New Documents Reveal Unlawful
Guantanamo Procedures Were Also Applied On American
Soil
"It didn't take long for ... lawlessness to be
brought home..."
Wall Street Journal,
October 9, 2008
go to original
See Article I.5
Promoting Illegal Torture
|
|
One page of 91 pages of e-mails and
documents produced by the U.S. Fleet Command
detail daily decisions made about the treatment
of Yaser Esam Hamdi and Jose Padilla, then
both American citizens, and Ali Saleh Kahlah
al-Marri, a legal resident. Padilla was held
incommunicado for 21 months.
Source:
Washington Post/AP/ACLU
|
NEW YORK — According to newly released military
documents, the Navy applied lawless Guantanamo protocols
in detention facilities on American soil. The documents,
which include regular emails between brig officers
and others in the chain of command, uncover new details
of the detention and interrogation of two U.S. citizens
and a legal resident -- Yaser Hamdi, Jose Padilla
and Ali al-Marri -- at naval brigs in Virginia and
South Carolina.
The documents were obtained under the Freedom of Information
Act by the Allard K. Lowenstein International Human
Rights Clinic at Yale Law School and the American
Civil Liberties Union.
"Guantanamo was designed as a law-free zone,
a place where the government could do whatever it
wanted without having to worry about whether it was
legal," said Jonathan Freiman, an attorney with
the Lowenstein Clinic at Yale. "It didn't take
long for that sort of lawlessness to be brought home
to our own country. Who knows how much further America
would have gone if the Supreme Court hadn't stepped
in to stop incommunicado detentions in 2004?"
According to the documents, Navy officers doubted
the wisdom of applying Guantanamo rules on American
soil. In particular, officers expressed grave concern
over the effects of the solitary confinement imposed
upon the three men detained at the brigs, a practice
that was considered to be even more extreme than the
isolation imposed at Guantanamo. Navy officers also
exhibited frustration with the Defense Department's
unwillingness to provide the detainees with access
to legal counsel or any information about their fates.
"The application of Guantanamo protocols on U.S.
soil is incredibly significant and indicates how far
the administration has gone in terms of suspending
the law," said Jonathan Hafetz, a staff attorney
with the ACLU National Security Project. "The
Bush administration has long argued that detainees
held in Guantanamo are not entitled to any constitutional
protections -- an argument the Supreme Court has recently
rejected. But this is not even Guantanamo -- we are
talking about creating prisons beyond the law right
here in America."
The documents clearly show that the standard operating
procedure developed for Guantanamo Bay governed every
aspect of detentions at the two bases inside the United
States. Though Navy personnel tried several times
to improve the harsh conditions under which Hamdi,
Padilla and al-Marri were detained, senior Defense
Department officials repeatedly denied the requests.
Padilla and al-Marri have reported being subjected
to many of the brutal interrogation techniques used
at Guantanamo Bay that included sleep deprivation,
painful stress positions, prolonged isolation, extreme
sensory deprivation, and threats of violence and death.
That regime, it now appears, was the product of an
effort to extend "Guantanamo rules" to prisons
inside the United States.
Although the newly released military documents include
mandatory "weekly updates" on the three
men for certain periods, the weekly updates pertaining
to Padilla and al-Marri for most of 2002-2004 - the
period during which the two were being detained incommunicado
and interrogated - were not released, but were also
not reported as withheld or as missing, suggesting
the possibility that Guantanamo-like interrogations
were taking place.
Last month, the ACLU urged the U.S. Supreme Court
to review the Bush administration's authority to indefinitely
imprison al-Marri without charge or trial. The ACLU
asked the Court to reverse a federal appeals court
decision that gave the president sweeping power to
deprive individuals in the United States, including
American citizens, of their most basic constitutional
rights.
The newly released documents are available online
at the ACLU's website:
www.aclu.org/safefree/detention/37040res20081006.html
The Guantanamo Standard Operating Procedure is available
online at: www.aclu.org/safefree/detention/37043lgl20030328.htm
News
Archive:
Judge: Let Chinese Muslims from Guantanamo into US
British commander
in Afghanistan: U.S. anti-Taliban plan "doomed
to fail"
Bush Knows
his Commutation of Libby will be part of his Legacy
Still time
to impeach President Bush
Investigating 'Africa's
Guantanamo'
Complete investigation
of U.S. attorney firings is needed
All Quiet on the Detainee Front
A Chinese Muslim
in Gitmo Legal Limbo
Don't forget
Torture Migration Day
Air Force Instructor
Details Harsh Interrogations
Top Officials
Knew in 2002 of Harsh Interrogations
Anti-war veterans
unfurl 'Arrest Bush/Cheney' banner at National Archives
Fein: Impeachable
offenses?
