9/11, and why he and his henchman, Cheney, were able to collectively brainwash most of us into trusting them into leading us into a war based on lies. And now we openly admit to torturing people, we have a government who is stealing our civil rights, and still we sit and do nothing. Pelosi refused to consider impeachment. Pray for Dennis Kucinich to be successful on Friday.

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» forgeta about it Posted by: walldodger1969
Revolution is upon us
Posted by: anna132 on Jul 23, 2008 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to have one hell of a revoltionary war to let these cocksuckers know that we want our country back and that our constitutional freedoms mean everything to each and every one of us and we are tired of all of their lies and criminal acts and going against all of the American people all for there fucking greedy needs that they think they desreve to have.We need to save our CONSTITUTION by any means,Dennis Kucinich and Wexler have been trying their damnedest and noone is listening to them and they should be.People need to wake the fuck up!

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» RE: evolution is upon us Posted by: beautifulady2003
Yes the revolution is upon us, we need a counter-revolution.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Jul 23, 2008 12:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They hold most of the cards and own the house so we don't have many options. Open revolt without some elements of the military means our defeat and their victory. They have planned for most contingencies. They don't want to lose. All of our problems including economic are designed to wear us down and weaken us to accept their empire with alacrity. The few who know and don't want it will be in deep trouble if caught.

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What next, what now, where to?
Posted by: symcokid on Jul 23, 2008 1:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been declaring for quite some time now that Der Bush makes Sir Hitler appear to be the Prince of Peace.

How can this USofA justify stationing over one million troops in approximately one hundred foreign countries. How can we declare War on a whim, how do we justify every War or don't we have to? Where does the United Nations come into play in all of our forays, what good is the U.N., what exactly is the role of the world's governing bodies?

This is one hell of a scary world and is getting more so everyday, what do our future generations have to look forward to? The answer - NOTHING!

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Mc Cain is clearly worse
Posted by: whealeydj on Jul 23, 2008 4:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so I will likely vote Obama.(if he picks Sam Nunn for VP, I may vote for Cynthia McKinney or Ralph Nader). I remain hopeful that with a clean sweep, th Democrats oan impeach these pro authortiarian judges. the article named the good judges but not the pro-totalitarian authoritarian judges. Lists should be made of those who beleive in ule of law and balance of power and those who beleive in divine right of Republic presidents.

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» RE: Mc Cain is clearly worse Posted by: beautifulady2003
Yes a time for outrage but -- Got to get beyond!
Posted by: editnetwork on Jul 23, 2008 6:00 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let us understand, in all sobriety, that we stand at a turning point for the planet, for humanity and the biosphere we share. Malignant egophrenia has overtaken those occupying our leadership positions, and it's a sickness we can only heal by integrating, one by one, realizing that the only real difference between us and our leaders is that they are in the catbird seat.

Any of us is capable of anything human ("there but for the grace of God..."), and the first step on the way out of this quagmire is empathy. I for one find it very hard to get beyond furious disbelief, but after some diligent practice, I find, it grows more natural to grok emotionally that I'm really in the same boat as George W. Bush, unbelievable as it looks on the page.

The answer to this unbelievable erosion in our governance is not to rage and demonize: those are the actions that got us here. We need to go deeper if there's any hope of taking us to a higher plane.

I recommend The Madness of George W. Bush as a primer for the consciousness raising that the time calls for. The outcome really is up to every single one of us. And on top of that, the awakening of any single one of us could be the tipping point that brings us back from the verge of disaster to instead realize a new, chastened, and spiritually strengthened humanity.

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Re-Forms
Posted by: talkville on Jul 24, 2008 3:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It may have taken a few hundred years, but the taste of Victory is fresh on many a tongue!

Profound Conservatives, that section of The Right with deep, dark, dank, and long - very long- standing resentments and hatreds is on the cusp of achieving long-cherished restitutions and restorations. It took a New World to bring this about.

