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The Padilla Ruling Is a Victory for Freedom
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
March 2, 2005
As I have been writing for the past two years, it is
impossible to overstate the importance of the Jose
Padilla case. The power assumed by the U.S. military and the Bush administration in the Padilla case constitutes what is arguably the most ominous and
dangerous threat to the freedom of the American people in
our lifetime. Fortunately, this past Monday a U.S. district
court in South Carolina put the quietus to the
assumption and exercise of such power. The courts
ruling was a major victory for freedom, the Constitution,
the Bill of Rights, and the rule of law. Unfortunately,
however, the government is appealing, hoping to overturn
the district courts judgment.
(Underscoring the vital importance The Future of Freedom Foundation has placed on the Padilla case and the threat that it poses to the American people, we have published more than 40 original articles and commentaries on Padilla since his arrest and we have linked to countless editorials and op-eds on Padilla from other publications in our FFF Email Update. A list of FFFs orginal articles and commentaries is posted at the end of this article. )
Jose Padilla was arrested at a Chicago airport almost
three years ago on suspicion of having conspired to
commit terrorism. The ordinary procedure the
procedure that has been followed in the United States
since our nations founding would have been
to charge him with federal crimes dealing with terrorism,
indict him, bring him to trial before a jury, and, if
convicted, sentence him. Thats the way the U.S.
criminal justice system has worked for more than 200
years.
With Padilla, the Pentagon has tried to do something completely different,
something that is alien to the American way of life,
something that was obviously modeled on the procedures
employed by the military regimes in Chile and Argentina, many of whose military officers were trained in detention and torture techniques by the Pentagons very own School of the Americas, during their wars on terrorism in the 1980s.
Securing a statement from President Bush that Jose
Padilla was an enemy combatant in the
war on terrorism, the Pentagon took the
position that it could bypass the entire federal criminal
justice system set up by the Constitution, including
rights and guarantees stretching all the way back to
Magna Carta. These included habeas corpus, due process of
law, trial by jury, and right to counsel.
The reason the Padilla doctrine is and should be
so critically important to the American people is
that if the federal courts uphold it, the doctrine will
apply not just to Padilla but to all Americans. The
reason that the Pentagon has limited the exercise of such
power to only one American arrested on U.S. soil is
obvious: it attracts much less attention from the public
and, therefore, does not appear so threatening.
But make no mistake about it: If the Pentagons
power to arrest Americans for terrorism and punish them
without federal court interference is upheld by the
courts, the floodgates will be open to omnipotent
military power in America. American life will never be
the same again. Life will be transformed by such power in
ways unimaginable. No one will be safe from military
arrest, including newspaper editors, government critics,
and dissidents. Any person any person
deemed to be an enemy combatant and
taken into military custody will have no recourse to
avoid punishment, except for the good faith
of the Pentagon, the government organization that is
responsible for plunging this nation into one of the most
shameful torture, sex abuse, rape, and murder scandals in
its history, not to mention the resulting cover-up.
There can be no doubt that the Pentagon is salivating
over the possibility of wielding the same power over U.S.
citizens that it has been wielding over foreigners ever
since 9/11. This includes the power to send detainees to
U.S. gulags in different parts of the world for
indefinite detention and punishment without interference
from the courts. It includes the outsourcing of detainees to friendly
authoritarian regimes so that they, rather than U.S.
officials, can do the torturing on behalf and for the
benefit of the U.S. government. In fact, the Pentagon
itself would admit that the very reason it set up its
primary gulag in Cuba was to avoid the constraints of the
Constitution and interference from the federal judiciary
in its treatment of prisoners and detainees.
Fortunately, in a testament to the wisdom and foresight
of our ancestors, who established the judicial branch of
government with independent judges, the federal judiciary
has stopped the Pentagon dead in its tracks, especially given the Supreme Courts recent decision in favor of Yaser Hamdi and the South Carolina district courts decision in favor of Padilla.
Several months ago,
over the vehement objections of the Pentagon, whose
position toward the Court was essentially Butt out
of our operations! the Supreme Court in Rasul
v. Bush held that the Pentagons operations
at Guantanamo Bay were subject to judicial review and,
moreover, that the Guantanamo Bay detainees had the right
to question their detention in federal court. The Court
also ordered federal officials to either charge or
release Hamdi, an American, whom the Pentagon had
held for some two years as an enemy combatant
in the war on terrorism.
And thats exactly what Judge Henry F. Floyd ordered
in his ruling on Monday in South Carolina either
charge Padilla or release him. Relying on the
Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and decisions of the
U.S. Supreme Court, Floyd made it clear that the
omnipotent power that the Pentagon has been seeking over
the American people, as represented by the Padilla case,
was not going to stand here in the United States. In
essence, he held that thats not what America and
the American way of life are all about.
