Category Archives: Guantanamo

The Bingaman Amendment

On Monday the Senate will consider the “Bingaman Amendment,” a provision which would remove the habeas-stripping provision from the Graham Amendment adopted Thursday. Forty-nine Senators voted for the Graham amendment; a few were absent. The odds do not look at all good, even if one assumes that Sen. Wyden’s vote was tactical and that Sen. Olympia Snow is educable on this issue.

The folks at The Million Phone March are providing an interface by which US voters can contact their Senators. It can’t hurt.

Posted in Guantanamo | Comments Off on The Bingaman Amendment

Condemned By the Company We Keep

Today’s New York Times carries an excellent and harrowing account of a Chinese father’s so-far-fruitless attempt to get Chinese justice for his son, now sentenced to life imprisonment, Desperate Search for Justice: One Man vs. China. The Chinese criminal judicial process is presented as an oriental version of Kafka: only limited rights for the defendant, and those are routinely ignored (e.g. right to see evidence, or to cross examine). In this case the father actually managed to win an appeal, but that just got the case sent down for re-trial, which again was a farce. And the second appeal was decided on political grounds — it seems that the specially selected panel thought that public confidence in the state required a scapegoat for the ugly crime, and here was a convenient scapegoat…

So my first reaction was that here was an object, and abject, account of why the rule of law matters, and why it is so important to protect the criminal rights of defendants. As the Times noted, the Chinese system had a 99.7 percent conviction rate last year out of 770,947 adjudicated cases. The Times suggests that “Conviction rates are also high in the United States, especially in federal criminal cases.” Indeed, “More than 90 percent of federal defendants plead guilty,” usually taking a plea bargain to avoid a trial. Those who elect a trial fare better: for the most recent period for which I could find data [circa 1986-2000, source: Andrew D. Leipold, Why Are Federal Judges So Acquittal Prone?, 83 Wash. U. L.Q. 151 (2005) (citing Bureau of Justice Statistics, Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics Online tbl. 5.22)], “the average conviction rate for federal criminal defendants was 84% in jury trials, but a mere 55% in bench trials.” These numbers are impressive when you figure that, in addition to the people determined to prove their innocence, a substantial subset of the people who go to trial are those whom the prosecutors think are so guilty that they offered little or nothing in the plea bargain.

Unfortunately, it seems that on balance the average Chinese criminal defendant gets a better deal than what this administration wants to offer persons it labels “enemy combatants” and ships off to Guantanamo.

On the basis of no evidence, I’m prepared to stipulate that the Guantanamo prisoners get better food — at least when they are not on hunger strikes or attempting suicide due to years in solitary or near-solitary confinement.

There are several similarities, e.g. handpicked judges, beatings and other mistreatment of prisoners, life imprisonment (in China, post-trial, in Guantanamo includes pre-trial)

In other ways, the Chinese defendant gets, or at least can hope for, a better deal than under the “monsterous” procedures the US government offers alleged “enemy combatants” in Guantanamo: While it appears the Chinese rules often are not followed in practice, at least aspirationally they offer the hope of the following rights that the Bush administration does not want to see in Guantanamo: the right to know the charges against you, the right to know who your accusers are, the right to cross-examine prosecution witnesses (compare the facts of the Hamdan case), the right to call your own witnesses (compare the recent refusal to allow David Hicks to call expert witnesses), the right to proceedings in your own language or with competent translation, and (here we can blame the Senate too) the right to appeal the fundamental fairness of the proceeding. If nothing else, the railroaded Chinese defendants’ families have visitations rights. Not even human rights groups get that in Guantanamo. [Incidentally, for a real double whammy, consider how badly the US government treats Chinese nationals held in Guantanamo whom even the US thinks are innocent of any crime.]

Is this the level to or below which we wish to sink?

Not in my name, please.

Posted in Guantanamo, Law: Criminal Law | 1 Comment

A Vote for Unreviewable Injustice

The Senate did a bad thing yesterday, voting for the so-called Graham Amendment, 49-42 (with McCain voting for it), which would eliminate the statutory right of habeas corpus for alien detainees held by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo. The point of this amendment is to undermine the Supreme Court’s June 2004 decision in Rasul v. Bush.

