In Terror War, 2nd Track for Suspects
Those Designated 'Combatants' Lose Legal Protections

By Charles Lane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, December 1, 2002; Page A01

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58308-2002Nov30.html>

The Bush administration is developing a parallel legal system in
which terrorism suspects -- U.S. citizens and noncitizens alike --
may be investigated, jailed, interrogated, tried and punished without
legal protections guaranteed by the ordinary system, lawyers inside
and outside the government say.

The elements of this new system are already familiar from President
Bush's orders and his aides' policy statements and legal briefs:
indefinite military detention for those designated "enemy
combatants," liberal use of "material witness" warrants,
counterintelligence-style wiretaps and searches led by law
enforcement officials and, for noncitizens, trial by military
commissions or deportation after strictly closed hearings.

Only now, however, is it becoming clear how these elements could
ultimately interact.

For example, under authority it already has or is asserting in court
cases, the administration, with approval of the special Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court, could order a clandestine search of
a U.S. citizen's home and, based on the information gathered,
secretly declare the citizen an enemy combatant, to be held
indefinitely at a U.S. military base. Courts would have very limited
authority to second-guess the detention, to the extent that they were
aware of it.

Administration officials, noting that they have chosen to prosecute
suspected Taliban member John Walker Lindh, "shoe bomber" Richard
Reid and alleged Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui in ordinary
federal courts, say the parallel system is meant to be used
selectively, as a complement to conventional processes, not as a
substitute. But, they say, the parallel system is necessary because
terrorism is a form of war as well as a form of crime, and it must
not only be punished after incidents occur, but also prevented and
disrupted through the gathering of timely intelligence.

"I wouldn't call it an alternative system," said an administration
official who has helped devise the legal response to the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "But it is different than the criminal
procedure system we all know and love. It's a separate track for
people we catch in the war."

At least one American has been shifted from the ordinary legal system
into the parallel one: alleged al Qaeda "dirty bomb" plotter Jose
Padilla, who is being held at a Navy brig, without the right to
communicate with a lawyer or anyone else. U.S. officials have told
the courts that they can detain and interrogate him until the
executive branch declares an end to the war against terrorism.

The final outlines of this parallel system will be known only after
the courts, including probably the Supreme Court, have settled a
variety of issues being litigated. But the prospect of such a system
has triggered a fierce debate.

Civil libertarians accuse the Bush administration of an executive-
branch power grab that will erode the rights and freedoms that
terrorists are trying to destroy -- and that were enhanced only
recently in response to abuses during the civil rights era, Vietnam
and Watergate.

"They are trying to embed in law a vast expansion of executive
authority with no judicial oversight in the name of national
security," said Kate Martin, director of the Center for National
Security Studies, a Washington-based nonprofit group that has
challenged the administration approach in court. "This is more tied
to statutory legal authority than J. Edgar Hoover's political spying,
but that may make it more dangerous. You could have the law serving
as a vehicle for all kinds of abuses."

Administration officials say that they are acting under ample legal
authority derived from statutes, court decisions and wartime powers
that the president possesses as commander in chief under the
Constitution.

"When you have a long period of time when you're not engaged in a
war, people tend to forget, or put in backs of their minds, the
necessity for certain types of government action used when we are in
danger, when we are facing eyeball to eyeball a serious threat,"
Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson, who leads the administration's
anti-terrorism legal team in the federal courts, said in an
interview.

Broadly speaking, the debate between the administration and its
critics is not so much about the methods the government seeks to
employ as it is about who should act as a check against potential
abuses. Executive Decisions

Civil libertarians insist that the courts should searchingly review
Bush's actions, so that he is always held accountable to an
independent branch of government. Administration officials, however,
imply that the main check on the president's performance in wartime
is political -- that if the public perceives his approach to
terrorism is excessive or ineffective, it will vote him out of
office.

"At the end of the day in our constitutional system, someone will
have to decide whether that [decision to designate someone an enemy
combatant] is a right or just decision," Olson said. "Who will
finally decide that? Will it be a judge, or will it be the president
of the United States, elected by the people, specifically to perform
that function, with the capacity to have the information at his
disposal with the assistance of those who work for him?"

Probably the most hotly disputed element of the administration's
approach is its contention that the president alone can designate
individuals, including U.S. citizens, as enemy combatants, who can be
detained with no access to lawyers or family members unless and until
the president determines, in effect, that hostilities between the
United States and that individual have ended.

