From the Los Angeles Times
Rules for Guantanamo Bay proceedings are still unclear
Atty.
Gen. Michael B. Mukasey calls on Congress to pass legislation on the
matter. Democrats' response suggests that rules for deciding who can be
held and for how long are unlikely to be made soon.
By David G. Savage
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 22, 2008
WASHINGTON —
More than six years after the Bush administration sent hundreds of
foreign prisoners to Guantanamo Bay, the rules for deciding just who
can be held and for how long remain unclear.
Comments Monday by the attorney general and congressional Democrats
suggest such issues will not be resolved soon -- and not before a new
administration takes power.
Roughly 270 prisoners remain at Guantanamo, of whom about 20 are slated
to be tried as war criminals. No one is sure what will happen to the
rest of them, even if the prison itself is closed.
Last month, the
Supreme Court said judges could hear appeals from the detainees,
and in theory, order some of them released.
But the justices did not spell out who would qualify as an "unlawful
enemy combatant," as the prisoners at Guantanamo are designated, nor
did they say what proof would be needed to show that someone captured
years ago remained a danger today.
On Monday morning, U.S. Atty. Gen. Michael B. Mukasey called on
Congress to pass legislation to set the rules.
"I am urging Congress to act to resolve the difficult questions left
open by the Supreme Court," he said in a
speech at the American Enterprise Institute.
"Without guidance from Congress," judges will disagree on the rules,
and it will "lead to a long period of protracted litigation."
When asked if the Bush administration had drafted a legislative
proposal, Mukasey said it had not. "It's Congress' job to pass
legislation," he replied.
Key Democrats in Congress declined Monday, saying judges should work
out the rules as they go along.
"The courts are well equipped to handle this situation," said Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev).
"Congress should not rush to pass yet another ill-conceived piece of
legislation," added Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick J.
Leahy (D-Vt.). "With so little time left in this legislative session .
. . it may be an issue more responsibly addressed in the next Congress
with a new president."
Until rebuked by the Supreme Court, the Bush administration had
maintained that the president on his own could decide who could be held
as an enemy combatant, and for how long.
Civil libertarians faulted Bush's "unilateral" approach.
Now, however, with the administration in retreat, it is asking for
Congress to set the rules. But this approach too has been denounced by
civil libertarians.
The
American Civil Liberties Union called Mukasey’s move an attempt "to
subvert the Constitution" and "an enormous executive branch power grab."
The continuing spat between the Bush administration and Democrats over
Guantanamo means a panel of federal judges will have to work out the
rules for the detainees' cases.
In a brief statement responding to Mukasey's speech, Chief Judge Royce
C. Lamberth said the judges were moving forward promptly to hold
hearings.
"Guidance from Congress on these difficult subjects is, of course,
always welcome," he said.
"Because we are on a fast track, however, such guidance sooner, rather
than later, would certainly be most helpful."
For judges, it is common to hear habeas appeals from prisoners who are
seeking their release. In ordinary cases, the prisoners have been tried
and convicted in a court; they appeal claiming their rights were
violated in some way.
But in the Guantanamo cases, the prisoners have not been tried or
convicted. The U.S. military contends it has evidence indicating they
are dangerous, either because they were linked to terrorists or they
were involved in fighting against Americans.
Lawyers for the detainees seek to challenge this evidence.
"In a lot of the cases, we believe it is misinformation or mistaken
identity," said David Cynamon, a Washington lawyer who is representing
four Kuwaitis who have been held since 2002.
How can these disputes over 6-year-old evidence be resolved? Mukasey
warned against requiring that "each detainee receive a full-dress
trial, with live testimony" from an array of witnesses, including
soldiers.
Cynamon said he and other lawyers opposed a "paper process," whereby
the judge would simply review memos submitted by the military.
It is also not clear who has the burden of proof in these cases.
Must the government prove the detainee was an enemy soldier or a
terrorist? Or does the detainee have to prove he is innocent of the
government's claims?
"Somebody has to figure out how these hearings will play out," Cynamon
said. "I think the judiciary is better positioned to decide these
questions."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times