Justice With A Nod And A Wink
by sarabeth at 12:40 pm on June 20th, 2008 in Bush Man Date, Corruption, War on TerrorWe’ve all been hearing for years about the evidence the government has against Guantanamo detainees. This is the evidence George Bush and his band of obedient henchmen have sworn by all these years, the evidence that proved the detainees were terrorist die-hards, the evidence that justified holding them indefinitely in Guantanamo, the evidence on the basis of which the Bushmen expected to obtain a few well-chosen convictions before November.
Now it turns out that this evidence is not good enough to put before federal judges. It was good enough only for the Guantanamo Bay Kangaroo Court System.
AP has the full story:
The Bush administration wants to rewrite the official evidence against Guantanamo Bay detainees, allowing it to shore up its cases before they come under scrutiny by civilian judges for the first time.
The government has stood behind the evidence for years. Military review boards relied on it to justify holding hundreds of prisoners indefinitely without charge. Justice Department attorneys said it was thoroughly and fairly reviewed.
Now that federal judges are about to review the evidence, however, the government says it needs to make changes.
The decision follows last week’s Supreme Court ruling, which held that detainees have the right to challenge their detention in civilian court, not just before secret military panels. At a closed-door meeting with judges and defense attorneys this week, government lawyers said they needed time to add new evidence and make other changes to evidentiary documents known as “factual returns.”
Attorneys for the detainees criticized the idea, saying the government is basically asking for a last-minute do-over.
“It’s sort of an admission that the original returns were defective,” said attorney David Remes, who represents many detainees and attended Wednesday’s meeting. “It’s also an admission that the government thinks it needs to beef up the evidence.”
Justice Department spokesman Erik Ablin declined to comment on the plan. The discussions were confirmed by several attorneys and officials who attended or were briefed on the meeting with the judges and defense lawyers.
“It’s a totally fishy maneuver…” said Jonathan Hafetz, an attorney representing several detainees. He was briefed on the plan.
The documents include the government’s accusations and summaries of the evidence that was presented to the military review panel. The records were filed in federal court in many detainee cases in 2004 and 2005, before Congress stripped those courts of the authority to hold hearings.
Detainees’ attorneys who have reviewed the records criticized much of the evidence as hearsay cobbled together from bounty hunters and border guards who accused people of being terrorists in exchange for reward money.
At Guantanamo Bay, the traditional rules of evidence do not apply in trials run by the military. In a Washington federal courtroom, they would.
The government wants to submit new records, which would allow it to add new intelligence and expand its reasoning for holding the detainees. Since the hearings will decide whether the detainees are lawfully being held now — not whether they were lawfully being held over the past several years — the government wants to provide the court its newest, best evidence.
It will be up to federal judges to decide whether the Justice Department can rewrite those documents.
The question is part of a broader dispute over what the upcoming hearings will look like. Attorneys for the detainees want judges to review all the evidence and decide whether each prisoner should be released. The government believes the judges should look only at limited evidence prepared by officials at Guantanamo Bay.
That’s why defense attorneys are troubled by the idea that authorities now want to rewrite that evidence. If the court limits arguments to just the government’s record, and gives the government a chance to improve that record, they believe the detainees’ chances will be hurt.
“They’re not just talking about making a little supplement where they’ve learned something new,” said attorney Charles H. Carpenter, who was in the meeting. “They’re talking about possibly amending every single one.”
What’s truly mindboggling is how openly and blatantly George Bush’s administration is willing to make a total mockery of our once-proud justice system. And how there is no one left within that system to stand up in opposition as the Bushies pervert all our traditional notions of justice.
Vin wrote:
As far as I am concened Islamofacist is my enemy. He should not be held as prisoner; he should be shot and buried six feey under
Posted 20 Jun 2008 at 4:08 pm ¶