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Appeals Courts Makes It Easier For Government To Hold Gitmo Detainees


First Posted: 03/29/11 08:43 PM ET Updated: 03/29/11 08:49 PM ET

by Dafna Linzer ProPublica, March 29, 2011, 5:51 p.m.

In a decision that will likely make it more difficult for Guantanamo prisoners to win release, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit today reversed a lower court's ruling in the pivotal case of a Yemeni detainee.

In a 14-page decision, the appeals court rejected the lower court's ruling to release Uthman Abdul Rahim Mohammed Uthman, who has been held at Guantanamo without charge since 2002. Uthman's case and the government's attempts to classify the legal opinions it generated were the subject of a ProPublica story.

The appeals court standard for detention has been laid out over the last year in a number of significant cases, and as with today's case, each time in the government's favor. The results have been a boon for the Obama administration's efforts to keep certain Guantanamo detainees in custody.

Today's decision further clarifies that standard by declaring that the government doesn't need direct evidence that a detainee fought for or was a member of al-Qaeda in order to justify a detention.

Much was riding on the Uthman case because he is among several dozen prisoners the Obama administration plans to hold indefinitely without charge. For other detainees, it will likely alter the way they can present their cases for release.

In 2008, Guantanamo detainees won the right to challenge the lawfulness of their detention in court. The first challenges were largely successful for detainees, but a number of significant cases have been pushed back at the circuit court.

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Uthman filed a challenge, and in February 2010, District Court Judge Henry H. Kennedy, Jr. ruled that he was being improperly held and that the United States had failed to demonstrate that he was a member of al-Qaeda. As ProPublica detailed, the government censored Kennedy's decision and quickly appealed the case to a court that was already lowering the government's burden for proving a prisoner's detainability.

In another case last year, known as Salahi, the appeals court rejected a lower court's standard that the government show direct evidence the detainee was a member of al-Qaeda. In that case, the court sent the detainee back to the district court to have his habeas corpus petition reheard.

In today's opinion, written by Judge Brett Kavanaugh, the appeals court went further by reversing the habeas win outright. In doing so, the court determined that circumstantial evidence, such as a detainee being in the same location as other al-Qaeda members, is enough to meet the standard to hold a prisoner without charge.

That standard, the court wrote in its decision today, "along with uncontested facts in the record, demonstrate that Uthman more likely than not was part of al Qaeda."

Benjamin Wittes of the Brookings Institution and the national security blog Lawfare attended Uthman's appeals hearing in February and predicted that the government would prevail. Noting the circuit court's emerging standards, Wittes wrote that if the appeals court ordered an outright reversal of the Uthman decision "a lot of other Guantanamo detainees are going to share his pain. His case could end up lowering the substantive bar for the government to prevail in these habeas cases."

Jonathan Hafetz, a professor at Seton Hall University School of Law who has represented a number of Guantanamo detainees including Salahi, said today's opinion significantly favors the government in ways the Supreme Court did not intend when it granted detainees the right to challenge detentions.

"The Uthman case cements the trend in the D.C. Circuit's decisions toward a broad and malleable definition of who can be considered 'part of' al Qaeda, combined with a highly deferential view of the government's interpretation of the facts," Hafetz said, "In many cases, the result is indefinite detention based on suspicion or assumptions about a detainee's behavior."

Hafetz argued that today's decision conflicts not only with the approach taken by the district courts but also with the Supreme Court. Hafetz said the Supreme Court "mandated a meaningful judicial process in which the government would be called to account; Uthman says judges should not require much in the way of an answer."

Wittes embraced today's opinion, writing on his blog that the court's opinion reflects the complex reality of Guantanamo Bay. Today's case asks "whether a relatively spare string of incriminating facts can get the government over the hump. The answer now is clear: It can," Wittes wrote.

"Many fewer detainees will prevail under this understanding of the government's evidentiary burden than would prevail under one less tolerant of a mosaic of incriminating facts," he wrote.

