http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/29/indefinite-detention-senate-military-imprisonment_n_2215305.html
The Constitution and the 5th Amendment live another day!!!!!
WASHINGTON
-- The Senate took a step Thursday toward ending the indefinite
detention of Americans in the U.S., voting for a narrow amendment that
some civil liberties groups opposed, even though they said it was in the
right direction.
The measure, offered by Sen. Dianne Feistein
(D-Calif.) as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act of
2013, specifies that citizens and legal residents suspected of terrorism
in the U.S. cannot be held without trial indefinitely.
"I know
this is a sensitive subject, but I really believe we stand on the values
of our country, and the value of our country is justice for all," said
Feinstein before the Senate voted 67 to 29 to add her provision to the
NDAA.
Civil libertarians had problems with her amendment, even though many regarded it as a positive step.
The
key sentence in her measure says: "An authorization to use military
force, a declaration of war, or any similar authority shall not
authorize the detention without charge or trial of a citizen or lawful
permanent resident of the United States apprehended in the United
States, unless an Act of Congress expressly authorizes such detention."
First,
the rights groups argued, the measure does not provide justice for all,
because it does not apply to non-citizens or Americans caught overseas.
"The
constitutional requirements of due process of law apply to all persons
within the United States," a coalition of 20 groups wrote in a letter to
Feinstein Thursday. "The 5th Amendment to the Constitution states that
'No person shall be…deprived of…liberty…without due process of law.'"
The
groups also said they worried that part of that sentence suggests that
Congress believes it can write laws that abridge basic constitutional
protections in the future.
"The clause 'unless an Act of Congress
expressly authorizes such detention' could be read to imply that there
are no constitutional obstacles to Congress enacting a statute that
would authorize the domestic military detention of any person in the
United States," the letter said.
Senators who had supported the detention of Americans in the past seemed to agree with the civil liberties groups.
One, Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich.), pointed to the same exception. "This is a big 'unless,'" he said.
"I
believe that the 2001 authorization for the use of military force
authorized the detention of U.S. citizens when appropriate in accordance
with the laws of war," said Levin, referring the authorization Congress
passed after the 9/11 attacks.
Sen.
Rand Paul (R-Ky.) an opponent of indefinite detention, said he believed
the amendment does shield citizens, and said American terrorist
suspects would be treated just like criminals and get trials, arguing
that if Americans give up a basic constitutional right to trial,
terrorists have won.
"People say, 'But these terrorists are
horrible people.' Yes, they're horrible people, but every day and every
night in our country horrible people are accused of crimes and they are
taken to court," said Paul. "They have an attorney on our their side.
They have a trial. People who we despise, people who murder and rape,
are given trials by juries. We can try and we can prosecute terrorists."
President
Barack Obama has pledged to never detain people caught in the United
States -- perhaps making it an academic point during his presidency --
but if someone were to be grabbed and detained in the U.S., the extreme
divergence of opinion among the lawmakers as to what the law does likely
assures a court will eventually make a final determination.
Republican
Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), a supporter of detention, suggested matters
were actually quite simple, and a judge would see it his way.
"When
you're fighting a war, the goal is not to prosecute people, the goal is
to win," Graham said. "How do you win a war? You kill them, you capture
them and you interrogate them to find out what they're up to next."
Sen Graham--oh such a war hero. Know one knows more tham him, all comic book style
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