Republicans Refuse to Hear Holder’s Claims about Civilian Trials

If you suspended disbelief in yesterday’s DOJ oversight hearing and pretend this wasn’t about demagoguing and protecting torturers, the Republican attacks on Eric Holder’s decision to try five of the 9/11 detainees raise good points. They argue:

  • The 9/11 conspirators are actually more appropriate defendants for a military commission than some others who will be charged in military commissions
  • The standards for who gets tried in a civilian court and who gets tried in a military commission are inconsistent
  • Trying al Qaeda detainees in civilian courts may present Miranda challenges to soldiers in Afghanistan
  • A civilian trial will take a long time (3 years, according to Mary Jo White) and cost a lot of money ($50 million, according to Chuck Schumer)
  • Defendants might get off on legal technicalities
  • There were problems alleged to have arisen out of the earlier NYC terrorist trials
  • KSM might be able to demand asylum under the Convention Against Torture once in the US

Some of those are, frankly, legitimate concerns. But I said, “pretend this wasn’t about demagoguing,” because even when Holder addressed each of these concerns (though he did admit he’s not an immigration expert), the Republicans continued to attack him on the same grounds. They simply ignored his serious responses to their questions.

But what I found most interesting about the way Republicans not listening to Holder’s answers came in response to Holder’s assertion that the government is more likely to succeed in getting a conviction in Article III Court. The exchange, above, with Kyl, is one of the most heated examples.

Kyl: Surely you’re not arguing that it’s easier to get evidence into an Article III than a military commission. I mean, you made the point that you’re aware of a lot of evidence in this case that others aren’t, of course, but the rules for admitting evidence are more lenient before a military commission than an Article III Court, so that can’t be the basis for your decision, is it?

Holder: That is not necessarily the case. With regard to the evidence that would be elicited in a military commission, evidence elicited from the detainees, from the terrorists as a result of these enhanced interrogation techniques, it is not clear to me, at all, that that information would necessarily be admitted into a military commission, even with the use of a clean team, or that it would withstand appellate scrutiny. And on the basis of that concern and other things, my desire to go to an Article III Court and to minimize the use of that kind of information, that kind of evidence, I thought was paramount.

Yet Kyl all but dismissed this assertion, continuing on to demagogue some more (in this case, by raising one of Andrew McCarthy’s attacks on Holder).

The Attorney General of the United States repeatedly told Congress that the government stands a better chance of getting a conviction in a civilian court, yet Republicans don’t care–they still want their military commissions.

Now, the Republican refusal to consider Holder’s assertion is one thing. But it does raise the question of what Holder meant.

We discussed some of these issues in the David Frakt thread. Significantly, Frakt noted that the judge in the Jawad case ruled that he had the basis to dismiss all charges on the basis of pretrial abuse.

The Judge in the case, Colonel Stephen Henley, had made a couple of rulings in the Jawad case (my case) which made the government very nervous. First, he ruled in response to a motion to dismiss that I filed on the basis of torture that he “beyond peradventure” had the power to dismiss all charges on the basis of pretrial abuse of the detainee. [my emphasis]

And that–Frakt suggests later in that comment–might lead a military judge to deny the death penalty to make up for the fact that KSM had been waterboarded 183 times. In addition, both Mustafa al-Hawsawi and Ramzi bin al-Shibh have active challenges to the constitutionality of the military commissions, which, at the very least would hold up the military commissions themselves (even assuming that they were found to be constitutional).

Holder seems to be accounting for some of these factors–as well as noting that a death penalty case should be heard in the place where the crime occurred. But he also seems to be suggesting that it will be easier to present the evidence he feels the government should use to try its case against KSM and the others. (I sort of suspect he thinks it might be easier to bracket off any consideration of KSM’s torture in a civilian trial–though I’m curious what the lawyers think about this.)

I’m going to look more closely at what Holder might be thinking.