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by Dafna Linzer ProPublica, March 29, 2011, 5:51 p.m.In a decision that will likely make it more diffi...
by Dafna Linzer ProPublica, March 29, 2011, 5:51 p.m.In a decision that will likely make it more diffi...
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joebiteme   11 hours ago (10:21 PM)
Its not tough they are enemy combatants and therefore can be held indefinite­ly
Erewhon7   11 hours ago (10:19 PM)
Internatio­nal laws of war and Geneva allow indefinite detention of captured combatants during hostilitie­s.
I congratula­te the Court of Appeals for acting rationally and conforming to internatio­nal standards.

Geneva Convention­:"
"The prime purpose... is to ensure that the prisoner of war remains in the hands of the Detaining power, so that he can neither do any harm to that Power within the camp, nor by escaping be enabled to take up arms again.
It must not be forgotten that his life has been spared only on condition that he is no longer a danger to the enemy."
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PCPrincess   16 hours ago (5:34 PM)
Obama is a complete liar. I'm ashamed of this administra­tion. We have become a mockery and are only a shadow of our former selves. The 3 tiers of government have no balance anymore. They are all tilted to protect themselves and those with the money to buy power.
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Texan POd   17 hours ago (4:38 PM)
Obama claimed FULL OWNERSHIP of Gitmo from his first days in office.
Can't blame any of this on Bush.
Suck it up and appreciate "your" new Leader.
Old Ed inVN   19 hours ago (2:16 PM)
I care not if one is for or against the president.
For any president to accept torture & accept locking people up without charges should cause a mass migration of Americans that supposedly love freedom.
If the government can torture them thar furriners & it is acceptable­, guess where it goes from there
I wish I had a solution or even an answer. I don't. I would love to visit my daughters & grandchild­ren in the states. In SE Asia I can travel as a free person. Even here in Viet Nam, a communist country I have no worries. When I come & go, the immigratio­n people just smile & say hello. when I go to the US, I always get pulled aside to be searched. As a 70 year old white male, maybe I should except being searched every time just like all the rest.
OK, me I was in the army .I thought that my country, right or wrong, I am there. After spending a year in Afghanista­n, I had serious doubts, not from the EM, lawd, In comparison to my days, the kids made me realize that at the same age, I was a complete dolt at that same age. the kids now are so much smarter than we were. The officers above captain are still as dumd as they were in the civil war. to explain get along to go along would take days.
What in the heck was I commenting on?
I think I may
Old Ed inVN   21 hours ago (1:05 PM)
The president & all elected people understand the little people. Too bad that they have no say in the country. Until you commoners have money, why should we pay attention to you.
America, a country where the rich rule.
Erewhon7   20 hours ago (1:21 PM)
"The president & all elected people understand the little people. Too bad that they have no say in the country."
This is a laughably incomprehe­nsible comment
Gee... we didn't know elected American officials have to represent Yemeni members of Al Qaeda.
And yes, it is a very good thing Al Qaeda fighters do not have a " say in this country." Absolutely­.
Old Ed inVN   20 hours ago (1:39 PM)
As a stupid comment, yours win the intertubes award.
Somehow you forgot to mention the Iranians that could not vote.
Gee, it is amazing that people that were allowed to vote, went for a person against torture & a prison in a foreign country
How sad it is that he knew nothing about secret prisons in AF. Yep, a politician could turn in an opponent & earn $25. Yep, them there Al something are millions & do not worry about the country you love & too many people going down. Uh, when I was in AF learning about the world, where were you.
Moms basement is not considered world travel. .
Epimenides   21 hours ago (12:21 PM)
The Bush and Obama administra­tions have been using Guantanamo as a laboratory for authoritar­ian practices that are gradually being implemente­d domestical­ly.

Like all other nations, America has a long and ignominiou­s history of doing "whatever it takes" to suppress political dissent. It is only a matter of time before the methods being developed at Guantanamo are used at home.

That's how it works, folks. Keep your passports current.
DCX2   21 hours ago (12:18 PM)
To a certain extent, I would agree that you can be detained based on the people in your immediate vicinity. If a cop busts into somewhere and there's a bunch of people doing drugs, they will detain everyone. Eventually­, everyone will be charged or released.

