Presumed Guilty
Nov 2, 3:10 pm ET
CBS
Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen: Innocence Is Under Fire
NOV. 1, 2002
(CBS News) - Attorney Andrew Cohen analyzes legal issues for
CBS News and CBSNews.com.
After a week of extraordinary comments and actions by prosecutors from
Manhattan to Richmond, it is not a stretch to contend that judicial oversight
over the executive branch's legal fight against domestic terrorism is on
life support these days. The presumption of innocence is pretty much dead.
In Richmond Monday, government lawyers told a distinguished federal appeals
court panel to butt out of the case of Yaser Esam Hamdi, the American citizen
held without charges as an enemy combatant. And in New York this week, Justice
Department attorneys told an earnest federal district court judge that he
did not have the authority to order the FBI to look into whether its agents
improperly forced a confession out of an Egyptian student detained after
the terror attacks on America.
In Washington, meanwhile, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft called
the sniper shootings an "atrocity" and said the death penalty is appropriate
even though the Justice Department's own mandated death penalty evaluation
-- codified in its manual -- may not have even begun, much less ended. And
lest anyone have any doubts about where law enforcement stands on the sanctity
of the presumption of innocence for even the most vilified suspects, Virginia
Attorney General Jerry W. Kilgore labeled John Allen Muhammad and John Lee
Malvo "these twisted murderers" as he practically begged the feds to let
Virginia try them first in order to get them executed as quickly as possible.
Taken together, these developments ought to be alarming to liberals and
conservatives alike who are concerned that the White House is using the
amorphous war on terror -- domestic-branch -- to relentlessly and remorselessly
grab extraordinary power away from the other two branches of government.
And they ought to be equally worrisome to all people who treasure constitutional
rights such as the right to a fair trial by decorous prosecutors who must
prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt to impartial jurors in a judicious
setting free from prejudice, bias or a mob mentality.
But there has been barely a peep of protest about the week's disconcerting
events and remarks from the chattering class of lawyers, journalists, jurists
and politicians whose job it is to shed light on government's exercise of
power and, if warranted, to move to check that power.
The Hamdi hearing, for example, is only the most recent instance of the
Bush Administration's "don't worry your pretty little head about it" mentality
toward the judicial branch when it comes to terrorism and the Constitution.
At issue this week was whether prosecutors had given a panel on the 4th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals enough justification to continue to hold Hamdi
as an "enemy combatant." That designation, which was unilaterally made
this summer by President Bush, has resulted in Hamdi being held in legal
limbo -- neither a criminal defendant with constitutional rights, nor a
prisoner of war with international rights.
In the Hamdi case, the government continues to argue that the courts may
not second-guess that designation, even as Justice Department attorneys
concede that Hamdi has not been given access to his lawyers to determine
whether the classification could and should be challenged. And if the courts
accede to that demand, they would be ceding now and for the foreseeable future
extraordinary power and authority to the executive branch of government.
But is anyone out there raising a ruckus about what this might mean for
you or me? Hardly. Even the judges who are being asked to cut their authority
don't seem to be particularly concerned about the sheer scope of the administration's
argument
Meanwhile, in the case out of New York, federal prosecutors continue to
thumb their collective noses at U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff, who ordered
them months ago to report back to him whether Abdallah Higazy had been coerced
by the FBI into confessing that he owned an aviation radio found in a lower
Manhattan hotel just after the World Trade Center was attacked. Such intransigence
by lawyers would have been unthinkable prior to the terror attacks.
Now government lawyers say that the separation of powers doctrine -- the
most substantial part of the government's argument in Hamdi -- permits them
to decide for themselves whether they will obey the order. Is anybody out
there concerned about how such an unseemly dispute will affect the ability
of federal judges in the future to issue enforceable orders? If so, I haven't
heard them speak above a whisper.
Then there's the Attorney General and his counterpart in Virginia, who,
in the span of a few days this week, completely obliterated the sniper suspects'
rights to the presumption of innocence. Not just by loudly labeling them
guilty before trial -- before the first bit of evidence has been seen by
the first judge or juror -- but by promising so quickly to seek the death
penalty. Indeed, by publicly manipulating the system in order to all but
ensure that the men receive a death sentence. You can understand why political
figures would say these sorts of things in the current atmosphere of fear
and rage in and around the nation's capital. But these particular political
figures have legal obligations even to criminal defendants; obligations they
break when they say things they shouldn't.
For example, then-Attorney General Janet Reno raised eyebrows in 1995
when she made some tepid remarks about the applicability of the death penalty
for the Oklahoma City bomber(s) and the McVeigh defense team subsequently
mounted a serious legal challenge to the government's decision to seek the
system's ultimate punishment. The argument they made -- and almost won on
-- was that the federal government may not prejudge a defendant's candidacy
for the death penalty before undertaking a substantial review under Justice
Department guidelines.
Clearly, that review has not been completed in Muhammad's case. But has
anyone in a position of responsibility in the legal system come forward in
the past week to criticize Generals Ashcroft and Kilgore for the inappropriate
way they have vitiated the constitutional rights of Muhammad and Malvo? I
haven't heard them if they have.
Attorneys General aren't just the top law enforcement officials for a
particular region. And they aren't supposed to be simple mouthpieces for
the victims of crime. They are supposed to be, instead, symbols of the justice
system in all of its forms. A bit above the fray, and able and willing to
interject a cool jet of dispassion into the heat of a high-profile crime.
By this standard, John Ashcroft and Jerry Kilgore have failed miserably.
Ashcroft, by calling the sniper crimes an "atrocity"; Kilgore by calling
the men "murderers" as often as he can. But has anyone called them on it?
Or chastised them for ignoring the basic rule of law that says that people
ought to be tried in court under evidentiary rules instead of before the
cameras and through media leaks? Again, hardly.
It's clear that the country is in no mood these days to coddle criminal
defendants or to put unnecessary hobbles on the nation's military or law
enforcement officers. The September terror attacks all but ended that debate.
But, still, the executive branch must answer to the judicial branch when
it comes to the final word on individual rights and liberties. The leaders
and symbols of our criminal justice system are paid and expected to rise
above the nation's mood for punishment before the adjudication of crime.
It's been a week where the old saw -- "sure, we'll have a fair trial. And
then we'll hang them" -- seems not only like the prevailing popular sentiment,
but also government policy. In other words, it's been a bad week for the
delicate balance between the government and the governed.
SOURCES: By Andrew Cohen
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