Supreme Court refuses to stop indefinite detention of Americans under NDAA
The United States Supreme Court this week effectively ended all efforts to overturn a controversial 2012 law that grants the government the power to indefinitely detain American citizens without due process.
RT,
1
May, 2014
On
Monday, the high court said it won’t weigh in on challenge filed by
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges and a bevy of
co-plaintiffs against US President Barack Obama, ending for now a
two-and-a-half-year debate concerning part of an annual Pentagon
spending bill that since 2012 has granted the White House the ability
to indefinitely detain people "who are part of or substantially
support Al-Qaeda, the Taliban or associated forces engaged in
hostilities against the United States.”
The
Obama administration has long maintained that the provision —
Section 1021(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012 — merely reaffirmed verbiage contained within the
Authorization for Use of Military Force, or AUMF, signed by
then-President George W. Bush in the immediate aftermath of the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Opponents,
however, argued that the language in Section 1021 of the NDAA is
overly vague and could be interpreted in a way that allows for the
government to detain without trial any American citizen accused of
committing a “belligerent act” against the country “until the
end of hostilities.”
When
the provision was first challenged days after Pres. Obama signed it
into law on December 31, 2011, Hedges — who previously worked as a
war correspondent for the New York Times and covered matters
concerning Al-Qaeda for the paper — said, “I have had dinner more
times than I can count with people whom this country brands as
terrorists … but that does not make me one.”
US
District Judge Katherine Forrest agreed with Hedges and his
co-plaintiffs, and months later wrote in a 112-page opinion that
“First Amendment rights are guaranteed by the Constitution and
cannot be legislated away.”
"This
Court rejects the government's suggestion that American citizens can
be placed in military detention indefinitely, for acts they could not
predict might subject them to detention,” Judge Forrest wrote.
But
the District Court’s temporary, then permanent injunction against
Sec. 1021 was challenged by the White House, and the Obama
administration pleaded with the Justice Department to issue a stay. A
federal appeals court ruled in favor of the president last July and
said that the government can, in fact, indefinitely detail a person
who has provided support to anyone deemed a threat to America.
On his part, Hedges said he feared that the administration’s adamant attempts to keep the law in tact could mean that the government has already relied on the NDAA to imprison American citizens without trial. Attorneys for the plaintiffs responded by saying they would take the case to the Supreme Court, but his week the nine-justice panel said they won’t be hearing the case.
SCOTUS declined to make any comment regarding the case on Monday, but rather simply said that it would not be considered by the high court.
Last
year, Hedges warned that the odds the court would take the case were
slim, and said rejection on that level could lead to grave
consequences with regards to freedoms in America.
“If
we fail, if this law stands, if in the years ahead the military
starts to randomly seize and disappear people, if dissidents and
activists become subject to indefinite and secret detention in
military gulags, we will at least be able to look back on this moment
and know we fought back,” he wrote.
On
Monday this week, activist and co-plaintiff Tangerine Bolen wrote
that the high court’s decision to ignore the case means that “the
fundamental right of due process and our fundamental rights of free
speech and association . . . no longer matter.”
“We
have tried to stand up to this madness: we are outnumbered, outspent
and outgunned - a David intrepidly fighting a Goliath that spans the
planet and has the power to shape our 'reality' - thus shaping what
the courts even see. We have sacrificed greatly to do this - and yet
we would do it all again,” she wrote.
Hedges
in Bolen were joined in their suit against the Obama administration
by Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg, writer Noam Chomsky,
activist and journalist Alexa O’Brien, Icelandic parliamentarian
and WikiLeaks associate Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Occupy London activist
Kai Wargalla and acclaimed academic Dr. Cornel West.
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