On Anniversary
of Civilian Shootings by Blackwater in Iraq:
Amnesty International Calls on U.S. Government to
Hold Military Contractors Accountable
DOJ Says Cheney's
Testimony in Valerie Plame Leak Classified
Attorney for Gitmo
inmate works to drum up support
CIA snatch trial
goes ahead: But intelligence officers to be heard
behind closed doors
Cheney Linked Hussein
to Al-Qaeda, Ex-GOP House Leader Says in Book
Mr. Bush's unitary
executive doctrine
Did White House ties
power pipeline approval?
Bush Secret
Order To Send Special Forces Into Pakistan
Suspected US
missile kills 12 in Pakistan
McDermott joins call to oust Bush
Kucinich Ramps Up
Impeachment Efforts Against Bush
Widespread
cell phone location snooping by NSA?
Lawsuit to Ask
That Cheney's Papers Be Made Public
The next step is to get Gitmo out of him
Hunger Strikers
Should Not Be Force Fed
Cheney colleague
admits bribery in Halliburton oil deals
US seeks delay in
Guantanamo detainees habeas appeal
Report Faults Handling
of Wiretap Notes
Katrina 3 Years Later
Suicide on the
Brink of Release
Executive privilege showdown looms for Congress, White
House
A Wake-Up Call
from Dennis Kucinich
Conyers questions Iraq
‘forgery’
89 Afghan civilians
die in 'tragic' US air strike
CIA More Fully Denies
Deception About Iraq
FISA amendment forces
appeals court to punt on wiretap case
Guantanamo Briton wins
high court battle
White
House Signing Statements “Unsubstantiated,”
Report Says
Anti-Regulation
Aide to Cheney Is Up for Energy Post
Bush guts a legal
system he had sworn to defend
Nancy Pelosi gets
pilloried at AJU
How Tenet 'betrayed' the
CIA on Iraq
Mukasey Won’t
Charge Former Justice Officials Over Hiring Practices
Pelosi Takes Heat from
Right and Left
RIGHTS-US: Hamdan’s
Future Remains Unclear
Verdict is in
on Bush-style justice: Guilty
Afghan Civilian
Casualties Mount: UN
New Book Says Bush Committed
Impeachable Offense
Media Blackout On
Cheney Iran False Flag Story
Source: British Territory
Used for US Terrorism Interrogation
Miers and Bolten
ordered to answer congressional subpoenas
House panel recommends
citing Rove for contempt
Kucinich gets his Day
The People, the Press
and the Case for Impeachment
U.S. Military
Says Soldiers Fired on Civilians
Impeachment supporters
get dais in spotlight
Rep. Kucinich Gets
His Day to Air Impeachment Article
Letterman: 'Bush's
Administration is Clearly Guilty of War Crimes?'
Exposing Bush's
historic abuse of power
Gitmo and Habeas
Corpus
Rebuff Pelosi Passes
the Buck; Gore Let Off the Hook at Netroots Nation
Conyers Plans Bush
Impeachment Substitute
Ashcroft Defends
Waterboarding before House Panel
Turley: Impeachment
hearings must consider evidence Bush committed crimes<
Congressional Panel
To Review Kucinich’s Call to Impeach Bush
The Outlaw Presidency
Kucinich to Present Impeachment
Case to Panel
How Britain Wages War
Congress Urged to Demand
War Role
Kucinich to take yet another
crack at impeachment
Rabbit-Hole Justice
Bush-Cheney Crony Got Iraq Oil Deal
Bush’s speech disrupted
by protesters
Kucinich's July 4th
message: Help me restore 'rule of law in America'
ACLU seeks government's
cell-phone data
US interrogation methods
borrowed from Chinese: NY Times
Arar's bid to sue U.S. rejected again
US army blames leaders over post-war Iraq
Bush, oil executives, criminally
liable for Iraq War, says Congressman
Key player in waterboarding
policy 'smug' under questioning
Robert Wexler breathes fire
at GOP with new book
Baldwin answers call of conscience,
backs impeachment
Activists call for Impeachment
Kucinich: Taguba’s
Comments Add Weight to articles of impeachment
McClellan testifies
he was wary of Libby's leak denial but went along
U.S. Says Israeli Exercise
Seemed Directed at Iran
Wexler Looking Forward to Willing
Witness in McClellan
Kucinich threatens 60
impeachment articles if Judiciary doesn’t act
Detainees Tortured in
Custody
Hastings says Bush deserves
impeachment and jail
Are efforts to
impeach President Bush warranted or a waste?
Administration Strategy
for Detention Now in Disarray
Vets deliver 23,000 Impeachment
petitions to House Judiciary Chair Conyers
Misdeeds Go On Record
Kucinich Reads Impeachment
Articles
President
Weakens Oversight