Significantly, Floyd rejected
the governments ludicrous claim that it has made
since 9/11 that terrorism is an act of war rather
than a criminal offense. Youll recall that ever
since 9/11 we here at The Future of Freedom Foundation
unlike so many supporters of the war on
terrorism have been making exactly that
point that terrorism is a crime, not an act of
war. No matter how
vicious those attacks, no matter how many people were
killed or injured, the fact remains that the attacks fall
within the same criminal-justice parameters as the 1993
attack on the World Trade Center and the Timothy McVeigh
attack on the Oklahoma City federal building. The accused
in those cases were arrested; indicted; accorded due
process of law, right to counsel, and trial by jury; and
were convicted. Thats the way the system works and
is supposed to work. Thats in fact why Zacarias
Moussaoui, whom the feds claim was the 20th hijacker on
9/11, is being tried in federal court rather than being
thrown into a military dungeon, tortured, and punished
without being accorded the procedural protections in the
Bill of Rights.
Unfortunately, the Pentagon continues to fight tooth and
nail for the power represented by the Padilla doctrine.
Thats why the government immediately announced
plans to appeal the ruling. The military dearly wants the
power to arrest any American and jail and punish him
without federal court interference. They know that Jose
Padilla and the federal judiciary are the only barriers
standing in their way.
We cannot rely on Congress to stand up for the
Constitution and to protect us from the military.
Congress has remained silent and supine with respect to
the Padilla doctrine and civil liberties ever since 9/11.
Even worse, the subservience that many members of
Congress have paid to the Pentagon is almost
embarrassing.
We can hope only that the federal judiciary stands firm
in the defense of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights,
and the criminal-justice system that has distinguished
our nation from all others in history stands firm
in the defense of our freedom.
Equally important, we must continue to raise the
consciousness of the American people to the threat that
the Padilla doctrine poses to our way of life, especially
given the possibility that the president and the Pentagon
might try to persuade the Pentagons friends in
Congress to grant the military the power over the
American people that it has so persistently asserted in
the Padilla case.
Jose Padilla has been incarcerated by the U.S. military
for almost three years. No charges. No indictment. No
trial by jury. No due process of law. For most of that
time, no right to counsel. Thats the way things
were done in Chile under General Pinochet and Argentina under General Videla. Thats, in fact, the way things were done under Stalin in the Soviet Union and Hitler in Germany.
Its true that Padilla might well have committed the
crimes of which he is accused. If so, then the government
simply needs to charge him with those crimes. Otherwise,
as Judge Floyd ordered, federal officials must release
him. Thats the way we do things in America.
Thats how things are done in a free society.
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
FFF Original Articles and Commentaries on Jose Padilla Case
Liberty Again at Risk by Sheldon Richman (Aug. 2002)
If This Is Freedom, What Exactly Is Dictatorship by Jacob G. Hornberger (April 2003)
Our Lives and Liberty Turn on Moussaoui by Jacob G. Hornberger (June 2003)
Crossing the Rubicon by Jacob G. Hornberger (July 2003)
We’re Number One … but Is That Good? by Jacob G. Hornberger (Oct. 2003)
Freedom without Due Process of Law by Jacob G. Hornberger (Dec. 2003)
Judicial Blows Against Military Tyranny by Jacob G. Hornberger (Dec. 2003)
An Important Message to FFF Supporters by Jacob G. Hornberger (Dec. 2003)
Jacob Hornberger Blog by Jacob G. Hornberger (Dec. 17, 2003)
Jacob Hornberger Blog by Jacob G. Hornberger (Dec. 19, 2003)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Jan. 9, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Jan. 22, 2004)
Freedom vs. the Pentagon in the U.S. Supreme Court by Jacob G. Hornberger (Feb. 2004)
Lessons About Our Constitution from Abu Ghraib by Jacob G. Hornberger (May 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (June 4, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (June 12, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (June 14, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (June 29, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (June 30, 2004)
The Padilla Doctrine Doesn’t Infringe on Freedom – It Destroys It by Jacob G. Hornberger (June 2004)
A Supreme Reason to Celebrate the Fourth of July (June 2004)
Torture as Due Process by James Bovard (July 2004)
Padilla, Hamdi, and Rasul: Charge Them or Release Them (Jan. 28, 2005) by Jacob G. Hornberger (July 2004)
Pentagon Learns About the Sixth Amendment by Jacob G. Hornberger (July 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (July. 5, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (July. 22, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Aug. 12, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Aug. 24, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Sept. 3, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Sept. 27, 2004)
The Bill of Rights: Antipathy to Militarism by Jacob G. Hornberger (Sept. 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Oct. 12, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Oct. 21, 2004)
Does John Ashcroft Understand the Constitution? by Jacob G. Hornberger (Oct. 2004)
The Bill of Rights: Searches and Seizures by Jacob G. Hornberger (Oct. 2004)
The Bill of Rights: The Right to Keep and Bear Arms by Jacob G. Hornberger (Nov. 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Nov. 15, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Nov. 27, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Dec. 14, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Dec. 16, 2004)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (Dec. 27, 2004)
Augusto Pinochet and the Conservative Threat to America by Jacob G. Hornberger (January 2005)
Jacob Hornberger Blog (March 1, 2005)
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