Thursday, March 28, 2024

From Roger Fitch and our friends down under at Justinian

 

Courtroom capers 

Trump ... Looking for the cash bond ... Lenders likely to be stiffed ... Supreme Court bends over for Trump ... Novel arguments for immunity ... Idiocy has its appeal ... From Washington, Roger Fitch reports 

"I often say Al Capone, he was one of the greatest of all time, if you like criminals" - Donald Trump 

"Trump represents the culmination of gangster Gemeinschaft" - John Ganz

The first criminal prosecution of a former US president is about to begin, briefly delayed by the late production of federal court documents that Trump subpoenaed in January.

The defendant has a sordid history, and the NY trial concerns hush-money paid to a prostitute before the 2016 election; Trump's co-conspirator, Michael Cohen, has already been convicted and served time.

Trump's trial will be about election influence, an attempt to corrupt a presidential election.

Clearly, Judge Juan Merchan has Trump's measure: one pre-trial order requires jury anonymity, in light of the "likelihood of bribery, jury tampering, or of physical injury or harassment of juror(s)".

Another is a comprehensive gag order against Trump's endless insults and harassment of court witnesses, prosecutors and jurors.

NY federal judge Lewis Kaplan also ordered anonymous juries and a gag rule, in the writer Jean Carroll's successful civil cases against Trump. After the second Carroll verdict, Kaplan thanked the jurors for their service, and recommended they never tell anyone they had been jurors, for the rest of their lives.

This is New York. They know Donald Trump. 

Moreover, the Times added, with MAGA threats:

"The intimidation is systemic and ubiquitous, an acknowledged tactic in the playbook of the Trump right that flows all the way down from the violent fantasies of Donald Trump himself. It is rare to encounter a public-facing Trump critic who hasn't faced threats and intimidation." 

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READ THE REST HERE...

Monday, March 25, 2024

Support for the uncharged men still at Guantanamo

 My last posting was about support for the men that have been released from Guantanamo but still suffering. My last client was released just about a year ago and although he is now at home with his family the continued struggle is real. Thank you for any support you are able to provide to Saeed and the other men.

This post is about the 16 men still at Guantanamo who have never been charged with a crime. These men have been languishing for up to 23 years. Waiting to be released.  There suffering is also very real. The attorneys, like me, who have represented men at the base continue to provide support to those men- especially during Ramadan.

Here is your way to help:

We need your support to give Ramadan gifts to the men still at Guantanamo (those who are not charged). While the Ramadan gift packages cannot make up for continued imprisonment, they do bring comfort and let the men know they are not completely forgotten. The gift package for each man includes zamzam water, tahini, halawa, dates, pastries, sweets, coffee (and similar food items), perfume, shoes or sandals, a thobe and a shirt.

You can make a tax-deductible donation here. If you prefer to use Zelle, the email is donation@hrtlaw.org, and please include contact information so your contribution can be acknowledged. Checks can be made out to Healing and Recovery after Trauma and sent to 2300 18th St NW, Unit 21074, Washington DC 20009. 


Saturday, March 23, 2024

Guantanamo Survivors Fund

Just reminding everyone that the men who have been freed from Guantanamo continue to suffer. Most cannot find work and depend on the generosity of all of us. 

Please give if you can:  

As you know, the Guantanamo Survivors Fund raises money to help meet the needs of the many Muslim men who are suffering after being transferred from Guantanamo to their own or third countries. We recognize the particular pain of those who continue to be separated from their loved ones during this traditionally joyful month of Ramadan. 

The neglect and abandonment of Guantanamo survivors by the US government has resulted in some men, like Salem Ghereby from Libya, dying without appropriate medical and other support.  We do not want this to happen to anyone else. With your help we can continue to provide relief to Guantanamo survivors who need our help.  

 So far during this year's Ramadan fundraising campaign Guantanamo Survivors Fund has raised 10% of the $10,000 goal. Thank you to everyone who has contributed. As the days of Ramadan progress, we hope you will continue to give generously.  

Thursday, February 29, 2024

From Roger Fitch and our friends down under at Justinian.

 

Danger ahead - falling rocks

Voting in America ... Gerrymanders and voter suppression give Republicans a whopping advantage ... The 14th amendment and its possibilities ... The post-Civil War reconstruction amendments ... Trump and the suspension of the Constitution ... Roger Fitch explains 

If more Americans had been able to vote in 2016, Donald Trump would have lost. 

However, thanks to the supreme court's decision in Shelby County v Holder (2013), the 2016 presidential election was the first in 50 years without the essential protections of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, resulting in massive vote suppression.

After the court inexplicably struck down the recent, near-unanimous, re-enactment of the Act's provisions requiring federal pre-clearance of voting measures, a toxic torrent of voting restrictions poured forth from conservative (and racist) states.

