Originally posted by Ramo
How can there be a "presumption of innocence"? We're not discussing a crime.
The gov't is detaining "enemy combatants" for hostile actions. You know, the actions that make someone any enemy combatant. Say, conspiring to committ an act of terror.
If the gov't calls you an indefinite combatant, and unless you can prove your innocence without the use of legal aid, without access to the evidence against you (which could very well could have been acquired through torture), it is the gov't's right to detain you. CSRT's are show trials, only nominally protecting rights. Detention doesn't become much more arbitrary than this.
How can there be a "presumption of innocence"? We're not discussing a crime.
The gov't is detaining "enemy combatants" for hostile actions. You know, the actions that make someone any enemy combatant. Say, conspiring to committ an act of terror.
If the gov't calls you an indefinite combatant, and unless you can prove your innocence without the use of legal aid, without access to the evidence against you (which could very well could have been acquired through torture), it is the gov't's right to detain you. CSRT's are show trials, only nominally protecting rights. Detention doesn't become much more arbitrary than this.
"Sec. 950g. Review by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and the Supreme Court
`(a) Review by United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit- (1) Subject to the provisions of this subsection, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit shall have exclusive jurisdiction to determine the final validity of any judgment rendered by a military commission under this chapter.
`(2) The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit may not determine the final validity of a judgment of a military commission under this subsection until all other appeals from the judgment under this chapter have been waived or exhausted.
`(3)(A) An accused may seek a determination by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit of the final validity of the judgment of the military commission under this subsection only upon petition to the Court for such determination."
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