First Unconstitutional Military Commission Trial Ends In Conviction (8/6/2008)
ACLU Says Deeply Flawed System Means No True Justice
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NEW YORK – After a trial filled with overwhelming constitutional and
procedural flaws, a jury of military officers today found Salim Hamdan guilty of
providing material support for terrorism. The American Civil Liberties Union has
been at Guantánamo Bay observing the Hamdan proceedings, which lacked the
fundamental legal safeguards found in traditional U.S. courts or military courts
governed by the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
The following can be attributed to ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero:
"Any verdict resulting from such a flawed system is a betrayal of American
values. The rules for the Guantánamo
military commissions are so flawed that justice could never be served. From
start to finish, this has been a monumental debacle of American justice. The
judgment against Hamdan undoubtedly will be challenged in legitimate courts, but
there is no appeal from the judgment of future generations. This system was
devised to permit the prosecution of alleged wrongdoing by detainees, while
continuing to cover up the wrongdoing by government interrogators. Trials that
are shrouded in secrecy and tainted by coercion are the very antithesis of
American justice."
The following can be attributed to ACLU National Security Project staff
attorney Ben Wizner, who observed the trial:
"In the strange world of Guantánamo justice, even if Hamdan had been
acquitted on all charges, he would have been detained indefinitely. Nowhere else
in the U.S. justice system can someone be held for life regardless of whether he
is convicted or acquitted of a crime. Today's outcome represents nothing more
than an illusion of justice. It is time to shut down these commissions and put
an end to this shameful chapter in American history."
As part of its John Adams Project, a partnership with the National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the ACLU is sponsoring expert civilian
counsel to assist the under-resourced military defense counsel of some
Guantánamo detainees.
More information on the John Adams Project is available online at: www.aclu.org/johnadams
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