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Padilla Trial Highlights Bush
Administration's Manipulation Of Justice
By Paul Craig Roberts
27/01/08 "Jurist"
-- - "The
George W. Bush administration responded to the 9/11 attack
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon with an assault on US
civil liberty that Bush and the DOJ justified in the name of
"the war on terror." The government gave assurances that the
draconian measures only apply to “terrorists.” “Terrorist,”
however, was not defined. The government claimed the
discretionary power to decide who is a “terrorist” without
having to present evidence or charges in a court of law.
The Bush administration’s policy comprises an end-run around
any notion of procedural due process of law. Administration
assurances that harsh treatment is reserved only for
“terrorists” is meaningless when the threshold process for
determining who is and who is not a “terrorist” depends on
executive discretion that is not subject to review.
Substantive rights are useless without the procedural rights
to enforce them.
Jose Padilla, a US citizen, was accused of intending to set
off a radioactive “dirty bomb” in an American city. He was
denied due process and the protection of habeas corpus. He
was held for years under harsh conditions that brought about
“essentially the destruction of a human being’s mind,”
according to Dr. Angela Hegarty, a psychiatrist who spent 22
hours examining Padilla.
Eventually, the courts intervened. In December 2003 an
appellate court ruled that Padilla could not be denied
habeas corpus protection. To forestall another Supreme Court
ruling against the Bush administration, the administration
withdrew Padilla’s status as “enemy combatant” and filed
criminal charges that bore no relationship to the
administration’s original allegations that Padilla intended
to explode a “dirty bomb.”
The only case the DOJ was able to manufacture against
Padilla was that he was a “terrorist-wannabe.” Padilla was
thus indicted on the Benthamite grounds that he might commit
a terrorist act in the future.
By the time Padilla went to trial, he had been demonized for
years in the media as the “dirty bomb” terrorist. In the
Washington Post, August 17, 2007, Peter Whoriskey described
the Padilla jury as a patriotic jury that appeared in court
with one row of jurors dressed in red, one in white, and one
in blue. As Lawrence Stratton and I write in the new edition
of The Tyranny of Good Intentions: “It was a jury
primed to be psychologically and emotionally manipulated by
federal prosecutors. No member of this jury was going to
return home to accusations of letting off the “dirty
bomber.”
The main “evidence” introduced against Padilla was an
unrelated 10-year old video of Osama bin Laden, which served
to arouse in jurors fear, anger, and disturbing memories of
September 11.
The prosecutors also claimed to have a form that Padilla is
alleged to have completed in 2000, prior to September 11,
2001, to attend an al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan. At
that time Al Qaeda and the Taliban were fighting against a
remnant of the Northern Alliance containing elements of the
old Soviet regime to unify Afghanistan as an Islamic state.
Although it is far fetched that al Qaeda sent out
applications to attend its training camps, any such
application by Padilla predated the 9/11 attack and was
related only to domestic affairs in Afghanistan. Any such
application has no relevance to any act of terrorism.
Padilla was convicted on all counts. In handing down a
17-year sentence, US District Judge Marcia Cooke denied
the prosecutors’ request for a life sentence and observed:
“There is no evidence that these defendants personally
maimed, kidnapped or killed anyone in the United States or
elsewhere.”
Under Blackstonian law, the basis of the US Constitution,
the Padilla case has no crime and no intent to commit a
crime. Judge Cooke vaguely recognized this, but US law has
been pushed off its Blackstonian basis and is being
reconstructed on a Benthamite basis.
Benthamite law is the great ally of tyranny. It permits
people to be arrested on the suspicion that they might
commit a crime in the future, to be tortured, and to be held
indefinitely. In other words, suspicion leads to
imprisonment without the check of warrant, judge, trial or
jury.
This is the law that the Padilla case has given us. Padilla,
an American citizen, was denied habeas corpus, tortured, and
convicted of the Benthamite crime of being suspected of
possibly committing a real crime in the future. The fact
that judge and jury went along with the Benthamite
proceeding shows that Benthamite justice can operate within
the old Blackstonian process.
The Justice Department that manufactured the case against
Padilla is the same DOJ that wrote memos justifying torture
and findings that the President of the US need not obey
federal statutes such as FISA or abide by the Geneva
Conventions and the US Constitution. It is the same DOJ
whose attorney general told Congress that the Constitution
does not provide habeas corpus protection to every US
citizen.
This same DOJ is the product of an administration the
highest officers of which have been documented to have
lied about Iraq 935 times in the two years following
9/11.
If the Bush administration will lie about matters of war and
death and fabricate evidence to justify war, why won’t the
administration lie and fabricate evidence in order to
convict accused “terrorists” like Padilla and whomever else
they please?
Harvey Silverglate has noted that the legal changes we have
experienced since 9/11/2001 have destroyed the common law
basis of US law. In terrorist cases, prosecutors do not need
to fabricate evidence, because they can make crimes out of
innocuous and even constitutionally protected activity. A
case in point is the federal indictment of a Saudi graduate
student at the University of Idaho who operated some
Websites, a constitutionally-protected activity, where some
participants in discussion groups advocated jihad. Applying
a provision of the US PATRIOT Act, federal prosecutors
indicted Omar Al-Hussayen for providing “expert advice or
assistance” to terrorist organizations (see
Silverglate, The Boston Globe, June 28, 2004). What
prosecutors are doing goes beyond fabricating evidence. They
are using amorphous terrorism statutes to criminalize
ordinary aspects of everyday life. Another way of putting it
is that prosecutors take ordinary events and stretch them to
fit an expansive interpretation of a terrorism statute. A
large amount of effort is committed to prosecuting
activities that do not fit any common sense meaning of
crime."
Paul Craig Roberts [former US Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury; co-author (with Lawrence Stratton) of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions]
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