But the bottom line is this: the country’s top law enforcement officer says we are most likely to win a conviction of KSM in a civilian trial. But Republicans want their military commission anyway.

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13 replies
  1. Arbusto says:

    I’d contribute to buy a few gross of Depends for the fearful, incontinent, bladder challenged brethren of the GOP and send to their office and offer to give freely at their ubiquitous pressers. I’m sure they’d appreciate the offer.

  2. phred says:

    I don’t know EW, I think the bottom line is that both parties are perfectly content to do away with the rule of law. The only difference is in how they choose to go about it.

  3. KenMuldrew says:

    KSM might be able to demand asylum under the Convention Against Torture once in the US

    He’s going to claim that he has to stay in a country that *did* torture him because sending him somewhere else *might* lead to torture? Boy, talk about black is white!

    • Jeff Kaye says:

      Thanks.

      As for the GOP and the Article III v. Military Commissions issue. They are simply stupid.

      As for Holder and the U.S. government, I don’t believe anything anymore that comes from their mouths, even whether KSM is really the mastermind of 9/11. I want to see the full evidence in court. It’s not Holder I especially disbelieve, btw, but the government, which has lied so much and to such terrible effect over the years, they have a credibility gap that stretches from here to Mars. Just ask the other mastermind, Abu Zubaydah, who wrote the Manchester Manual (supposedly) and knew the identity of everyone who went through Karachi.

  4. earlofhuntingdon says:

    Nice observation. Military commissions are not guilty verdict slam dunks. Even they might throw out Bush or Obama’s torture-wrought evidence, which taints the charges and/or the penalty for them if and when a defendant is charged and convicted through a process that would withstand credible appeals tribunals.

  5. earlofhuntingdon says:

    I think the GOP has a longstanding abhorrence for the third branch. It isn’t as predictably controllable as a lobbyist-influenced legislature or a power and caution-dominated executive branch. It’s the source of such sour things as privacy rights and school busing, individual rights and attempts to redress prior wrongs that they despise, because they were the chief beneficiaries of the way things were that courts – in the last generation – attempted to ameliorate.

  6. brantl says:

    When haven’t these assholes thought that they knew better about everything, even when the overwhelming evidence to the contrary rears up and gob-smacks them? No time that I’ve ever seen.

  7. Loo Hoo. says:

    Racism much? Kyl more than met his match. His tone and condescending behavior was much like Session’s.

  8. orionATL says:

    when i read ew’s real time reporting yesterday on the senate judiciary committee’s interrogation of attorney general holder,

    i was struck by the continuous use by republican senators of themes that would and do play real well on glenn beck’s or rush limbaugh’s radio shows. this did not appear, for these senators, a chance to understand the ag thinking on, fro example, trying terrorists,

    it was instead a chance to establish talking points for manipulating relatively ignorant american citizens.

    what to make of this particular bald-faced effort at demagoguery?

    well, this afternoon i used my wife’s itouch to sneak a quick peek at the nytimes, and read this:

    http://prescriptions.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/19/republican-governors-warn-on-costs-to-states/?scp=1&sq=republican%20governors&st=cse

    and later found this:

    http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/11/19/2132342.aspx.

    the picture is quite clear, is it not.

    this is 1992 all over again.

    the republican will oppose any and all of obama’s “rational government” efforts

    by “vigorously” playing on themes from and appropriate for use on “populist” right-wing radio programs,

    until any national consensus on any issue had been muddled

    and legions of poorly-informed citizens are again ready to change governing parties from democrats back to the money, sex, korporate-keister-kissing, dirty-politics party, aka, the right-wing republicans –

    look what just happened in new jersey.

  9. Leen says:

    Do they think that KSM went through being waterboarded 183 times with all of this marbles in place? How can they put a guy who has been tortured like this on trial?

    Who could with stand that kind of torture. Sorry to say but KSM must have some damn strong beliefs…hatred, lust for money and power, spiritual beliefs can drive some people to do some damn radical actions

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