(The judge alluded to in the title of the article was a Bush appointee.)

NY Times July 19, 2013
Judge Challenges White House Claims on Authority in Drone Killings
By SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON —  A federal judge on Friday sharply and repeatedly 
challenged the Obama administration’s claim that courts have no power 
over targeted drone killings of American citizens overseas.

Judge Rosemary M. Collyer of the United States District Court here was 
hearing the government’s request to dismiss a lawsuit filed by relatives 
of three Americans killed in two drone strikes in Yemen in 2011: Anwar 
al-Awlaki, the radical cleric who had joined Al Qaeda in the Arabian 
Peninsula; Mr. Awlaki’s 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman, who had no 
involvement in terrorism; and Samir Khan, a 30-year-old North Carolina 
man who had become a propagandist for the same Qaeda branch.

Judge Collyer said she was “troubled” by the government’s assertion that 
it could kill American citizens it designated as dangerous, with no role 
for courts to review the decision.

“Are you saying that a U.S. citizen targeted by the United States in a 
foreign country has no constitutional rights?” she asked Brian Hauck, a 
deputy assistant attorney general. “How broadly are you asserting the 
right of the United States to target an American citizen? Where is the 
limit to this?”

She provided her own answer: “The limit is the courthouse door.”

The case comes to court at a time when both the legality and wisdom of 
the administration’s use of targeted killing as a counterterrorism 
measure have come under question in Congress and among the public. The 
debate, including the first public discussions of drone strikes by 
Congress and a major speech by President Obama on May 23, has raised the 
possibility of a role for judges in approving the addition of Americans 
to the so-called kill list of suspected terrorists or in signing off on 
strikes.

Mr. Hauck acknowledged that Americans targeted overseas do have rights, 
but he said they could not be enforced in court either before or after 
the Americans were killed. Judges, he suggested, have neither the 
expertise nor the tools necessary to assess the danger posed by 
terrorists, the feasibility of capturing them or when and how they 
should be killed.

“Courts don’t have the apparatus to analyze” such issues, so they must 
be left to the executive branch, with oversight by Congress, Mr. Hauck 
said. But he argued, as Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has in the 
past, that there are multiple “checks” inside the executive branch to 
make sure such killings are legally justified.

Judge Collyer did not buy it. “No, no, no,” she said. “The executive is 
not an effective check on the executive.” She bridled at the notion that 
judges were incapable of properly assessing complex national security 
issues, declaring, “You’d be surprised at the amount of understanding 
other parts of the government think judges have.”

Despite Judge Collyer’s evident frustration with parts of the Obama 
administration’s stance, legal experts say the plaintiffs face an uphill 
battle. They are Nasser al-Awlaki, father and grandfather of two of the 
men killed, who wrote about their deaths on Wednesday in The New York 
Times, and Sarah Khan, mother of Samir Khan. Only Anwar al-Awlaki was 
deliberately targeted, officials say; Mr. Khan was killed in the same 
strike, while Abdulrahman al-Awlaki was killed by mistake in a strike 
officials say was intended for a suspected terrorist who turned out not 
to be present.

The relatives filed suit late last year, but not against the military 
and the Central Intelligence Agency, which carried out the strikes, 
because such lawsuits usually fail on technical grounds. Instead, they 
sued four officials in charge of the agencies at the time: David H. 
Petraeus, the former C.I.A. director; Leon E. Panetta, the former 
defense secretary; and two successive heads of the Joint Special 
Operations Command, Adm. William H. McRaven and Lt. Gen. Joseph L. Votel.

The lawsuit is known as a Bivens action, after a 1971 Supreme Court 
ruling that permitted citizens to sue government officials personally 
under some circumstances for violating their constitutional rights.

The government is asking that the lawsuit be dismissed on several 
grounds. Mr. Hauck said decisions about targeted killing should be 
reserved to the “political” branches of government, the executive and 
legislative, not the judiciary. In addition, he said, allowing a lawsuit 
against top national security officials to proceed would set a dangerous 
and disruptive precedent.

“We don’t want these counterterrorism officials distracted by the threat 
of litigation,” he said.

Pardiss Kebriaei of the Center for Constitutional Rights and Hina Shamsi 
of the American Civil Liberties Union, representing the plaintiffs, 
argued that the claims had extraordinary importance because they 
involved the deaths of Americans at the government’s hands. “The entire 
goal of Bivens is deterrence,” to discourage officials from infringing 
the rights of Americans, Ms. Shamsi said.

“The court still has a role to play in adjudicating whether or not a 
citizen’s rights have been violated,” she said.

At one point, when Mr. Hauck referred to the Constitution, Judge 
Collyer, 67, who was appointed by President George W. Bush and also 
serves on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, interrupted to 
note that the Constitution prescribed three branches of government, and 
that she represented one of them.

“The one that’s normally yelled at and not given any money,” she said, 
sounding as if she was not entirely joking. “The most important thing 
about the United States is that it’s a nation of laws.”

The judge said that she believed the case raised difficult questions and 
that she would “do a lot of reading and studying and thinking and try to 
reach a decision as soon as I can.”
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