President Obama Signs Military Commissions Changes Into Law (10/28/2009)
Fatally Flawed System Is Beyond Repair, Says ACLU
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON – President Obama today signed into law the National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA), which includes significant changes to the Guantánamo
military commissions. The American Civil Liberties Union is calling on the Obama
administration to abandon the fatally flawed military commissions system and,
where evidence of terrorism crimes exists, try the Guantánamo detainees in
federal courts.
The NDAA makes improvements to the military commissions but fails to bring
those tribunals in line with the U.S. Constitution and international law under
the Geneva Conventions. It continues to apply the military commissions to a much
broader group of individuals than should be tried before them under the
Constitution and the Geneva Conventions and does not prohibit military
commission trials of children. The new law does, however, for the first time
require experienced capital defense attorneys in death penalty cases, authorize
more resources for defense counsel, impose new limitations on the use of hearsay
and coerced testimony and afford greater access to witnesses and evidence for
defendants.
The ACLU firmly believes that the military commissions should be shut down
for good as they remain a second class system of justice that cannot shed the
shameful legacy of Guantánamo and all it stands for, rendering their results
open to question.
The following can be attributed to Jameel Jaffer, Director of the ACLU
National Security Project:
"It will be a shame if the law that the president signed today gives new life
to the military commissions. The Obama administration has committed to closing
the prison at Guantánamo, but closing the prison will have little meaning if the
administration leaves in place the policies that the prison has come to
represent.
"While the new law addresses some of the defects of the military commissions,
it fails to bring the tribunals in line with the Constitution and the Geneva
Conventions. The commissions remain not only illegal but unnecessary - the
federal courts have proven themselves capable of handling complex terrorism
cases while protecting both the government's national security interests and the
defendants' rights to a fair trial."
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