Judge Jay Bybee, Professor John Yoo, heads up!
Posted on 13 June 2009
Judge: Terrorist can sue over torture memos
First time a government lawyer has been held potentially liable for abuse
As you read this – please note that though convicted of terrorism, this claim is made by a US Citizen, who was detained at a Navy Brig in the United States.
White ruled that Yoo, now a University of California at Berkeley law professor, went beyond the normal role of an attorney when he helped write the Bush administration’s detention and torture policies, then drafted legal opinions to justify those policies.
"The issues raised by this case embody that … tension — between the requirements of war and the defense of the very freedoms that war seeks to protect," White wrote in his 42-page decision. "This lawsuit poses the question addressed by our founding fathers about how to strike the proper balance of fighting a war against terror, at home and abroad, and fighting a war using tactics of terror."
The ruling rejected the government’s arguments that the courts are barred from examining top-level administration decisions in wartime, or that airing "allegations of unconstitutional treatment of an American citizen on American soil" would damage national security or foreign relations.
The Justice Department is representing Yoo and has argued for dismissing the lawsuit. The department has not said if it will appeal White’s ruling. The department’s on-duty spokesman, Dean Boyd, did not return a telephone message Saturday.
"It’s a really a significant victory for accountability and our constitutional system of checks and balances," said Tahlia Townsend, an attorney with the Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic at Yale Law School who represented Padilla.
White ruled that "the treatment we allege does violate the Constitution and John Yoo should have known that," Townsend said Saturday. "This is the first time there’s been this sort of ruling."
Enemy combatant
Padilla is an American citizen who was arrested in Chicago in 2002 and accused of conspiring with al-Qaida to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb."
He was held in a Navy brig in Charleston, S.C., for three years and eight months as an enemy combatant. Padilla’s lawsuit alleges Yoo personally approved his time and treatment in the brig.
His lawsuit alleges he was illegally detained and was subjected to sleep deprivation, temperature extremes, painful stress positions, and extended periods of bright lights and total darkness. Padilla also alleges he endured threats that he would be killed, that his family would be harmed, and that he would be transferred to another country to be tortured.
He eventually was charged in an unrelated conspiracy to funnel money and supplies to Islamic extremist groups. Padilla was convicted in 2007 in Miami federal court, and is appealing.
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Related posts:
- Talking Torture
- Are we still a nation of laws not men? In the coming weeks and months that question will be answered.
- Is there a place for moderates left in the Republican party? (Their behavior in Judge Sotomayor’s confirmation hearings may be as good an indicator as any).
- The March toward a System of Indefinite Detention continues.
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