Showing posts with label abuse of power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abuse of power. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2007

José Padilla: The Bush Admin's Poster Child of Terrorism




I first heard about José Padilla's case when I read How Would A Patriot Act? by Glenn Greenwald. Greenwald uses Padilla as one example of the Bush Administration's illegal detaining of American citizens in the War On Terror.

Arrested in April 2002, Padilla was named "The Dirty Bomber" and declared an "enemy combatant" by George Bush and held for 3 1/2 years before charges were ever brought against him.

On Thursday, over 5 years after he was originally detained, a federal jury in Miami unanimously found José Padilla guilty of "conspiracy to support Islamic terrorism overseas."

According to Greenwald, "That Padilla was finally tried in a court of law is hardly a cause of celebration. The only reason why, after almost four years, the administration finally charged Padilla with crimes was because it wanted to avoid a looming U.S. Supreme Court ruling on whether the President has the power to imprison U.S. citizens without charges.

By finally indicting him, the administration was able to argue, successfully, that the Court should refuse to rule on that question on the ground that the claims were now "moot" by virtue of the indictment. As a result, a ruling by a very right-wing appellate panel in the Fourth Circuit, which held that the President does have these imprisonment powers, still remains valid law, and the administration still claims the authority to imprison U.S. citizens with no charges. "

So, bad news there. I'm worried about use of Presidential Authority to imprison US citizens without even charging them with a crime. And so I'm holding out for the hope that Padilla's conviction will be appealed, the Bush Administration's illegal behavior will be reexamined, and the Fourth Circuit appellate panel's ruling will be reversed. Although there is the question of whether Padilla is more fall guy than terrorist, I'm focusing on the Bush Administration's abuse of power and total ineptitude, as opposed to Padilla's complicity. Because, in theory, it could be any one of us in his shoes.

Regardless of whether Padilla does or does not belong behind bars for being a terrorist, the Bush Administration gathered intelligence on him illegally, detained him illegally, planned to put him away forever and ended up sabotaged by their own disregard for the law in building a case against him. And all the while, it couldn't produce enough evidence to convict him of more than "conspiracy to support Islamic terrorism overseas", which will likely be appealed. What happened to "The Dirty Bomber"? How did we go from blowing up Chicago with a radiological bomb to a disgruntled gangbanger who allegedly attended a "Death to America" training camp? Allegedly. They found his fingerprints on an application? That's all the evidence they have on this dangerous criminal mastermind? Are you kidding me? And there are how many more of these cases waiting in the wings at Guantanamo Bay?

This is a big problem. I would like the Bush Administration to stop using the War on Terror as an excuse to bypass the Bill of Rights. Padilla's case is a perfect example of why this should never happen. I maintain that our government should not have the power to detain us illegally or spy on us. If you agree, then speak up to your representatives. Our congress still doesn't get it. For example, on August 5, President Bush signed S.1927, a bill amending the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978. The bill gives more authority to the National Security Agency and other agencies to monitor emails, phone calls, and other communications that are part of a foreign intelligence investigation.

We're going in circles, spiraling toward a police state under the cover of security while practicing ineptitude and forgoing the country's basic premises.

Back to Padilla, here's a history and some thoughts by David Cole, The Nation's legal affairs correspondent and a professor at Georgetown University Law Center.

The Real Lesson of the Padilla Conviction
posted August 18, 2007

José Padilla's conviction by a federal jury in Miami has already become something of a Rorschach test. Critics of the Bush Administration have argued that the conviction proves that the ordinary criminal justice system works for trying terrorists, and that therefore President Bush did not need to assert the truly extraordinary power of detaining an American citizen arrested on US soil in military custody for more than three years. Meanwhile, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has hailed the conviction as "a significant victory in our efforts to fight the threat posed by terrorists and their supporters."

Both sides are wrong. In fact, Padilla's criminal conviction was a stroke of luck for the Administration. It took a huge gamble in his case, trying him on very weak evidence in the hope of avoiding a Supreme Court test of the President's asserted power to hold American citizens arrested here as "enemy combatants." For the moment, the bet has paid off--at least until an appeal overturns it. But do we really want the Administration gambling on our national security?

The gamble began in 2002, when the Administration took Padilla, arrested at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, into military custody, denied him access to a lawyer and interrogated him for extended periods of time under circumstances that would render anything they learned from him unusable in a trial against him. It continued the gamble when it "disappeared" high-level Al Qaeda suspects into CIA secret prisons, or "black sites," where it subjected them to waterboarding and worse in an effort to coerce information from them. There, too, the Administration allegedly gained intelligence about Padilla--but that information will also never be admissible in a court of law because of the brutal way in which it was obtained.

The short-term decisions to gather information in illegal ways made it impossible to bring Padilla to trial on the Administration's press conference charges that he was pursuing plans to detonate a radiological "dirty bomb," or, somewhat less dramatically, to explode an apartment building by leaving the gas on and setting it afire. Instead, it was relegated to trying him in Miami as part of a hazy conspiracy that involved no plans to commit any specific terrorist or violent act.

The charges in Miami were that Padilla had attended a terrorist training camp sometime before 9/11. Vast stretches of the three-month trial concerned a conspiracy of two other men to provide support to jihadist fighters in Chechnya and Bosnia. Of 3,000 tape-recorded phone calls introduced into evidence, only two concerned Padilla. The main piece of evidence against Padilla was a "mujahadin data form" that appeared to place him at a terrorist training camp--but prosecutors never offered any evidence that Padilla had used that training to further terrorist activity.