Private enforcement actions remained, but in November 2023, a 2-1 panel of the 8th circuit issued a clearly-wrong decision that such actions are not allowed, though they've been used for 40 years during which time private litigants brought 182 successful lawsuits and the DoJ alone only 15. 

Worse, four Republican states are cynically pursuing a two-pronged attack on the remnants of the VRA.

A third of eligible voters in America fail to vote. Why? It's the difficulty of doing so under Republican Party governance. Voting is voluntary, and it's actively discouraged through onerous registrations and voting, pointlessly-purged voter rolls, inconvenient polling sites, Tuesday elections, deliberately-burdensome ID requirements, restricted voting hours, and even punishments for poll assistance.

If one succeeds in voting, gerrymanders can give Republicans an advantage of 7% or more; in Wisconsin 47.5% of the vote gives Republicans a two-thirds super-majority in the legislature, enough to override executive actions of the progressive Democrat governor.

Enforcement of an overlooked provision of the 14th amendment might address these problems.

Americans are constantly reminded of the holy writ enshrined in the Constitution (1789) and Bill of Rights (Amendments 1-10, adopted 1791), but people know little about the Reconstruction Amendments hammered out by Congress after the Civil War, in debates rivalling those of the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention eighty years earlier. 

Reconstruction Amendments - deliberations

Following the Civil War, the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments were adopted to recast the Constitution and Bill of Rights, and vindicate the supremacy of the federal over state governments, not least in matters of citizenship, voting, and (gender aside) freedom from discrimination. 

Most people have heard of the 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery, and perhaps the 15th, but it's the 14th that is most well-known, the amendment that turbo-charged the Bill of Rights. Properly interpreted, the 14th would be Donald Trump's kryptonite, as its Section 3 prohibits certain insurgents holding office

The supreme court, however, seems sure to allow Trump on the ballot, simply deferring a constitutional crisis. Why? Perhaps because Section 3 doesn't mention the (Australian) ballot

Other sections of the 14th are more consequential: Section 1 adds birthright citizenship, equal protection and privileges or immunities to the due process provided in the Bill of Rights, making these federal protections also those of state citizens. Then there is Section 2

"Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State ... when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State." (emphases added)

It was Section 2 that introduced a gender distinction for the first time through its "male" references: no mention of sex appears in the Constitution or Bill of Rights.

In Section 1, women were included in the same birthright citizenship, "privileges or immunities", due process, and equal protection as men. Yet during the compromises in drafting section 2, recognition of women was dropped: it was thought its inclusion would make ratification too difficult.

The campaign for women's suffrage had begun before the War, in the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention, and there were precedents for women voting, e.g, single women and widows voted in New Jersey from 1776 to 1807, when the all-male legislature put a stop to it. 

Hence one purpose of Section 2 - in referring to male inhabitants and male citizens - was deterring states from increasing their representation in congress by enfranchising women, as soon occurred in Wyoming Territory (1869) and elsewhere in the West. The "male" distinction became redundant after the adoption of the 19th Amendment (1920).

The 15th Amendment also refers to "males", as it only sought to deal with racial, not sex, discrimination. What is striking is that the amendment does not contain a right to vote, something the US, alone among advanced democracies, lacks. 

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READ THE REST HERE.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

The Artists at Guantanamo

 I know I have mentioned how some of the men, who were never charged with any crime, took up painting and other artistic pursuits while waiting to be released. Upon release they had to fight to keep their art work- our government considered their art work to belong to the government. sigh. Anyway, another story with a different twist. This man was released and allowed to take his art work- except for the Art depicting his torture. Apparently those pieces depict our torture methods- which must remain secret.

you really can't make his shit up.

read more here.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Former Guantanamo detainee goes to Bagram....

 Of course Bagram is where most of the detainees were held before they were moved to Guantanamo. This is where the torture began for many of the men.

Moazzam Begg has dedicated his life, since his release, to helping the men who were once held at Guantanamo.

This is 25 minutes long but worth the look.

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

From Roger Fitch and our friends down under at Justinian.

 

The Disunited States of America

The cowboys of Texas ... Asserting control over immigration ... Operation Lone Star ... Confederate theory of secession is alive and kicking ... Usurping federal powers ... Trump judges to the rescue ... Wild defence claims in election conspiracy case ... Roger Fitch reports from Washington 

Texas has always asserted its enduring sovereignty, claiming to be the only state that was previously a republic (Vermont disagrees). The state bolted from the Union once: it was almost the first to secede in 1861, and in 1870 it was one of the last readmitted.

Why? It was among the last to ratify the 15th amendment guaranteeing the right of "males" to vote without racial discrimination. 

