[ACLU-NM] Supreme Court Says Courts Can Review Bush Administration
Actions in Terrorism Fight
Kimberly Lavender
aclunmpa at swcp.com
Mon Jun 28 13:47:33 MDT 2004
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Supreme Court Says Courts Can Review Bush Administration Actions in
Terrorism Fight
NEW YORK - Rejecting the Bush administrations arguments that its actions
in the war on terrorism are beyond the rule of law, the Supreme Court today
ruled that detainees and "enemy combatants" held by the United
States are entitled to challenge their detention in court.
"A State of War is Not a Blank Check for the President When it Comes to
the Rights of the Nation's Citizens," Justices Say
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NEW YORK - Rejecting the Bush administrations arguments that its actions in
the war on terrorism are beyond the rule of law, the Supreme Court today
ruled that detainees and "enemy combatants" held by the United States are
entitled to challenge their detention in court.
"Today's historic rulings are a strong repudiation of the administrations
argument that its actions in the war on terrorism are beyond the rule of law
and unreviewable by American courts," said ACLU Legal Director Steven R.
Shapiro. "The administration designed its war on terrorism in an effort to
insulate its actions from judicial review. The Supreme Court today clearly
and overwhelmingly rejected that strategy."
The cases, which addressed the indefinite detention of U.S. citizens
designated as enemy combatants and of non-citizens at the Guantánamo Bay
naval base in Cuba, raised fundamental questions about the role of the
courts in preserving civil liberties during times of national crisis.
The Supreme Court, said ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero, today
"unflinchingly asserted the central role of the judiciary in determining the
appropriate balance in matters of national security and civil liberties."
"President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft have wrongly asserted that
their actions in the war on terror were lawful and within the scope of the
Constitution," Romero said. "Todays decisions clearly repudiate that
assertion and show that the Bush administrations war on terror has eroded
constitutional rights and respect for the rule of law. The Guantánamo and
Hamdi cases in particular reinforce longstanding notions of the rights of
the detained and accused."
In the Guantánamo cases, the Court ruled 6-3 that prisoners seized as
potential terrorists and held for more than two years at a U.S. military
prison camp in Cuba may challenge their captivity in American courts.
Writing for the majority, Justice John Paul Stevens said that the inmates
status in military custody is immaterial. "What is presently at stake is
only whether the federal courts have jurisdiction to determine the legality
of the executives potentially indefinite detention of individuals who claim
to be wholly innocent of wrongdoing," he wrote. The cases are Rasul v. Bush,
03-334 and Al Odah v. United States, 03-343.
Writing for an 8-1 majority in the case of American-born detainee Yaser Esam
Hamdi, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said the Court has "made clear that a
state of war is not a blank check for the president when it comes to the
rights of the nation's citizens." Four of the Justices (Souter, Ginsburg,
Scalia and Stevens) said that they would go further and order Hamdis
immediate release, and Justice Souter in particular said that holding Hamdi
incommunicado is a violation of the Geneva Conventions. The case is Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld, 03-6696.
In the second enemy combatant case, Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 03-1027, the
Justices evaded the substantive question of Padillas right to counsel,
saying that his case had been brought in the wrong venue and must be refiled
in South Carolina, where Padilla is being held.
Shapiro noted that the Hamdi opinion may have strengthened Padillas legal
claim that, because he was arrested at OHare Airport rather than captured
on the battlefield, he should not be subject at all to detention as an enemy
combatant.
The Guantánamo detainees will now have a right to press their claim in the
lower courts that their detention is unlawful. Hamdi will now receive a
federal court hearing in which he will have an opportunity to establish that
he should not have been designated an enemy combatant. Padilla will
undoubtedly now file a new court case in South Carolina to pursue his claim
that he should be tried or released.
The decisions in all of the cases can be accessed through the ACLU website
at http://www.aclu.org/supremecourt.
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