In the end, the prosecution succeeded, as the jury found Padilla guilty of attending the training camp and of one count of conspiracy to maim, murder or kidnap overseas. But given how weak the evidence was, the case could easily have come out the other way--and may not withstand appeal.

If what the Administration says about Padilla is true, this should not have been a close case. But because the Administration obtained its evidence against him through unconstitutional means, it was never able to tell the jury what it really thinks Padilla was up to--planning serious terrorist attacks within the United States, not just training abroad and seeking to support Muslims in Chechnya.

And Padilla is only the tip of the iceberg. There are dozens of people at Guantánamo whom the government accuses of much more serious crimes, including the masterminding of 9/11 itself. Those men may never be tried at all, because of the way the Bush Administration chose to treat them and their fellow suspects.

Our national security should not rest on a wager that we can convict terrorists on weak charges that do not even speak of their most serious crimes. Had it chosen to follow the rule of law at the outset, the Bush Administration could have brought many real terrorists to justice by now. Instead, it is left to declare a major victory when it manages to convict a marginal player for crimes that do not even come close to those the Administration claims he actually committed.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Thanks For The Memories, Suckers!


Karl Rove is credited for winning 4 elections for George Bush, and is hailed as the brain of the White House. But what did he really do? "Bush's Brain" manipulated public opinion and exploited his base, giving fundamentalist religious extremism a voice in the process. The country became more divided than ever- more volatile, more scared. Under his advice, the standard for leadership in 21st century America started low and quickly became a joke. Now, after tearing the country apart and leaving it for dead, he's finally joining the long list of Bush staffers who've jumped ship. Mission accomplished!

Here's a hot editorial by Bill Moyers from his August 17th program on the subject of Karl Rove's timely departure from the White House.

"...What struck me about my fellow Texan, Karl Rove, is that he knew how to win elections as if they were divine interventions. You may think God summoned Billy Graham to Florida on the eve of the 2000 election to endorse George W. Bush just in the nick of time, but if it did happen that way, the good lord was speaking in a Texas accent.

Karl Rove figured out a long time ago that the way to take an intellectually incurious draft-averse naughty playboy in a flight jacket with chewing tobacco in his back pocket and make him governor of Texas, was to sell him as God's anointed in a state where preachers and televangelists outnumber even oil derricks and jack rabbits. Using church pews as precincts Rove turned religion into a weapon of political combat -- a battering ram, aimed at the devil's minions, especially at gay people.

It's so easy, as Karl knew, to scapegoat people you outnumber, and if God is love, as rumor has it, Rove knew that, in politics, you better bet on fear and loathing. Never mind that in stroking the basest bigotry of true believers you coarsen both politics and religion.

At the same time he was recruiting an army of the lord for the born-again Bush, Rove was also shaking down corporations for campaign cash. Crony capitalism became a biblical injunction. Greed and God won four elections in a row - twice in the lone star state and twice again in the nation at large. But the result has been to leave Texas under the thumb of big money with huge holes ripped in its social contract, and the U.S. government in shambles - paralyzed, polarized, and mired in war, debt and corruption.

Rove himself is deeply enmeshed in some of the scandals being investigated as we speak, including those missing emails that could tell us who turned the attorney general of the United States into a partisan sock puppet. Rove is riding out of Dodge city as the posse rides in. At his press conference this week he asked God to bless the president and the country, even as reports were circulating that he himself had confessed to friends his own agnosticism; he wished he could believe, but he cannot. That kind of intellectual honesty is to be admired, but you have to wonder how all those folks on the Christian right must feel discovering they were used for partisan reasons by a skeptic, a secular manipulator. On his last play of the game all Karl Rove had to offer them was a hail mary pass, while telling himself there's no one there to catch it."

Monday, August 6, 2007

Deeper Into Madness





















Fear is still ruling our decisions. The concept of giving up liberty to protect our freedom continues. What will we have left after the dust settles? How bad will it get?

House approves foreign wiretap bill, 227-183
The House handed President Bush a victory Saturday, voting to expand the government's abilities to eavesdrop without warrants on foreign suspects whose communications pass through the United States. See the role call here.

Bush Signs Terrorism Law
President Bush on Sunday signed into law an expansion of the government's power to eavesdrop on foreign terror suspects without the need for warrants.

On August 5, President Bush signed S.1927, a bill amending the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978. The bill gives more authority to the National Security Agency and other agencies to monitor emails, phone calls, and other communications that are part of a foreign intelligence investigation.

Democrats Capitulate to President Bush as Congress Gives Government Broad New Powers to Conduct Warrantless Surveillance on American Citizens

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Remind your congressmen that several of our founding fathers have long ago weighed in on the dangers of valuing security over liberty, and of using war to override the separation of powers outlined in the U.S. Constitution.

The FISA court never refused any warrants; it was a rubber-stamp court. It was a bureaucratic step, but an important one. Its presence reminded us what was good about the United States of America. Without it...not so much.

Click here to make your voice heard if you oppose the expansion of Warrantless Wiretapping.

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King George W: James Madison's Nightmare
In 1795, James Madison wrote of war's far-reaching and corrosive effect on public liberty. He could well have been warning us about our own King George, just the sort of imperial president that Madison and other founders of our nation feared most.

Robert Scheer details how James Madison (as well as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson) predicted that America's new experiment in representative government could be threatened. George Bush is currently endangering the foundation of America by doing exactly what the founding fathers warned against: emphasizing security over liberty and getting bogged down in "foreign entanglements".










The view from Jemmy and Dolley Madison's west-facing Montpelier estate in Virginia.