In fact, the original admission of Texas in 1846 was so contentious and unpopular that, alone among the states, it was done by joint congressional resolution. Texas reserved the right to subdivide into five states, which, happily, never occurred; 108 US senators, ten of them Texans, doesn't bear thinking about. 

When British author John Bainbridge's seminal book about Texas, The Super-Americans, appeared in 1961, the state was still ruled by the same conservative Democrats (today's Republicans) who defended the "White Primary" (disallowed in Smith v Allwright, 1944) and segregated state universities (struck down in Sweatt v Painter, 1950). 

The Bainbridge paperback bore the cover blurb, "an incipient fascist state". Perhaps incipient no more: the majority-minority Texas has been tightly controlled by white-minority Republicans for a generation. Since George Bush's 1994 election as governor, most state-wide officers (governor, lieutenant governor, attorney-general, members of the supreme court and court of criminal appeals) have been Republicans. 

Since the Republicans' unprecedented 2003 do-over of the previous (Democrat) legislature's 2000 census-based redistricting, the party's unshakeable gerrymanders have guaranteed perpetual Republican control of the legislature and state congressional delegation.

In 2019 (in Rucho v Common Cause), a Republican-dominated US supreme court stopped all federal judicial review of partisan gerrymanders at the moment when most gerrymanders favoured Republicans. 

With permanent government assured, Texas Republicans have taken increasingly bold stances against the federal government, and with Donald Trump's extreme Federalist Society judges now in place at all levels of the federal judiciary, the state is reasserting its independence, bringing test cases of Texas's purported sovereign supremacy in sympathetic federal courts. 

It's the 1830s and "Nullification" again, with Texas standing-in for South Carolina. Indeed, 24 of the 25 Republican governors have piled on with what is essentially the Confederate Theory of Secession.

Operation Lone Star appropriates immigration control, though states have no right or power to participate in immigration policy, a federal matter. No matter, Texas found a friend in Drew Tipton, the district judge alternating with fellow Texan Matthew Kacsmaryk as worst Trump-appointed judge.

Texas governor Greg Abbott has also attacked immigration law in Kacsmaryk's court, where ultra vires interventions in federal immigration policies have succeeded. 

READ THE REST HERE.

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

You might ask??

Why were these men at Guantanamo? Captured in Thailand for a bombing in Bali back in 2002.

Well maybe they are one step closer to leaving Guantanamo. We shall see.

Two Malaysian prisoners at Guantánamo Bay pleaded guilty on Tuesday to conspiring in the October 2002 nightclub bombings in the resort island of Bali, Indonesia, that killed more than 200 people.

The guilty pleas were the first step in a slowly unfolding proceeding that began when the men, Mohammed Farik Bin Amin, 48, and Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep, 47, were charged in 2021 — 18 years after their capture in Thailand. Sentencing is scheduled for next week.

Read the rest here.

Monday, January 15, 2024

Former U.N. Special Rapporteur Fionnuala Ni Aolain on Gitmo's 22nd anniversary


The former Rapporteur was a tremendous help in freeing my client, Saeed Bakhouch from the clutches of the Algerian government after his release from Guantanamo last spring. Click here for her reflections on Guantanamo and what the Biden administration could be doing....

Fionnuala Ní Aoláin

Fionnuala Ní Aoláin (@NiAolainF) is Executive Editor at Just Security. She served as the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism from 2017-Nov 2023. She also concurrently serves as Regents Professor and Robina Chair in Law, Public Policy, and Society at the University of Minnesota Law School and Professor of Law at the Queens University School of Law in Belfast, Northern Ireland.


Thursday, January 11, 2024

The Talking Dog.... on the 22nd anniversary of Gitmo.

 Sigh.  read the dog here---

and yes, it is exhausting and frustrating and infuriating.

And even with my two men out (and yes, my second client is now home with family- hopefully without further intrusion from the Algerian government) I still cannot fathom the idea that this place is still open.

read the talking dog here:

http://thetalkingdog.com/2024/01/11/22/



Thursday, January 4, 2024

22nd anniversary of Guantanamo's opening next week- Jan. 11.

 Next week is the 22nd anniversary of the opening of the torture prison at Guantanamo. There are several events if you would like to participate in protesting the continuation of the prison:

Thursday January 11: 22 years since the Bush/Cheney regime set up the U.S. torture camp on Guantanamo, to imprison people outside the law. We demand it be closed now! Join us in cities across the U.S.

Join Vigils and Rallies Across the U.S. January 10, 11, 12 and 13

Sponsors: World Can’t Wait, Amnesty International US, Center for Constitutional Rights, Center for Victims of Torture, CloseGuantanamo.org, CODEPINK, Muslim Counterpublics Lab, National Religious Campaign Against Torture, No More Guantanamos, September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, Witness Against Torture.