Padilla was held as a material witness for a month after his May 8
arrest in Chicago before he was designated an enemy combatant. He is
one of two U.S. citizens being held as enemy combatants at the Navy
brig in Charleston, S.C. The other is Yaser Esam Hamdi, a Saudi
Taliban fighter who was captured by American troops in Afghanistan
and sent to the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, until it was
discovered that he was born in Louisiana.

Attorneys are challenging their detentions in federal court. While
civil libertarians concede that the executive branch has well-
established authority to name and confine members of enemy forces
during wartime, they maintain that it is unconstitutional to subject
U.S. citizens to indefinite confinement on little more than the
president's declaration, especially given the inherently open-ended
nature of an unconventional war against terrorism.

"The notion that the executive branch can decide by itself that an
American citizen can be put in a military camp, incommunicado, is
frightening," said Morton H. Halperin, director of the Washington
office of the Open Society Institute. "They're entitled to hold him
on the grounds that he is in fact at war with the U.S., but there has
to be an opportunity for him to contest those facts."

However, the Bush administration, citing two World War II-era cases
-- the Supreme Court's ruling upholding a military commission trial
for a captured American- citizen Nazi saboteur, and a later federal
appeals court decision upholding the imprisonment of an Italian
American caught as a member of Italian forces in Europe -- says there
is ample precedent for what it is doing.

Courts traditionally understand that they must defer to the
executive's greater expertise and capability when it comes to looking
at such facts and making such judgments in time of war, Bush
officials said. At most, courts have only the power to review legal
claims brought on behalf of detainees, such as whether there is
indeed a state of conflict between the United States and the
detainee.

In a recent legal brief, Olson argued that the detention of people
such as Hamdi or Padilla as enemy combatants is "critical to
gathering intelligence in connection with the overall war effort."

Nor is there any requirement that the executive branch spell out its
criteria for determining who qualifies as an enemy combatant, Olson
argues.

"There won't be 10 rules that trigger this or 10 rules that end
this," Olson said in the interview. "There will be judgments and
instincts and evaluations and implementations that have to be made by
the executive that are probably going to be different from day to
day, depending on the circumstances."

The federal courts have yet to deliver a definitive judgment on the
question. A federal district judge in Virginia, Robert G. Doumar, was
sharply critical of the administration, insisting that Hamdi be
permitted to consult an attorney. But he was partially overruled by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, based in Richmond.

The 4th Circuit, however, said the administration's assertion that
courts should have absolutely no role in examining the facts leading
to an enemy combatant designation was "sweeping." A decision from
that court is pending as to how much of a role a court could claim,
if any. The matter could well have to be settled in the Supreme
Court. Secret Surveillance

The administration scored a victory recently when the U.S. Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review ruled 3 to 0 that the USA
Patriot Act, passed by Congress shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, gives the Justice Department authority to break down what
had come to be known as "the wall" separating criminal investigations
from investigations of foreign agents.

The ruling endorsed the administration's view that law enforcement
goals should be allowed to drive Justice Department requests for
special eavesdropping and search warrants that had been thought to be
reserved for counterintelligence operations. But the court went
further, agreeing with the administration that "the wall" itself had
no real basis in pre-Patriot Act law. Instead, the court ruled, "the
wall" was a product of internal Justice Department guidelines that
were, in turn, based partly on erroneous interpretations of the law
by some courts.

There is no clear line between intelligence and crime in any case,
the court said, because any investigation of a spy ring could
ultimately lead to charging U.S. citizens with crimes such as
espionage.

The decision overruled an earlier one by the lower- level Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court, in which seven judges sharply
criticized past Justice Department misstatements in applications for
permission to do secret surveillance.

Administration officials say that the ruling permits what is only
sensible -- greater sharing of information between federal
prosecutors and federal counterintelligence officials.

Thanks to enforcement of "the wall" by FBI lawyers, they note, pre-
Sept. 11 permission to search Moussaoui's computer was not sought, a
crucial missed opportunity to prevent the attacks.

In practical terms, the ruling means that the attorney general would
still have to convince the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
that he has probable cause to believe that a given subject of a
wiretap or search is an agent of a foreign terrorist group, a
standard that is not dissimilar to the one required for warrants in
ordinary criminal cases.

Yet civil libertarians say that targets of such investigations who
end up being ordered out of the country or prosecuted would lose a
crucial right that they would have in the ordinary criminal justice
system -- the right to examine the government's evidence justifying
the initial warrant.

"So the government starts off using secret surveillance information
not to gather information upon which to make policy, but to imprison
or deport an individual, and then it never gives the individual a
fair chance to see if the surveillance was lawful," Martin said.

(c) 2002 The Washington Post Company

Reply via email to