IMPRISONED WITHOUT DUE PROCESS FOR

Correspondence with the Bush Administration

U.S. transfers 20 more prisoners to Afghan custody
Reuters
February 10, 2008
Confusion Clouds Guantanamo Tribunals
Associated Press
February 6, 2008
France urges US to drop Guantanamo trial of Canadian
AFP
January 23, 2008
More Media...

Supreme Court Decisions
  - RASUL v. Bush & Al-Odah v. United States
  - HAMDI et al. v. RUMSFELD
  - HAMDAN et al. v. RUMSFELD

Amicus Briefs
  - Helen Duffy and William Aceves

 

 

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If You're Innocent, You Might Be Able To Get Your Sentence Reduced To Life

Prison garb lies on a bed in a cell at CampEcho in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba

Editorial: Jacob Sullum
The Chicago Sun-Times
July 30, 2006

The Bush administration is circulating a bill that would tweak the rules for trying accused terrorists before military commissions. The New York Times says the new rules include some additional protections for defendants, but after reading the article twice I'm still not sure what they are.

Hearsay would still be admissible as evidence, and so would information obtained through coercive interrogation techniques (though not through torture -- but remember that waterboarding is not torture). Defendants could still be excluded from their own trials.

Instead of starting with standard court-martial procedures and revising them to handle terrorism, as several influential senators prefer, the administration is starting with the commissions nixed by the Supreme Court and hoping that a few barely perceptible revisions will suffice.

The procedural details may not matter in any case. "Rather than requiring a speedy trial for enemy combatants," the Times reports, "the draft proposal says they 'may be tried and punished at any time without limitations.' Defendants could be held until hostilities are completed, even if found not guilty by a commission."

If "hostilities" are not completed until the world is rid of terrorism, suspects can get a life sentence with or without a trial, no matter what procedures are used and regardless of the verdict.

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