When you factor in the prolonged and potentiall­y indefinite detention of some of these detainees, things are quite different. In those cases, this effectivel­y removes the burden on the government to prove your crimes beyond a reasonable doubt. Beyond a prepondera­nce of evidence. Beyond even show trials that permit coerced testimony and hearsay.

Granting such powers to the government will do far more harm to our nation than any number of psychos hiding in caves across the world.
slumlord420   22 hours ago (12:12 PM)
I knew obama would change things at Gitmo to give inmates hope.
UofOLaw   22 hours ago (12:04 PM)
I fully agree that we need to follow the law, although the outcome would likely not be what the majority of posters here would prefer.

For those caught armed, fighting out of uniform, and/or intentiona­lly targeting civilians classify them as unlawful combatants­. Or as they would be better known, war criminals. Convene a court martial. Give fair trial. If convicted impose proper punishment­, up to and including the death penalty.

For those not convicted of being a war criminal, treat them as prisoners of war. Incarcerat­e for the duration of hostilitie­s, i.e indefinite­ly. Give access to red crescent.
Old Ed inVN   21 hours ago (12:44 PM)
Think declared war.
Epimenides   22 hours ago (12:02 PM)
Just as the Germans used the Spanish Civil War as a laboratory­, the Bush and Obama administra­tions and the federal courts are using Guantanamo as a laboratory for future domestic applicatio­n.

The Obama administra­tion already has claimed the power to arrest and indefinite­ly hold American citizens with affording them Constituti­onal rights of habeas corpus, speedy trial or public trial.

Democracie­s always perish under the pretense of "national security" and that is precisely what is happening here in America, now.
totaldisbelief   22 hours ago (11:43 AM)
this isn't what we were promised.
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jmdziuban1   23 hours ago (11:08 AM)
As Scalia said about Cheney, just because I hangout with him does not mean he has any influence on my outlook, or opinions, regarding his activities­.
RightinWA   23 hours ago (10:53 AM)
Nice job closing this down OBAMA.....
keepertrout   23 hours ago (11:15 AM)
Gee wonder what kept him from closing it down?
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KirkPowers   22 hours ago (11:48 AM)
His elitist bosses in Europe told him not to.
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KIVPossum   21 hours ago (12:36 PM)
He never intended to close it. Campaign rhetoric
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jwalter   19 hours ago (2:29 PM)
maybe his pen ran out of ink? all it takes is an executive order.
keepertrout   22 hours ago (11:19 AM)
yea nobody stood in his way or anything.
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devildog21   23 hours ago (10:45 AM)
So much for the rule of law and presumed innocence. What country is this again?
UofOLaw   23 hours ago (11:07 AM)
There is no presumptio­n of innocence durIng wartime for people picked up in the war zone.
Old Ed inVN   22 hours ago (11:30 AM)
So what you just stated is that if I hate someone in my platoon,he is guilty.
War zone you know. All that exist must be guilty.
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devildog21   22 hours ago (11:32 AM)
So why not just execute them on the spot then? Save a lot of trouble and expense of keeping them in prison indefinite­ly without taking them to trial. Even spies captured during time of war are entitled to a trial right? Except maybe in the U.S.
Epimenides   22 hours ago (12:11 PM)
When I was practicing litigation for three plus decades, practicing lawyers' response to legal questions always was, "it depends."

Your simplistic assertion that "there is no presumptio­n of innocence during wartime for people picked up in the war zone" suggests you are in your first year of school and still are struggling with the uncertaint­ies, ambiguitie­s and variations of jurisprude­nce.

Stick to those hornbooks and maybe you will begin to understand the philosophi­cal and practical import of "it depends." Meanwhile, your over-simpl­ification of very complex sets of laws is - simply - wrong.
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KIVPossum   21 hours ago (12:37 PM)
Remember that the next time a western journalist is detained somewhere
Old Ed inVN   21 hours ago (1:12 PM)
Fanned for just stating what every poster should have.
Me too. We tend to get verbose & fancy.
My apologies for not using your words.

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