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boutons
12-21-2005, 06:06 PM
The New York Times
December 21, 2005

Court Refuses to Transfer Padilla to Civilian Custody
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON -- In a sharp rebuke, a federal appeals court denied Wednesday a Bush administration request to transfer terrorism suspect Jose Padilla, a former Chicago gang member, from military to civilian law enforcement custody.

The three-judge panel of the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also refused the administration's request to vacate a September ruling that gave President Bush wide authority to detain "enemy combatants" indefinitely without charges on U.S. soil.

The decision, written by Judge Michael Luttig, questioned why the administration used one set of facts before the court for 3 1/2 years to justify holding Padilla without charges but used another set to convince a grand jury in Florida to indict him last month.

Luttig said the administration has risked its "credibility before the courts" by appearing to use the indictment of Padilla to thwart an appeal of the appeals court's decision that gave the president wide berth in holding enemy combatants.

Padilla was arrested in 2002 at Chicago's O'Hare Airport as he returned to the United States from Afghanistan. Justice and Defense Department officials alleged Padilla had come home to carry out an al-Qaida backed plot to blow up apartment buildings in New York, Washington or Florida.

* Copyright 2005The New York Times Company

RobinsontoDuncan
12-21-2005, 06:22 PM
In a sharp rebuke, a federal appeals court denied Wednesday a Bush administration request to transfer terrorism suspect Jose Padilla, a former Chicago gang member, from military to civilian law enforcement custody.

Why is this a good thing? Remeber Padilla is a US citizen being held without access to a lawyer or being charged


The three-judge panel of the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also refused the administration's request to vacate a September ruling that gave President Bush wide authority to detain "enemy combatants" indefinitely without charges on U.S. soil.

It's a sad day when President Bush wants to restore civil liberties and the courts wont allow him to.

boutons
12-21-2005, 07:25 PM
"Why is this a good thing"

Because the judicial is confronting the executive about the executive's bizarre behavior. Padilla is just a pawn.

"It's a sad day when President Bush wants to restore civil liberties and the courts wont allow him to."

Are you serious? The last thing dubya/dichead want is any restraint on executive by the judicial or the legislative. Civil liberties is the last thing dubya/dickhead are concerned about in this case, or any other case. dubya/dickhead are liars who bear no goodwill in their operation of the executive or towards the country.

dubya is trying to keep the Padilla case out of the SC forever, or at least until he can get another right-wing activist in the SC.

=========================

washingtonpost.com

Appeals Court Slams Administration on Padilla Detention

By Fred Barbash
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 21, 2005; 5:24 PM

A U.S. appeals court, acting in the case of alleged "enemy combatant" Jose Padilla, today rejected the administration's move to avoid another Supreme Court review of its powers of detention, blasting the government in unusually blunt terms for its behavior in the case which, it said, may have significantly damaged "its credibility before the courts."

The decision by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond stems from the administration's actions last month just as the Supreme Court was set to consider whether to review the Padilla case.

At that time, after holding him without charges for three-and-a-half years, it indicted Padilla on criminal charges and asked the 4th Circuit to have him moved from a military prison to a civilian prison, thus mooting the issues the Supreme Court might have reviewed on the question of detention without formal charge.

On top of that, the government asked the appeals court to withdraw the opinion it issued that might have been considered by the justices, even though that opinion upheld the administration's position on detention.

Today, the panel rejected both requests in an opinion written by J. Michael Luttig, a conservative often mentioned on the administration's short list for the U.S. Supreme Court.

Its actions revive the possibility that the high court will review the Padilla case and at least give the justices the opportunity to review it, which the administration sought to avoid.

The appeals court opinion reflected a tone of anger that is rare for a federal court addressing the United States government, particularly in a matter of presidential authority.

Luttig said the government's actions created the appearance "that the government may be attempting to avoid" Supreme Court review in a matter of "especial national importance."

He also suggested that the government's actions in the Padilla case may possibly have had negative consequences for "the public perception of the war on terror" and "also for the government's credibility before the courts in litigation ancillary to that war.

" . . . We cannot help but believe that those consequences have been underestimated" by the government, he added.

For "as the government must surely understand," it has left "the impression" that Padilla may have been held for these years "by mistake, an impression we would have thought the government could ill afford to leave extant."

