ACLU Praises Obama's Plan To Close Guantánamo (11/17/2008)
Government's Replacement Of Military Judge In 9/11 Cases Is Transparent
Attempt To Ram Through Cases Before Administration Changes, Adds Group
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union strongly praises
President-elect Barack Obama's promise on CBS' "60 Minutes" Sunday night to
close down Guantánamo and its unconstitutional military commissions being used
to prosecute detainees.
"After eight years of a Bush administration that thumbed its nose at the
Constitution and the rule of law, it is incredibly gratifying that
President-elect Obama plans to put an end to the Guantánamo prison camp and its
sham military commission system which have been a stain on America's name at
home and abroad. We strongly urge him to take such action on Day One with the
stroke of a pen, by executive order," said Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director
of the ACLU. "The Bush military commissions that violate core constitutional
principles and rely on hearsay, secret evidence and evidence obtained through
torture have no place in our democracy. Federal civilian or military courts are
perfectly capable of handling terrorism prosecutions and accommodating sensitive
national security concerns, as has been demonstrated time and time again."
On Monday morning, immediately following President-elect Obama's promise to
close Guantánamo and its shameful commissions, it was announced that a new
military judge would be assigned to the military commission cases against
Guantánamo detainees accused of perpetrating 9/11 crimes, effective
immediately.
"The timing of the announcement to replace the military commission judge on
the 9/11 cases is highly suspect and disturbing," said Romero. "We cannot allow
the Bush administration to sabotage President-elect Obama's plans by ramming
through these cases in its last days while the new administration is making
plans to dismantle the military commission system. This seems like a
quintessential set-up by a defeated administration bitter about its failure to
achieve the real justice Americans deserve."
As part of the 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 for several Guantánamo
detainees. More information on the John Adams Project is available online at: www.aclu.org/johnadams
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