For an explanation of the issues see Marty Lederman at SCOTUS Blog and then see Steve Vladeck for the advanced course in the horrible and complex federal courts and constitutional law implications.

Amazingly, the proposal has a (tentative) academic supporter, Julian Ku, at Opinio Juris.

Posted in Guantanamo, Law: Constitutional Law | 5 Comments

Is This the Most Important Paragraph in Today’s NYT?

It was buried deep in the print edition, but I wonder if this isn’t the most informative paragraph in today’s paper,

Striking Guantánamo Detainees Gain in Ruling. Judge Kessler’s order is the latest development in a vast change in the legal situation at Guantánamo. For the first two years of the camp’s existence, the military had total control of procedures there and what it told the public about them. But after a Supreme Court ruling in 2004 allowing lawyers to represent detainees and visit them, the military has had to contend with judicial rulings on procedures and with the ability of defense lawyers to provide an alternative narrative as to events there.

Posted in Guantanamo | Comments Off on Is This the Most Important Paragraph in Today’s NYT?

Shackled For No Crime; Acquitted But Not Told or Released

A commentator on the previous item points out this story, which I’d missed: Chinese Detainees Are Men Without a Country:

In late 2003, the Pentagon quietly decided that 15 Chinese Muslims detained at the military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, could be released. Five were people who were in the wrong place at the wrong time, some of them picked up by Pakistani bounty hunters for U.S. payoffs. The other 10 were deemed low-risk detainees whose enemy was China’s communist government — not the United States, according to senior U.S. officials.

More than 20 months later, the 15 still languish at Guantanamo Bay, imprisoned and sometimes shackled, with most of their families unaware whether they are even alive.

Do Americans understand what’s being done in their name?

For more than three years these unpersons were not allowed a lawyer. When they got one, he was appalled.

One of the Uighurs was “chained to the floor” in a “box with no windows,” Willett [his lawyer] said in an Aug. 1 court hearing…

And all this after they had been cleared — not that the US government was willing to admit this little fact:

All 15 Uighurs have actually been cleared for release from Guantanamo Bay twice, once after a Pentagon review in late 2003 and again last March, U.S. officials said. Seven other Uighurs were ruled to be enemy combatants and will continue to be detained.

Even after the second decision, however, the government did not notify the 15 men for several months that they had been cleared. “They clearly were keeping secret that these men were acquitted. They were found not to be al Qaeda and not to be Taliban,” Willett said. “But the government still refused to provide a transcript of the tribunal that acquitted them to the detainees, their new lawyers or a U.S. court.”

Having wrongly imprisoned them, treated them very harshly at the very least, and having held them long after it had reason to do so, the US government’s position is that these victims should return to their home country — China — a place they fled in the first place due to a well-founded fear of persecution, and where their record of having been in Guantanamo is not likely to better their circumstances.

Words really fail me, here. Can anyone seriously claim to be proud of this conduct by our government? Is there no one in Congress who will act to stop the running sores on the national honor? We do still have a national honor don’t we? Or has that gone missing too?

Oh, do I feel shrill today.

Posted in Guantanamo | 6 Comments

Canadian Court Treats Gitmo Like Cesspool

Via JURIST – Paper Chase: Judge orders Canada to stop questioning Gitmo teen:

A Canadian Federal Court judge has ruled that intelligence authorities must stop interrogating Guantanamo Bay [JURIST news archive] detainee Omar Khadr [CBC Khadr family profile]. Justice Konrad von Finckenstein’s decision also slammed Canadian counterterrorism agents for gathering information at a place where he claims Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms [text] has been violated. Khadr has admitted killing a US medic [JURIST report] while fighting with the Taliban. He was captured when he was 15 years old and transferred to Guantanamo Bay after turning 16. The US never clarified Khadr’s legal status or charged him but agents from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service [official website] and the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade [official website] have interviewed him at Guantanamo at least three times. Von Finckenstein’s ruling prevents further interviews from occurring. The Globe and Mail has more.

Posted in Guantanamo | 2 Comments