New York Times (December 3, 2007)
Supreme Court Memo …
By
LINDA GREENHOUSE
The question before the court will be whether federal judges have
jurisdiction to hear cases brought by detainees at Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba. A lawyer for a group of detainees will argue that
they do; the Bush administration’s solicitor general will argue that they do
not.
But did not the court already decide that
question? Did not the justices rule in Rasul v. Bush in 2004 that federal
judges could review the legality of the Guantánamo detentions, rejecting the
administration’s position that the detainees’ fate was a question for the
executive branch alone?
No, history will not just be repeating
itself at the court Wednesday. It has moved on, and the four years since the court shocked the administration by agreeing to
hear the Rasul case have been busy ones.
Each of the three branches of government
has made a series of judgments on how to strike the
balance between individual liberty and national security in the post-9/11 era.
This latest Supreme Court confrontation, round three of the justices’
encounter with the detainee question, reflects an extraordinary interbranch
drama, played out as a series of actions and reactions that has now cycled back
to where it began: the role of the federal courts.
This third round is potentially the most
momentous, because at stake is whether
the Supreme Court itself will continue to have a role in defining the balance
or whether, as the administration first argued four years ago, the executive
branch is to have the final word.
The roots of the new case, Boumediene v. Bush, No. 06-1195, lie in the court’s second-round detainee case, Hamdan
v. Rumsfeld, decided in 2006. The court ruled that the military
commission system the Bush administration had set up to try enemy combatants
for war crimes was fatally flawed because the president had acted without
Congressional authorization.
That decision came in an appeal brought
by Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a former driver for Osama
bin Laden. Mr. Hamdan’s route to court had been by means of a
petition for habeas corpus, the traditional route for prisoners to get before a
judge to challenge the validity of their confinement.
In its waning weeks under Republican
control, Congress responded swiftly to the Hamdan decision
by passing the Military Commissions Act of 2006. This new law
not only authorized the military commissions — a commission at
Guantánamo will begin taking evidence against Mr. Hamdan on Wednesday — but
also provided that “no court, justice or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear
or consider” further habeas corpus
petitions from foreigners held as enemy combatants, at Guantánamo or
anywhere else.
Now the question before the Supreme Court
is whether that court-stripping action was valid in light of the Constitution’s
injunction to Congress not to suspend “the privilege” of habeas corpus “unless
when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.”
No one disputes that those conditions
have not been met. But resolving the challenge to the Military Commissions Act
is not as simple as stating that obvious fact.
Modern Supreme Court decisions have put a
gloss on the “suspension clause,” as the
constitutional provision is known, holding that habeas corpus need not be available
in a formal sense as long as prisoners have an “adequate and effective”
substitute for challenging the validity of their detention. The government
offers a substitute: “combatant status review tribunals,” which are panels of
military officers who review the initial determination that an individual
detainee has been properly labeled an enemy combatant.
As substitutes
for habeas corpus, the tribunals are “structurally and incurably
inadequate,” Seth P. Waxman, a lawyer for six Algerian detainees, asserts in
his brief. By sharply limiting access to evidence and witnesses and by
forbidding defense lawyers from participating in the hearings, he says, the
alternative procedure fails to offer “even the most elemental aspects of an
independent adversarial proceeding.”
Mr. Waxman, who served as solicitor
general in the Clinton administration, will argue on behalf of the four groups
of detainees whose separate cases have been consolidated for a single argument.
The current solicitor general, Paul D. Clement, will argue for the government.
It will be Mr. Clement’s fourth argument in a detainee case; he argued the
Hamdan case last year and, as principal deputy solicitor general, also argued a
pair of cases that the court heard along with the Rasul case in 2004.
The government’s position is that the
detainees’ complaints about the alternative procedure are irrelevant. Mr.
Clement argues that the Military Commissions Act has rendered moot the court’s
2004 decision that federal judges had jurisdiction over cases from Guantánamo.
That ruling, in the Rasul case, simply interpreted the federal habeas corpus
statute as it then existed, he says, before the Military Commissions Act
amended the statute to withdraw jurisdiction.
Without a statutory basis for
jurisdiction, the government’s argument continues, there is no jurisdiction
because as “aliens with no connection to this country who were captured abroad
in the course of an ongoing military conflict,” the detainees can claim no
constitutional entitlement to habeas corpus.
In any event, the alternative procedure
is more than adequate, Mr. Clement asserts in the government’s brief, enabling
the detainees to “enjoy more procedural protections than any other captured
enemy combatants in the history of warfare.”
The
government’s argument persuaded the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit, which ruled in February that the Military
Commissions Act had succeeded in removing the federal courts’ habeas corpus
jurisdiction. In April, the Supreme Court initially turned down the detainees’
appeal of that ruling, before reversing itself in a startling about-face on the
final day of its term in June.
The Algerians whom Mr. Waxman represents
are among 34 detainees in the current case. The others include a Libyan, a Palestinian, 4 Kuwaitis
and 22 Yemenis, who represent the biggest national group among the 300 or so
men being held at Guantánamo. Most of those before the court were captured in
The
Algerians are an exception. Lakhdar Boumediene and the other five immigrated to
Bosnia during the 1990s and were legal residents there. They were arrested by
Bosnian police in October 2001 on suspicion of plotting to attack the United
States embassy in Sarajevo.
The Supreme Court of
Mr. Waxman is arguing that because these
six do not fit any authorized definition of enemy combatant, the Supreme Court
should order their release.
If the court rules for the detainees, a
more likely result is an order to the appeals court to consider for the first
time the merits of the men’s habeas corpus petitions. The government would then almost certainly renew the argument it made
in the immediate aftermath of the Rasul decision: that even assuming the
existence of the federal courts’ jurisdiction, the detainees had no
constitutional rights that they could assert. That question, which the
justices have not directly confronted in any of the cases so far, would then
almost certainly come back to the Supreme Court.
The vote in the Hamdan case last year was
5 to 3. Chief Justice John
G. Roberts Jr. did not participate, because he had voted in the
case, on the government’s side, when he was a judge on the appeals court. The
dissenting justices were Antonin
Scalia, Clarence
Thomas and Samuel
A. Alito Jr., voting in his first detainee case.
The conventional wisdom that the outcome
of the new case will depend on the vote of Justice Anthony
M. Kennedy is almost certainly correct.
Justice Kennedy has been in the majority
in the other detainee cases and, quite likely, gave a signal in June that gave
the more liberal justices the confidence to add the case to the court’s docket
with some assurance of the likely outcome.
Some of the many briefs filed for the
detainees address arguments to Justice Kennedy.
Limiting access to lawyers presents a
danger to individual rights and a “severe impairment of the judicial function,”
the
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