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The End Of Innocence: Uighurs Want A Fair Day In Court

Several days ago, counsel for five Uighur detainees filed a motion to stay a recent Circuit Court decision which upheld broad governmental powers in transferring detainees without third party review by the courts.

The stay is requested pending their appeal of that order to the SCOTUS. SCOTUSblog has helpfully posted the full brief in PDF form.

A response brief from DOJ is due today, and I’m hoping for something better than "the courts can’t compel us to release anyone, thank you very much." But I am, sadly, not holding my breath on that one.

Why?  Because of what the US government may or may not continue to do:

At issue in the case are several orders issued by District Court judges, temporarily limiting the government’s power to transfer individuals out of Guantanamo. The detainees’ lawyers sought those limits to give them a chance to challenge any possible transfer to another country where the prisoners were likely to be tortured, or detained further. Some of the orders require a 30-day notice before a detainee could be sent elsewhere.

The issue gains in importance as the Obama Administration moves toward some final policy decisions on what to do with Guantanamo detainees, in preparation for President Obama’s planned closing of the detention facility next January.

The Circuit Court refused in July to rehear en banc its April ruling. The vote was 6-3. If the Circuit Court now puts the decision into effect without delay, the government would then be free to shift individuals out of Guantanamo with federal judges having no power to intervene.

We have seen maneuvers previously to thwart third party oversight by the Courts on matters ranging from FISA to the gutting of habeas corpus by the MCA and elsewhere. In all cases, the issue comes down to an uplifting of executive power under a unilateral executive theory of supremacy — one which has not, thus far anyway, faired well at SCOTUS.

The Uighurs have provided a stark window into the injustices and excesses of the lengthy detention of innocents at Gitmo.

It has taken years of detention, interrogation by the Chinese under our auspices, exposure of lack of counsel, multiple hearings, adjudication of innocence and then a lengthy attempt at negotiating resettlements for these detainees after we refused to allow them resettlement.

And yet? Still we hold several Uighurs in our custody who have been found "no longer enemy combatants," in official parlance, and China is demanding them back.

I’ll be keeping an eye out for the government’s response brief.

In the meantime?  We still have Uighurs sitting in a prison run by our government after that same government has declared them innocent of the charges for which they were initially detained.  It’s the end of innocence through the looking glass.


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15 Responses to "The End Of Innocence: Uighurs Want A Fair Day In Court"
Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 05:39 am 1

Morning folks. It’s hot, hot, hot here today. How are things with you?


spork_incident | Monday August 17, 2009 05:45 am 2

Christy!

How can I convince you to come and visit us in Pittsburgh? You know you’d have a great time! C’mon, you know you wanna. It’s not that far from…

Oh, wait.

Never mind.

;-P

.


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 05:50 am 3
In response to spork_incident @ 2

LOL — was so nice to meet you in person finally. :)


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 06:19 am 4

btw, the YouTube above is Don Henley and Bruce Hornsby. Was in that kind of mood this morning, so enjoy…


MrCleaveland | Monday August 17, 2009 06:26 am 5

Uighur? I don’t even know her.

Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 06:27 am 6
In response to MrCleaveland @ 5

I toyed with the headline “Uighurs Wobble But They Don’t Fall Down,” but decided that was probably too obscure. *g*


spacefish | Monday August 17, 2009 06:35 am 7
In response to Christy Hardin Smith @ 6

That’s not at all obscure! Everybody knows Weebles!


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 06:36 am 8
In response to spacefish @ 7

I also thought it might just be funny for me, given that I hadn’t had any coffee yet at that point and was a little punchy. *G*


spacefish | Monday August 17, 2009 06:43 am 9
In response to Christy Hardin Smith @ 8

I’m on my third cup and I freaked out my coworkers by wobbling like a Weeble.


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 07:01 am 10
In response to spacefish @ 9

Dude, is there video of that?


spacefish | Monday August 17, 2009 07:03 am 11

Sorry. No cameras allowed in here :(


spacefish | Monday August 17, 2009 07:16 am 12

OMG!!! Tom Delay on Dancing With The Stars this fall!

msnbc.com link


Christy Hardin Smith | Monday August 17, 2009 07:37 am 13
In response to spacefish @ 12

Oh my lord — my eyes, my eyes…


Ann in AZ | Monday August 17, 2009 09:04 am 14

Hi, Christy. Hope you had a great trip. I was able to watch a video of one of your panels on CSpan. It was a great panel, and you did very well.

Did Sabin Willett file the brief? I’ve been very disturbed by what has been done to the Uighurs in our name since I first read a Sabin Willett article about his clients. This is a shameful episode, as is the fact that the US courts wouldn’t release them to the existing Uighur community near DC and Tallahassee Fl. That community wanted to take them, said they could give them jobs, a place to live, all the necessities. But we’re so paranoid, we couldn’t bothered listening to reason.

I’m still wondering if the Uighurs who have already been released have been reunited with their families, or if we have considered that a bridge too far that we didn’t want to cross. Our behavior has been inexcusable. We are truly sorry human beings if we don’t do everything possible to restore families and provide these people with whole lives after what we did to them unjustly.


Hugh | Monday August 17, 2009 09:58 am 15

The Uighur case is another example of how the Obama Administration has bought wholesale into the extreme legal doctrines of the Bush era. It shows that far from breaking with Bush’s excesses Obama is intent on making them his own.

There continues to be a presumption that Obama is on our side. I would argue that in general, we should presume the opposite.


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