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#21 |
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Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
Um No... I disagree with the fact that the defense doesn't get to see the evidence they are being charged with, and thus doesn't have the ability to refute such evidence. I thought I was clear on that point. What if we provide a team of security-cleared lawyers to act as devils advocate for the defendant in front of the determining judges? |
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#22 |
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It's not melodramatic. The Republicans in Congress have just killed habeas corpus. If Dear Leader wills it, you have no meaningful right to challenge your detention; it's as simple as that. That's a very different thing from saying that there' are going to be mass arrests of Democrats in the near future, and I certainly never implied that.
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#23 |
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Originally posted by Ramo
How can there be a "presumption of innocence"? We're not discussing a crime. The gov't is detaining "enemy combatants" for hostile actions. You know, the actions that make someone any enemy combatant. Say, conspiring to committ an act of terror. If the gov't calls you an indefinite combatant, and unless you can prove your innocence without the use of legal aid, without access to the evidence against you (which could very well could have been acquired through torture), it is the gov't's right to detain you. CSRT's are show trials, only nominally protecting rights. Detention doesn't become much more arbitrary than this. did this part get taken out "Sec. 950g. Review by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and the Supreme Court `(a) Review by United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit- (1) Subject to the provisions of this subsection, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit shall have exclusive jurisdiction to determine the final validity of any judgment rendered by a military commission under this chapter. `(2) The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit may not determine the final validity of a judgment of a military commission under this subsection until all other appeals from the judgment under this chapter have been waived or exhausted. `(3)(A) An accused may seek a determination by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit of the final validity of the judgment of the military commission under this subsection only upon petition to the Court for such determination." |
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#24 |
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I haven't read the bill yet, but I think that the military commissions may be different beasts from the CSRT's. I'm mostly going by the Senate testimony. From Feingold's speech:
Even more disturbing is that the bill appears to permit individuals to be convicted, and even sentenced to death, on the basis of coerced testimony. According to the legislation, statements obtained through cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment, as long as it was obtained prior to December 2005 when the McCain amendment become law, would apparently be admissible in many instances in these military commissions. CSRT's shouldn't be able to sentence detainees AFAIK. |
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#25 |
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Originally posted by Ramo
And I don't see how you appeal to the DC court if you don't even have counsel in the CSRT. Ramo, the entire content of the bill is about the military tribunals, AFAICT. I didnt spend much time on it, and I am Not a Lawyer, but I didnt see any discussion of CSRTs. It would help if you would specify exactly which provisions are troubling. Similarly, testimony gained from torture is excluded absolutely. Testimony from coercion is excluded, but may be included under circumstances that are spelled out in the legislation. |
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#26 |
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Ramo, the entire content of the bill is about the military tribunals, AFAICT.
It's also about stripping enemy combatants of the right to apply for the great writ (again, see the Leahy and Specter Amendments). Without an avenue to challenge their detention in the civilian courts, all they have are the CSRT's which are little more than show trials, where they have no access to counsel or the evidence against them, and are subject to hearsay and coerced testimony . The Appeals Court in DC doesn't help them if they are never prosecuted by the military commission (where, according to Feingold, tortuire as admissable as long as it predated the McCain Amendment). |
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#27 |
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Originally posted by SpencerH
How can there be a "presumption of innocence"? We're not discussing a crime. One is not guilty of being an enemy combatant. One is, or one is not, an enemy combatant. Many of the people in Gitmo were not captured on the battlefield, but sold to the U.S. for a bounty by Afgan and Pakistani warlords. There were quite a few Arabs in both countries who were not connected to al-Qaeda or the Taliban. But for a few thousand bucks, you were who ever the warlords said you were. |
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#28 |
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#29 |
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#30 |
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