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Monday, June 23, 2008
Fred Thompson :: Townhall.com Columnist
Boumediene: A Supremely Problematic Court Decision
by Fred Thompson
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Look, this issue isn’t going to go away, so consider these things the next time you hear someone defend the Supreme Court’s majority opinion as an attempt at “basic fairness” and to help prevent an innocent sheepherder from being improperly detained:

First, the Court left total confusion and uncertainty as to what rights these habeas petitions will vindicate. What will be the nature of the review under these new habeas rights? Will the Court review the constitutionality of the detention hearing procedures? What will be the burden of proof in these new proceedings? Will they have a factual hearing in order to try to recreate the circumstances in the field at the time of the detainee’s apprehension?

The answer is no one knows. It will all be dumped into the laps of some federal district judge and his or her law clerks. These are unprecedented circumstances and there is no way to predict what some judge might see as his or her new mandate under the constitution.

Again, it will be a federal judge — not the President or the Congress or a military tribunal — who will decide the appropriate extent to which the detainee will have access to classified military information, as just one of the more troubling examples. In other words, the branch of our government least qualified to make determinations on national security and foreign policy will now do just that. One other thing is certain. Whatever comes out of this new habeas corpus mish mash will generate a new round of appeals and our avowed enemies will work their way deeper and deeper into our court system.

Second, the majority opinion throws into question whether the tens of thousands of detainees in Iraq and the more than 1000 in Afghanistan are now entitled to habeas. Is the Court going to extend habeas protection to all foreign detainees held in foreign territory over which the United States is not sovereign, but has de facto control? We could be looking at tens of thousands of military detainee habeas cases in federal court.

Third, the Court’s decision encourages al Qaeda to continue in violation of the Geneva Conventions. The Geneva Conventions are designed to protect civilians and to reward combatants with certain protections if they abide by the Conventions. Al Qaeda specifically targets civilians and wears no uniform to distinguish themselves from the civilian population. Our policy now is to give al Qaeda combatants privileges that exceed the Conventions in terms of access to our court system without requiring al Qaeda to abide by these conventions themselves. This, of course, is an incentive for them to violate the law of war. They receive no penalty for not doing so, and by not wearing uniforms, makes any standard of proof requirement with regard to enemy combatant status more difficult for the United States. We are literally giving the enemy the means by which they can do us great harm.

Unfortunately it is not uncommon for a majority of the Supreme Court to make new law based not upon precedent but upon policy preferences of members of the Court. But this time it’s part of a much bigger picture. It is about power, and who gets to exercise it in an area that is vital to the security of this nation. This time it’s not only wrong, it’s dangerous.

It should also be noted that Senator Obama thinks that the decision in Boumediene v Bush is an excellent one. I don’t know what’s worse: that he doesn’t understand what the Court has done … or that he actually does and still thinks this was a sound ruling. Good luck to all of us.

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About The Author

Fred Thompson has been a lawyer, actor and United States Senator. He writes exclusive analysis and commentary for Townhall Magazine.

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SCOTUS
Talent Scout is right. I have a copy of the Constitution and that is what it says. Bryce is wrong I am pretty sure it was Lincoln who suspended Habeas Corpus. Article III section 2 mentions citizen 5 times. Enemy combatents 0. XI amendment "the judicial power shall not be construed to extend to... subjects of a Foreign State. That says to me that SCOTUS has no jurisdiction over ENEMY COMBATENTS. The XIV amendment says born or naturalized. Everything from there forward means just that born or naturalized citizen. Next time you liberals want to quote the Constitution read those as well.

Kimberly if you think that anybody in their right mind is going to believe an anti-Bush diatribe cloaked under the guise of a congressional finding you are nuts. I don't believe a word this congress says.

I am still looking for the answer to my question I posted on another blog. Can't the President tell the SCOTUS to shove it? You have no Constitutional role in the conduct of a war. That is the jurisdiction of Congress and the President.

How are we to have any faith in the Supreme Court if they rule on enemy combatants and then do the right thing with 2nd amendment. We need as much trust in the court as we do our elected representatives. It was Abraham Lincoln who said the "Constitution is not a suicide pact."

For you people who like this ruling and think we should go back to Sept 10th tell me why, after Bin Laden was indicted by a Federal Grand Jury, the FBI did'nt arrest him since they knew where he was? If they are criminals and not terrorists how many people will have to die before the FBI can do anything? Evidently 2,974 dead americans wasn't enough for you to believe that we are in a war not a criminal investigation.

He obviously understands
You do not know what you're talking about.
----

bryce Location: MI
Reply # 198
Date: Jun 26, 2008 - 12:19 AM EST
Subject: To Lilly
You obviously share Talent's belief that the military is not obliged to obey the Constitution, but that is simply not true.


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