The chain of events leading to today's ruling began more than three-and-a-half years ago when the government seized Padilla in an airport claiming he was plotting a "dirty bomb" attack in the United States in connection with al Qaeda. It never charged him with such a plot in any court, but transferred him to a brig in Charleston, S.C., where he was denied a lawyer until a threatened Supreme Court intervention.

Padilla's lawyers appealed twice, losing on technical grounds at the Supreme Court in 2004 and losing on substantive grounds in the 4th Circuit in September. That opinion was also written by Luttig.

Padilla appealed again to the Supreme Court, but days before the administration's response to the justices was due, the administration indicted him on charges unrelated to the so-called "dirty bomb" plot, asked that he be transferred to a civilian cell in Florida and advised the Supreme Court that the case was now moot and did not require any ruling.

Subsequently, to guarantee that the Supreme Court would stay out of the case, it asked the 4th Circuit to wipe out its September ruling upholding the power of the president to detain Padilla.

The circuit responded today. "If the natural progression of this significant litigation to conclusion" is to occur "under these circumstances, we believe that decision should be made not by this court but, rather, by the Supreme Court of the United States," Luttig wrote.

The government's behavior, he said, has "given rise to at least an appearance that the purpose of these actions may be to avoid consideration of our decision by the Supreme Court. We are not in a position to ascertain whether behind this appearance there is the actual fact, because the government has not explained its decisions either publicly or to the court."

Various reports of the government's decision-making process have appeared in the news media, Luttig noted, and "it should go without saying that we cannot rest our decisions on media reports of statements from anonymous sources." Besides, "the information that the government would provide to the media . . . it should be prepared to provide to the court."

In any case, Luttig wrote, none of the government's reported concerns about the Padilla case "would justify the intentional mooting of the appeal of our decision to the Supreme Court after three and a half years of prosecuting this litigation and on the eve of final consideration of the issue by that court."

The government, he said, "cannot be seen as conducting litigation with the enormous implications of this litigation -- litigation imbued with significant public interest -- in such a way as to select by which forum . . . it wishes to be bound."

On an "issue of such surpassing importance, we believe that the rule of law is best served by maintaining on appeal the status quo in all respects and allowing Supreme Court consideration of the case," Luttig said, rather than by "an eleventh-hour transfer" under "circumstances that would further a perception that dismissal may have been sought for the purpose" of avoiding the high court.

The government's behavior, Luttig said in conclusion, has "left the impression that the government may even have come to the belief that the principle in reliance upon which it has detained Padilla for this long time, that the President possesses the authority to detain enemy combatants who enter this country for the purpose of attacking America and its citizens from within, can, in the end, yield to expediency with little or no cost to its conduct of the war against terror -- an impression we would have thought the government likewise could ill afford to leave extant.

"And these impressions have been left, we fear, at what may ultimately prove to be substantial cost to the government's credibility before the courts, to whom it will one day need to argue again in support of a principle of assertedly like importance and necessity to the one that it seems to abandon today.

"While there could be an objective that could command such a price as all of this," he ended, "it is difficult to imagine what that objective would be."

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

Vashner
12-22-2005, 01:34 AM
Na that's just JAG and the Judiciary tangling a bit.....

Evertime you libs think you win something you wind up loosing...

Nbadan
12-22-2005, 03:40 AM
No, Boutons is right. W is trying to avoid to have to fight this out before the Supreme Court..


A U.S. appeals court, acting in the case of alleged "enemy combatant" Jose Padilla, today rejected the administration's move to avoid another Supreme Court review of its powers to detain individuals without trial, blasting the government in unusually blunt terms for its behavior in the Padilla case. The unusual decision by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals stems from the administration's actions last month just as the Supreme Court was set to consider whether to review the Padilla case.

At that time, after holding him without charges for three-and-a-half years, it indicted Padilla on criminal charges and asked the 4th Circuit to have him moved from a military prison to a civilian prison, thus mooting the issues the Supreme Court might have reviewed. On top of that, it asked the appeals court to withdraw the opinion it issued that might have been considered by the justices, even though that opinion upheld the administration's position on detention.

Today, the panel that issued the opinion rejected both requests. It said the government's actions create the appearance "that the government may be attempting to avoid" Supreme Court review in a matter of "especial national importance." The opinion of the three judge panel was written by J. Michael Luttig, a conservative judge often mentioned as a Bush administration Supreme Court nominee.

Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/21/AR2005122101524.html?nav=rss_nation)


"The privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it."

-US Constitution

I don't think this case passes the smell test.