We will protest this terrible anniversary, knowing that even the close of the prison will not bring justice. Mansoor Adayfi, released in 2016 from Guantanamo, has become an energetic and eloquent advocate for released prisoners, many of whom are still not "home," still separated from their families, never having received the tiniest acknowledgment of their illegitimate imprisonment, or the means to carry on their lives. Mansoor wrote in Common Dreams.org on New Year's Day:

"...Despite the fact that the transfer out of Guantánamo was supposed to offer survivors some reprieve from the abuse at the prison, many of those who have been repatriated to their home country or resettled in a third country have found themselves in either another prison or in what we call Guantánamo 2.0. Those of us who remained in Guantánamo while our brothers were released heard shocking stories about their predicaments. This includes Uyghur prisoners being released to a refugee camp in Albania and having their beards forcibly shaved by the Albanian police; a prisoner who was resettled in Slovakia and beaten by police so severely he had to be hospitalized; and many former prisoners who have simply disappeared in prisons where they were abused, tortured, and killed..."

Wednesday January 10 webinar: From Gaza to Guantanamo: Resisting State Violence & Occupation

View a presentation by Katherine Gallagher, presenter in the webinar above, to the UN

Friday January 12 webinar: Guantanamo, Where Do We Go From Here?




Sunday, December 10, 2023

Remember guantanamo survivors - Human rights day. matching funds.

 



The Universal Declaration of Human Rights outlines inalienable rights for all, including the right to be free from torture and arbitrary detention, and to a fair trial with presumption of innocence until proven guilty.  But these rights are meaningless unless upheld. 

No one knows this better than Guantanamo prison survivors, who have endured countless and repeated violations of their human rights inside the prison, and whose ordeal often doesn’t end when they leave. 

Please support Guantanamo survivors with a tax-deductible donation to the Guantanamo Survivors Fund.  Today on Human Rights Day and for the rest of  the year, a generous donor will match your donation dollar for dollar up to $22,000 - $1,000 for each of the 22 years that the prison has been opened in the War on Terror.  This means that with your generous donation, we can double this amount to $44,000, to help up to 15 more Guantanamo survivors and their families!   

Since Witness Against Torture joined other groups to establish the Fund in April 2022, it has raised over $93,000 and provided small grants to 29 former Guantanamo prisoners. 

The Fund's success depends on our support.  Donate to the Guantanamo Survivors Fund!

In peace and solidarity,
The WAT Organizing Team 

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

One war criminal dead….so many more to go.

 And yes rolling stone nailed it

Friday, November 17, 2023

From Roger Fitch and our friends down under.

Letter from Washington


The 2023 supreme court term has opened, producing understandable unease because of the bad cases on its docket. The first of such cases, predicted to be its worst, was a 2nd Amendment, "gun rights" case, US v Rahimi, and concerned the right to keep and carry firearms when subject to a domestic violence order. 

Applying Clarence Thomas's bizarre test from last season's Bruen case, the Fifth Circuit found Rahimi was entitled to access his firearms as there were no comparable restrictions on gun ownership in the 18th-century. 

That's quite true: there were few, if any, colonial prosecutions for domestic violence

Rahimi has now been argued, and contrary to expectations it doesn't look good for "gun enthusiasts".  The court may finally be drawing a line on "gun rights". Michael Dorf has more. 

The supreme court will also be hearing a South Carolina redistricting case that could decide the majority in the next congress. The new districting is pretty clearly racist, but since the 2019 supreme court ruling (in Rucho v Common Cause) that partisan gerrymanders are non-justiciable, the Republican legislature has rebranded the districts as merely partisan. 

It's an irrelevant co-incidence that the voters are black; they were  actually targeted for voting Democrat… 

Meanwhile, on the tenth anniversary of Shelby County v Holder, Americans should reflect on the damage caused by one of the most outrageous decisions in US supreme court history, the opinion that judicially annulled the essential section of Lyndon Johnson's landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965

The VRA had only recently been reconfirmed by a near-unanimous bipartisan majority of congress; its extralegal invalidation by the supreme court has never been adequately explained.

The immediate consequence of Shelby County was the introduction of state restrictions on voting that are now notorious: the decision is directly responsible for the ten years of voter disenfranchisement that have followed in Red States, and for the gerrymandered legislatures that are able to perpetuate themselves, as  well as pack and crack congressional districts for the benefit of the Republican party.

Although the US constitution famously lacks an explicit right to vote, 49 state constitutions do contain this right. That's why it's important that state supreme courts remain free of partisan control.

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READ THE REST HERE