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Court Backs Open Deportation Hearings in Terror Cases

August 27, 2002
By ADAM LIPTAK






The federal appeals court in Cincinnati declared yesterday
that the Bush administration acted unlawfully in holding
hundreds of deportation hearings in secret based only on
the government's assertion that the people involved may
have links to terrorism.

The decision, which was laced with stinging language
questioning the administration's commitment to an open
democracy, is the first major appellate ruling on the
government's legal tactics concerning Sept. 11.

"Democracies die behind closed doors," wrote Judge Damon J.
Keith for the unanimous three-judge panel of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The Bush
administration has sought, the panel said, to place its
actions "beyond public scrutiny."

"When the government begins closing doors," the panel
continued, "it selectively controls information rightfully
belonging to the people. Selective information is
misinformation."

Barbara Comstock, a spokeswoman for the Justice Department,
said the government had not decided whether to appeal.

"The Justice Department has an obligation to exercise all
available options to disrupt and prevent terrorism within
the bounds of the Constitution, and will review today's
opinion in light of our duty to protect the American
people," Ms. Comstock said in a statement.

The case was brought by four Michigan newspapers and
Representative John Conyers Jr., Democrat of Michigan. They
sought to attend deportation hearings concerning Rabih
Haddad, a Muslim clergyman who had overstayed his tourist
visa.

Mr. Haddad, a native of Lebanon and a resident of Ann
Arbor, Mich., is the founder of the Global Relief
Foundation, a Muslim charity whose assets were frozen after
it came under federal scrutiny.

In April, a federal district judge in Detroit rejected the
government's argument that it should be allowed to decide
which hearings must be closed without presenting arguments
and evidence to immigration judges. The judge, Nancy G.
Edmunds, ruled that future hearings in Mr. Haddad's case
must be open, and the government has released transcripts
of the sealed hearings. Judge Edmunds was appointed by the
first President Bush.

In similar decisions that have yet to be tested on appeal,
trial court judges in Newark and Washington have also
recently ordered the government to open hearings and
release information about people held in connection with
terrorism investigations.

According to information provided by the Justice Department
last month, 752 people were detained on immigration
violations in connection with Sept. 11 investigations. As
of late June, 81 remained in custody. The rest were
released or deported.

The appeals court in Cincinnati affirmed Judge Edmunds's
decision with unusual speed, issuing its decision fewer
than three weeks after it heard oral arguments.

"The panel was offended by the government's attempt to hide
behind national security to strip us of our freedoms," said
Herschel P. Fink, who represented The Detroit Free Press in
the case.

Press lawyers were unrestrained in their enthusiasm for the
decision.

"I want to weep it's so good," said Lucy Dalglish, the
executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press.

Judge Keith, who was appointed to the appeals court by
President Jimmy Carter, has a history of strong opinions on
civil liberties. In 1971, as a district judge, he rejected
an argument by Attorney General John Mitchell that wiretaps
obtained without search warrants could sometimes be
justified in the name of national security.

The appeals court panel also included Martha Craig
Daughtrey, also of the United States Court of Appeals for
the Sixth Circuit, and James G. Carr, a federal trial court
judge from Toledo, Ohio, sitting as a visiting appellate
judge. Judges Daughtrey and Carr were both appointed by
President Bill Clinton.

A broader case on the same issues will be heard by the
federal appeals court in Philadelphia next month. In that
case, a Newark judge ordered that all deportations
nationwide be opened to public scrutiny unless the
government offered proof, case by case, of why secrecy was
needed.

The Justice Department may be awaiting the outcome of that
case before deciding whether to appeal in the Haddad case.

Yesterday's decision applied directly only to Mr. Haddad's
case. Its reasoning, though, is binding on courts in
Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee and may be cited as
precedent elsewhere.

The recent judicial activity is part of a historical
pattern, said Lee Levine, a Washington lawyer and the
author of a treatise on access to government proceedings.

"Some momentous event happens," Mr. Levine said. "There
follows a governmentwide tendency to defer to the executive
branch. Then at some point when a calm distance has been
achieved from the precipitating event, slowly but surely
the judiciary rises from its slumber and says, `We've
forgotten what we're fighting for.' "

The decision rejected administration arguments that tried
to distinguish immigration hearings, which are conducted
within the executive branch, from trials conducted by the
judicial branch.

The court held that deportation hearings look and feel like
trials. They are, Judge Keith wrote, "exceedingly formal
and adversarial."

Indeed, said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer at the American Civil
Liberties Union who represented some of the plaintiffs,
"there is perhaps even greater reason to have public
scrutiny of deportation hearings."

"There is no jury," Mr. Gelernt added, "and the defendants
will often not have counsel. They're facing trained
prosecutors, and they're often very literally sitting there
all by themselves."

The appeals court decision was also notable, experts said,
for a warm embrace of news organizations not seen in most
courts since the Vietnam and Watergate eras. The public,
the court wrote, has deputized the press "as the guardians
of their liberty."

The panel emphasized that the government might well be able
to meet its burden of persuading immigration judges case by
case that given proceedings may be closed.

The panel wrote that the government has already outlined
"compelling interests sufficient to justify closure."

Among the rationales for closing cited in government
affidavits were physical danger and embarrassment to the
detainees and people associated with them, along with the
possibility of compromising investigations.

Ms. Comstock said the government was pleased with this
aspect of the decision.

"As the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals recognized today,"
she said, "the government has a compelling interest in
preventing terrorism and closing immigration proceedings
that could reveal information" that might help terrorists
avoid detection.

The panel held that the general interest in preventing
terrorism must be argued to and accepted by immigration
judges in the context of particular cases. The judge in Mr.
Haddad's case made no such findings. Rather, she relied on
a blanket directive issued by the chief immigration judge,
Michael J. Creppy. It instructed immigration judges to keep
so-called special-interest cases secret.

"Each of these cases is to be heard separately from all
other cases on the docket," Judge Creppy wrote. "The
courtroom must be closed for these cases - no visitors, no
family, and no press."

"This restriction," he continued, "includes confirming or
denying whether such a case is on the docket."

The appeals court panel said the directive violated the
Constitution.

"The task of designating a case special interest is
performed in secret, without any established standards or
procedures, and the process is, thus, not subject to any
sort of review," Judge Keith wrote. "A government operating
in the shadow of secrecy stands in complete opposition to
the society envisioned by the framers of our Constitution."


http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/27/national/27DETA.html?ex=1031452980&ei=1&en=c977034cebc34cdb



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