Early Christmas for the Constitution
The Supreme Court granted certiorari review in the case of Ali al-Marri, after Padilla, the second most important case of our lives.
Why? Mr. al-Marri, you will recall from our interview with his attorney Jonathan Hafetz, was a legal resident studying at Bradley University in Peoria, IL, when, just like Padilla, was already in the criminal justice system when he was magically declared “an enemy combatant” and held in camera in a military brig in South Carolina, denied any semblance of legal or human rights, and, under every known legal definition of the word, tortured, whether or not a rack or thumbscrews were used.
As I noted in my interview with Mr. Hafetz, years after the Supreme Court rendered our nation a de facto dictatorship by finding a technicality in Padilla to avoid shoving its unlawful detention of a citizen in the face of the Bush Administration, because 2004 was an election year and the Supreme Court did not want to embarrass a Bush Administration that it is widely credited with installing in the first place by giving it “an accountability moment” and so it ducked the matter entirely… finding that improper venue was the highest constitutional value.
Well, better late than never (though one fears too much damage has already been done). Now, at least, the Supreme Court has a chance to weigh in once and for all and close down the 747-sized loophole it left after Padilla… to wit, that Article II of the Constitution allows an executive override of the entire Bill of Rights and the remainder of the Constitution just because the President invokes the magical incantation of “national security”. The Bush Administration, btw, is unabashed in continuing to assert that it can pick up anyone, illegal alien, legal resident, tourist, transiter, citizen alike… and deny them charge, trial or even counsel, torture them in endless solitary confinement, and not be legally accountable to anyone, ever, as long as the right magic words are recited.
We can now hope that the Supreme Court will address this, and close this loophole once and for all. Of course, the irony is that the Obama Administration may, once again, prevent the Supreme Court from hearing this critical open question (which is now the law of the 4th Circuit… in VA, MD, and the Carolinas, the USA is a dictatorship… as a matter of law) by doing the right thing and charging al-Marri in court, or releasing him.
Stick around…



December 5th, 2008 at 7:56 pm
Excellent post. Ya beat me to the “Justice is Served . . . and it’s not just OJ” blogging.
I’m just hoping that out Constitutional expert/Prez-elect will manage to keep the case alive long enough to get a definitive SCOTUS ruling before he moots the case by releasing him.
December 6th, 2008 at 10:13 pm
[…] So far, despite talk of a Depression, we can be of good cheer because the Bill of Rights will get a reprieve with SCOTUS deciding to hear (and most likely strike down) the case of a guy locked up for the last five years just because someone in George Bush’s administration labeled him an “enemy combatant,” without even an offer of proof. We have a chance to be reminded what it means to be Americans again. […]
December 6th, 2008 at 10:13 pm
[…] So far, despite talk of a Depression, we can be of good cheer because the Bill of Rights will get a reprieve with SCOTUS deciding to hear (and most likely strike down) the case of a guy locked up for the last five years just because someone in George Bush’s administration labeled him an “enemy combatant,” without even an offer of proof. We have a chance to be reminded what it means to be Americans again. […]
December 6th, 2008 at 10:16 pm
[…] So far, despite talk of a Depression, we can be of good cheer because the Bill of Rights will get a reprieve with SCOTUS deciding to hear (and most likely strike down) the case of a guy locked up for the last five years just because someone in George Bush’s administration labeled him an “enemy combatant,” without even an offer of proof. We have a chance to be reminded what it means to be Americans again. […]
December 8th, 2008 at 12:28 pm
It’s the domestic enemies holding government office that I fear even more than any foreign terror group. And though the Supremes offered us some defense against an overly deadly and nearly6 omnipotent executive branch in the past five years, ‘too little too late’ will likely be the principal legacy of the Roberts’ court, even if they correct some of its mistakes.