Obama Moves to Preserve Indefinite Detention of “Terrorism” Suspects

 By Kenneth J. Theisen

 
On Friday, February 27, 2009 the Obama administration made a series of legal moves aimed at protecting the future use of indefinite detention for “terrorism” suspects picked up in the United States. It is also attempting to circumvent a Supreme Court hearing in this case which could possibly set a precedent limiting Obama and future presidents’ power. The former president Bush must be proud of his successor, Barack Obama.
 
On Friday, Obama directed U.S. military officials to transfer Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri into the civilian custody of the Department of Justice. Al-Marri is an alleged al Qaeda agent according to the federal government.
 
Al Marri came to the U.S. on September 10, 2001, with his family. He was studying computer programming at Bradley University in Peoria Illinois. As Jane Meyer wrote in a recent New Yorker,
“t
hat December, he was arrested as a material witness in an investigation of the September 11th attacks. However, when Marri was on the verge of standing trial, in June, 2003, President George W. Bush ordered the military to seize him and hold him indefinitely.
 
The Bush Administration contended that America was in a full-fledged war against terrorists, and that the President could therefore invoke extraordinary executive powers to detain Marri until the end of hostilities, on the basis of still secret evidence. That day, Marri was put on a military jet to Charleston (South Carolina), and since then he has been living as the only prisoner in an eighty-bed high-security wing of the brig, with no visits from family, friends, or the media.”
Ali Al-Marri is now facing criminal charges under the Obama administration. Al-Marri was just indicted in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois and charged with two counts of material support for terrorism.
 
At the same time that Obama issued his order to removed Al-Marri from military to civilian detention, Obama’s solicitor general was asking the Supreme Court to dismiss al-Marri's challenge to the president's authority to detain people in the U.S. indefinitely and without charges. By moving al-Marri, the administration hopes to make his case moot (legally no longer necessary to be heard), requiring it to be dismissed. This avoids the possibility that the Supreme Court would issue a ruling limiting indefinite detention, without charges, in future cases involving alleged “enemy combatants” arrested in the U.S. On behalf of the Obama administration, Solicitor General Edwin Kneedler argued to the court that there is no "certainty as to whether, or in what circumstances" the legal issues in this case will ever arise again.
 
Jonathan Hafetz is an attorney with the ACLU National Security Project and lead counsel in al-Marri's Supreme Court case. In response to the latest moves of the government he stated, “Despite this indictment, the Obama administration has yet to renounce the government's asserted authority to imprison legal residents and U.S. citizens without charge or trial. We will continue to pursue Mr. al-Marri's case before the Supreme Court to make sure that no American citizen or lawful resident will ever again be subjected to such treatment. It is important that the Court hears Mr. al-Marri's case and rejects, once and for all, the notion that any president has the sweeping authority to deprive individuals living in the United States of their most basic constitutional rights by designating them 'enemy combatants.’”
 
But if the Obama’s dismissal request is granted, future presidents will still allegedly have that authority. That is why the Executive Director of the ACLU Anthony D. Romero said, "The Obama administration must unequivocally state that it will not repeat the abuse of executive authority that occurred in this case to imprison other U.S. citizens and legal residents without charges or trial."
In 2007, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that the government cannot hold individuals arrested in this country in military detention without charge. However, in July 2008, the full appeals court overturned that ruling in a narrowly divided decision. In the pending case of Al-Marri v. Spagone, the ACLU has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the full appellate court decision.
 
On April 27th the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear legal arguments in the case. But if the dismissal is granted the case will not be heard. This is exactly why the Obama administration has done what it did with al-Marri. It wants to avoid having to argue the case before the Supreme Court on its merits. It would rather use procedural moves to keep the case out of the Supreme Court to avoid an unfavorable ruling. The ACLU will oppose dismissal. The Supreme Court ordered al-Marri's attorneys to respond to the government request by March 3rd.
 
In the less than two months that Obama has been in office, his administration has consistently done whatever it could to uphold the privileges of the “national security” state. How long will people put up with this? Eight years of similar policies under the Bush regime should have been enough. Why is the Obama administration following the lead of the Bush regime? What will you do to reverse the reactionary political course started by the Bush administration and now continued by the Obama administration?
 
The ACLU's Supreme Court brief is available online at: www.aclu.org/safefree/detention/38405lgl20090121.html
 
More information about
Al-Marri v. Spagone, including legal documents, is available online at: www.aclu.org/safefree/detention/case_almarri.html
 

 

 

Main Torture Obama Moves to Preserve Indefinite Detention of “Terrorism” Suspects

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