These Profound Conservatives, rife in our midst and of both Theologic and Secular vantage points, hate, despise and deeply desire the complete and utter destruction of:

1. The results and effects of The French Revolution and the multifarious emergence of theories of Universal and Individual Equal Rights; above all Democratic theories. Only those Appointed by God or genetically-bred and prepared ought to rule. Only to them belong Rights. "Peoples", "Masses", "Multitudes", Peasants, Laborers, the Property-less. All these deserve and get only Permissions and Degrees of activity.

2. The general Advent of all that is comprised by that gathered term: the Enlightenment. Here, Reason and Reasoning are placed centrally in the activities of humans and they over-ride Faith in the Existing Dogmas of Biblical narratives and interpretations.

They hate these things and associated activities in our human realm. They hate our human realm. They hate. And they want to not only Restore, but to Punish for Intransigence, to punish severely, with malice aforethought.

And it is here, in the USA, where they are achieving their most cherished and deeply-felt goals; they can taste and smell the Return of the King. Europe's not too far behind.

The so-called 'conservative movement' contains many a sect and group of emphases; these Profound Conservatives are by no means a small or insignificant part of it.

It's not any longer so certain that it is 'rights' the people or the individual or the human have; not at all certain. If anything is characteristic of us all as humans, it is self-deceptions.

If and when there is some kind of 'wake-up' it will be sure to be Rude. A loud knock and a crash of the door, and a jack-booted thug yelling that you've over-slept and are late to your Assigned time-position and thus threaten the Perfection and Efficiency of the All-Embracing Corporate State -- a Capital Offense.

All legal. We are, after all, an Empire of Law. Question this; it too, will soon be a Capital Offense, punishable by degrees of Shunning, Exile, Ostracism, Prison, or just plain Disappearance.

They smell it; they taste it; they relish it; they're just about there. Those Twin Enemies, brought to Heel by Faith and the Right of the Anointed and Divinely Marked.

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Karen Freed
Posted by: karinkdf82 on Jul 24, 2008 10:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How to build a dictator:

1. The Patriot Act (unlawful warrantless wiretapping and surveillance of U.S. citizens (any and all with a dissenting point of view may be labeled anti-government - translation: anti-war- and thus "terrorists) - effectively arrest anyone to attempts to preserve our laws

2. Presidential abuse of "Signing Statements" - alter bills approved by Congress at will

3. "Executive Privilege" - fail to comply with any subpoena in order to answer for abuse of the electorate and the Constitution

4. Disseminate propaganda through hostage media

5. Designate "free speech" as free speech WITH consequences (effectively NOT free speech)

6. Deny citizens the right to peaceably assemble (in instances where citizens aim to protest acts of the Administration

Good ... done!

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Full of Crap
Posted by: robbie.seal on Jul 26, 2008 8:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The courts have said that the president cannot confine people indefinitely without recourse. If Bush had afforded the detainies POW status under the Genva Convention, we would not have to worry. That was his BIG mistake. The courts said that detainies had to have some form of process to determine their status. Are they detained apporpriately? Thye must get a hearing to determine their status. Like the conservatives that claim that the courts afford the same rights as any US defendant, you have lied. Be honest and stop posting BS to get the anti-American anarchists in an uproar.

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Here is more news you may have missed. John Edwards and Rielle Hunter affair.
Posted by: Ky Lake Dave on Jul 27, 2008 3:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While Elizabeth Edwards is battling breast cancer. John Edwards was busted in LA Hilton by reporters. He was attempting to sneek out of the hotel after spending the night in Rielle Hunters hotel room. When confronted by the reporters questions about staying in Ms Hunters room he ran to a bathroom and played tug of war with the door with the reporters while they asked questions till hotel security intervened and excorted John Edwards out of the Hilton. What a PIG! How completely disrespectful to his wife and famly. His wife is fighting CANCER damnit and this calus son of a bitch is screwing around on her! Thank GOD this prick did not get the Democratic Nomination. This story has not been reported by CNN. Not reported by MSNBC. ABC News. Nothing on ALTERNET. Only Fox News is reporting this story. Alot is said about Fox but other news outlets and Alternet are obviously only reporting what "they" think we should hear.

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