*Cross-posted from Balkinization
Wednesday’s Supreme Court argument in the
List the factors that make a hearing unfair and put them all together: that’s the CSRT on a good day. In brief, the CSRT relies predominantly on evidence a detainee cannot see; affirmatively prohibits the assistance of counsel; freely admits statements gained by torture and other coercion; and routinely refuses detainees’ requests to call witnesses or present exculpatory evidence. In addition, the CSRT’s panels of mid-level officers lack any structural guarantees of independence. All of the detainees had already been designated “enemy combatants” by the tribunal’s superiors, all the way up to the Secretary of Defense and the President. The CSRT disagreed with those determinations only on rare occasions (about 5 percent of the time). And, on several of those occasions, the tribunal’s superiors ordered “do-overs” until the tribunal reached the desired result.
The
DTA makes it impossible to remedy the CSRT’s flaws. It limits judicial review
to whether the CSRT followed its own rules and whether those rules satisfy the
Constitution and laws of the
In one sense, comparing this scheme with habeas corpus is unfair. The DTA-CSRT was never meant to provide an adequate or effective substitute for habeas. This fact alone should make a constitutional difference. When the Supreme Court previously suggested that the Suspension Clause might be satisfied by an “adequate and effective” substitute for habeas, it was considering the constitutionality of alternative review measures that Congress intended to be commensurate with habeas: post-conviction review for federal prisoners under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in United States v. Hayman and under the D.C. Code (for D.C. prisoners) in Swain v. Pressley. Congress, however, intended DTA review of CSRT findings to be much more circumscribed than habeas, not commensurate with it. Unlike in Hayman and Swain, Congress did not intend to replicate habeas in another forum with the DTA. Rather, Congress set out to create an inferior process for a class of individuals it believed had no right to habeas corpus (or to anything else for that matter). Trying to make the DTA-CSRT into a substitute for habeas is like trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
The
government seeks to divert attention from the DTA-CSRT’s failings by invoking
the idea of agency review. The DTA, the government reassures, merely adopts the
familiar model of the modern administrative state: limited appellate review of
agency fact-finding. But even assuming this model could pass constitutional
muster for cases of indefinite executive detention, the underlying process
would have to be full and fair – everything the CSRT is not. And, any
suggestion that errors can be corrected on DTA review from a one-sided and
non-adversarial CSRT process is a fantasy. Whether an agency model might
suffice in another time and another place, it cannot replace habeas for these
detainees, who have languished at
In
a 2005 speech
to the NSA, former Deputy Attorney General James Comey called for a commitment
to “Intelligence Under the Law.” Comey explained why the
In
his insider
account of the CSRT process, Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Abraham, a
26-year-veteran of military intelligence, demolishes any pretence that the CSRT
could ever be part of a system of intelligence under law. The tribunals made
decisions, Abraham says, based upon a haphazard
collection of generic information that rarely related to the detainee in
question and that “lacked even the most fundamental earmarks of objectively
credible evidence.” In a subsequent
declaration, Abraham explains how the CSRT had no ability, incentive, or
means to assess the reliability or accuracy of the intelligence on which it was
relying in the jerry-rigged process that has come to define the detention
system at
Hafetz: “Inadequate Substitute” (PDF)