General
Ashcroft's Detention Camps
Time to Call for His
Resignation
Nat
Hentoff
VillageVoice.com
September 4 - September 10, 2002
Jonathan Turley is a professor of constitutional and
public-interest law at George Washington University Law School in D.C. He is
also a defense attorney in national security cases and other matters, writes
for a number of publications, and is often on television. He and I occasionally
exchange leads on civil liberties stories, but I learn much more from him than
he does from me.
For
example, a Jonathan Turley column in the national edition of the August 14 Los
Angeles Times ("Camps for Citizens: Ashcroft's Hellish Vision")
begins:
"Attorney
General John Ashcroft's announced desire for camps for U.S. citizens he deems
to be 'enemy combatants' has moved him from merely being a political
embarrassment to being a constitutional menace." Actually, ever since
General Ashcroft pushed the U.S. Patriot Act through an overwhelmingly supine
Congress soon after September 11, he has subverted more elements of the Bill of
Rights than any attorney general in American history.
Under
the Justice Department's new definition of "enemy combatant"--which
won the enthusiastic approval of the president and Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld--anyone defined as an "enemy combatant," very much including
American citizens, can be held indefinitely by the government, without charges,
a hearing, or a lawyer. In short, incommunicado.
Two
American citizens--Yaser Esam Hamdi and Jose Padilla--are currently locked up
in military brigs as "enemy combatants." (Hamdi is in solitary in a
windowless room.) As Harvard Law Professor Lawrence Tribe said on ABC's
Nightline (August 12):
"It
bothers me that the executive branch is taking the amazing position that just
on the president's say-so, any American citizen can be picked up, not just in
Afghanistan, but at O'Hare Airport or on the streets of any city in this
country, and locked up without access to a lawyer or court just because the
government says he's connected somehow with the Taliban or Al Qaeda. That's not
the American way. It's not the constitutional way. . . . And no court can even
figure out whether we've got the wrong guy."
In
Hamdi's case, the government claims it can hold him for interrogation in a
floating navy brig off Norfolk, Virginia, as long as it needs to. When Federal
District Judge Robert Doumar asked the man from the Justice Department how long
Hamdi is going to be locked up without charges, the government lawyer said he
couldn't answer that question. The Bush administration claims the judiciary has
no right to even interfere.
Now
more Americans are also going to be dispossessed of every fundamental legal
right in our system of justice and put into camps. Jonathan Turley reports that
Justice Department aides to General Ashcroft "have indicated that a
'high-level committee' will recommend which citizens are to be stripped of
their constitutional rights and sent to Ashcroft's new camps."
It
should be noted that Turley, who tries hard to respect due process, even in
unpalatable situations, publicly defended Ashcroft during the latter's
turbulent nomination battle, which is more than I did.
Again,
in his Los Angeles Times column, Turley tries to be fair: "Of course
Ashcroft is not considering camps on the order of the internment camps used to
incarcerate Japanese American citizens in World War II. But he can be credited
only with thinking smaller; we have learned from painful experience that
unchecked authority, once tasted, easily becomes insatiable." (Emphasis
added.)
Turley
insists that "the proposed camp plan should trigger immediate
Congressional hearings and reconsideration of Ashcroft's fitness for important
office. Whereas Al Qaeda is a threat to the lives of our citizens, Ashcroft has
become a clear and present threat to our liberties." (Emphasis added.)
On
August 8, The Wall Street Journal, which much admires Ashcroft on its editorial
pages, reported that "the Goose Creek, South Carolina, facility that
houses [Jose] Padilla--mostly empty since it was designated in January to hold
foreigners captured in the U.S. and facing military tribunals--now has a
special wing that could be used to jail about 20 U.S. citizens if the
government were to deem them enemy combatants, a senior administration official
said." The Justice Department has told Turley that it has not denied this
story. And space can be found in military installations for more "enemy
combatants."
But
once the camps are operating, can General Ashcroft be restrained from
detaining--not in these special camps, but in regular lockups--any American
investigated under suspicion of domestic terrorism under the new, elastic FBI
guidelines for criminal investigations? From page three of these Ashcroft terrorism
FBI guidelines:
"The
nature of the conduct engaged in by a [terrorist] enterprise will justify an
inference that the standard [for opening a criminal justice investigation] is
satisfied, even if there are no known statements by participants that advocate
or indicate planning for violence or other prohibited acts." (Emphasis
added.) That conduct can be simply "intimidating" the government,
according to the USA Patriot Act.
The
new Steven Spielberg-Tom Cruise movie, Minority Report, shows the government,
some years hence, imprisoning "pre-criminals" before they engage in,
or even think of, terrorism. That may not be just fiction, folks.
Returning
to General Ashcroft's plans for American enemy combatants, an August 8 New York
Times editorial--written before those plans were revealed--said: "The Bush
administration seems to believe, on no good legal authority, that if it calls
citizens combatants in the war on terrorism, it can imprison them indefinitely
and deprive them of lawyers. This defiance of the courts repudiates two
centuries of constitutional law and undermines the very freedoms that President
Bush says he is defending in the struggle against terrorism."
Meanwhile,
as the camps are being prepared, the braying Terry McAuliffe and the pack of
Democratic presidential aspirants are campaigning on corporate crime, with no
reference to the constitutional crimes being committed by Bush and Ashcroft. As
Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis prophesied: "The greatest menace to
freedom is an inert people." And an inert Democratic leadership. See you
in a month, if I'm not an Ashcroft camper.
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