Boston
Bombing Lessons: Martial Law Doesn't Work
20
April, 2013
Only
after the curfew in Watertown, Massachusetts was lifted and alert
resident David Hanberry went outside his home to get a smoke,
according to news
reports,
did the case of the Boston Marathon bombing manhunt for suspect
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev crack open. That was when Hanberry saw blood on the
tarp of his dry-docked boat and called the police.
Up
until that time, a wide assortment of local, state, and federal
officials were engaged in a dragnet that essentially shut down the
City of Boston, and included house-to-house searches in the
neighborhoods of Watertown, Mass. and New Bedford, Mass., the latter
being near where 19-year-old Russian immigrant Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
had enrolled in college. Tsarnaev, a Muslim from the Dagestan area
of Russia that abuts Chechnya, became a U.S. citizen on September 11
of last year.
In
essence, the lessons from the Boston Marathon mean that the following
procedures employed in the week-long manhunt proved to be completely
ineffective in apprehending Tsarnaev:
• Use
of tanks
and armored vehicles on the streets of Boston,
Cambridge, Watertown, and New Bedford;
• Shutting
down the city, except for limited coffee shops;
• Banning
taxi service across the City of Boston; and
Moreover,
the use of curfews in a number of towns actually likely delayed
apprehension of the suspect, as the curfew essentially took more than
a million pairs of eyes off possible getaway scenes.
Veteran
police investigators have traditionally rejected the dragnet because
they see it as a waste
of police resources,
but in the post-bombing panic, politicians demanded that police on
the beat appear to be doing everything they can to solve the crisis.
In this case, that appearance included a curfew that amounted to
searching and hassling people who were clearly not in cahoots with
the bombing suspects. Police detained and searched anyone on the
streets of Boston and Watertown, even searching famous local news
reporters multiple times during the course of the manhunt. In some
instances, news reporters received death
threats from
over-zealous police officers.
In
the end, if the goal of the terrorists was to terrorize, the
terrorists won in Boston. Rather than returning to its ordinary
business, the two suspects identified by authorities — Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev and his older (deceased) brother Tamerlan — were able to
terrorize — and even shut down — one of the world's greatest
cities for days. The two presumably hated America for its freedom,
and were able to get the government to take away much of those
freedoms from its citizens for a period of time.
The
scare even led to a humorous over-reaction in Bridgewater, a college
town where a “suspicious” backpack forced the evacuation of part
of Bridgewater University. The Navy bomb disposal team arrived to
find the backpack full of beer, according
to the
Brockton, Mass.-based Enterprise newspaper. The newspaper story did
not record how police disposed of the “suspicious package.”
The
reaction of Massachusetts's state and federal officials to the Boston
Marathon bombings — two black powder bombs with nails and ball
bearings that killed three people — can be contrasted with the wave
of 125
nearly identical bombings,
technologically speaking, that took place across America in major
U.S. cities during the 1917-20 "Red Scare." The differences
are that many more were killed 100 years ago, top U.S. government
officials were targeted (including the U.S. Attorney General and
judges) back then, and the federal government did not shut down
entire cities. Although the period is known as the "Red Scare,"
the genuine security threat was greater than the threat authorities
responded to in Boston. And with the exception of a set
of warrantless
searches by
the Justice Department's Bureau of Investigation (later the FBI)
under J. Edgar Hoover, the public's liberties were respected.
And
as if the attacks on civil liberties during the current Boston
manhunt weren't sufficient offense against the Bill of Rights, South
Carolina Republican Senator Lindsay Graham has called on denying
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev — a U.S. citizen — all of his rights under the
U.S. Constitution. On the evening of Tsarnaev's arrest,
Graham tweeted the
following remarks:
• “If
captured, I hope Administration will at least consider holding the
Boston suspect as enemy combatant for intelligence gathering
purposes.”
• “The
Law of War allows us to hold individual in this scenario as potential
enemy combatant w/o Miranda warnings or appointment of counsel.”
• “Under
the Law of War we can hold #Boston suspect as a potential enemy
combatant not entitled to Miranda warnings or appointment of
counsel.”
Graham
later tweeted a
partial retraction, claiming: “As to any future trial, if this
suspect is an American citizen, he is NOT subject to military
commission trial. #Boston.”
However,
that trial could (and probably should) be indefinitely delayed,
according to Graham and Senator John McCain (R-AZ). The two issued
a joint
statement on
April 20, arguing: “We hope the Obama Administration will consider
the enemy combatant option because it is allowed by national security
statutes and U.S. Supreme Court decisions.”
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