Obama Administration Should Not Revive Military Commissions, Says ACLU
Posted on: Monday, 29 June 2009, 13:28 CDT
"Tweaking" The System Will Not Make It Constitutional
The following can be attributed to
"While the Justice Department is correct that the Constitution must apply to trials of terrorism suspects, it is gravely wrong to think that this can happen in the context of revived military commissions. The commissions system is inherently illegitimate, unconstitutional and incapable of delivering outcomes we can trust. It is designed to ensure convictions, not achieve justice.
"If the Obama administration truly intended to try the detainees in a system that provides fundamental rights and protections, it would do so within the tried-and-true federal court system where both national security evidence and fundamental rights can be protected. The only conceivable reason to design an alternative legal system would be to evade due process requirements. The proposed fixes to the Bush-era military commissions are thoroughly insufficient; there is no such thing as 'due process light.' If the Obama administration chooses to proceed with the commissions, it will find itself mired down in the same morass of legal challenges that the Bush administration did.
"It is also becoming increasingly clear that Obama's 'cabinet of rivals' is devolving into intramural squabbling - with the Defense Department trouncing and shooting down the policy positions of the Justice Department. Pentagon officials who object to affording detainees their full constitutional rights if they are brought onto the U.S. mainland seem to be merely making a behind-the-scenes play for keeping the military commissions in operation at Guantanamo - hoping to force the president's hand into breaking his clear promises in the executive orders he signed his first day in office."
SOURCE American Civil Liberties Union
Source: PR Newswire
Related Articles
- Department of Justice Will Not Challenge Hospitals' Joint Purchasing Agreement
- PFLAG Denounces the Department of Justice's Arguments Supporting DOMA
- Lionbridge Awarded Contract by United States Department of Justice for Language Services; Expects Contract to Generate $100 Million Over 6 Years
- HNBA Supports Nomination of Seasoned Environmental Law Attorney, Ignacia S. Moreno, for Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division of the U.S. Department of Justice
- Laidlaw and FirstGroup Comply With Second Request and Allow Department of Justice Additional Time to Review Transaction
- Statement on the Department of Justice Investigation
- DNAPrint Genomics Researcher Lectures at California Department of Justice Seminar
- Government Telecommunications, Inc. Receives Multiple Award Multi-Year IDIQ; Contract From U.S. Department of Justice Contract Has an Aggregate Ceiling of $50 Million Over a 7 Year Period
- GOOGLE Has Hit Back at the US Department of Justice
- Department of Justice Awards $6.2 Million to Help States Fight Prescription Drug Abuse
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds