Friday, September 29, 2006

Big Brother Bush Now Has The Power To Detain You Indefinitely, Torture You and Convict You On Hearsay Evidence

All he has to do is call you an "enemy combatant" and you can disappear from view for a long, long time. The Washington Post has the details:

The military trials bill approved by Congress lends legislative support for the first time to broad rules for the detention, interrogation, prosecution and trials of terrorism suspects far different from those in the familiar American criminal justice system.

President Bush's argument that the government requires extraordinary power to respond to the unusual threat of terrorism helped him win final support for a system of military trials with highly truncated defendant's rights. The United States used similar trials on just four occasions: during the country's revolution, the Mexican-American War, the Civil War and World War II.

Included in the bill, passed by Republican majorities in the Senate yesterday and the House on Wednesday, are unique rules that bar terrorism suspects from challenging their detention or treatment through traditional habeas corpus petitions. They allow prosecutors, under certain conditions, to use evidence collected through hearsay or coercion to seek criminal convictions.

The bill rejects the right to a speedy trial and limits the traditional right to self-representation by requiring that defendants accept military defense attorneys. Panels of military officers need not reach unanimous agreement to win convictions, except in death penalty cases, and appeals must go through a second military panel before reaching a federal civilian court.

By writing into law for the first time the definition of an "unlawful enemy combatant," the bill empowers the executive branch to detain indefinitely anyone it determines to have "purposefully and materially" supported anti-U.S. hostilities. Only foreign nationals among those detainees can be tried by the military commissions, as they are known, and sentenced to decades in jail or put to death.

At the same time, the bill immunizes U.S. officials from prosecution for cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment of detainees who the military and the CIA captured before the end of last year. It gives the president a dominant but not exclusive role in setting the rules for future interrogations of terrorism suspects.

Amazing. Just amazing. Giving a proven liar and torturer these expanded powers is absurd.

But of course the real reason why the administration needed to pass this before the midterms is so that they can get immunity for all the torture they have ordered in the past.

Now nobody can touch them and try them as war criminals.

Even though they are war criminals.

Comments:
There's still plenty of other grounds for prosecuting these guys. But until they do something that rises to the level of a blow job, it ain't gonna happen.
 
But of course the real reason why the administration needed to pass this before the midterms is so that they can get immunity for all the torture they have ordered in the past.

And this may be the most compelling reason that Bu$hCo needed to get Congress to role over on this one.
 
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