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to their defense. How can they get a fair trial in any proceeding when the government has already paraded them around as guilty?
The very language, 'enemy combatant', is not even descriptively accurate except in the way they've again made up a definition to suit their made-up law.
com‧bat‧ant
1. a nation engaged in active fighting with enemy forces. 2. a person or group that fights. –adjective 3. combating; fighting: the combatant armies. 4. disposed to combat; combative.
Whether or not these defendants have been 'combatants', or not, is a matter to be determined in court, even under their own legislation. Yet, the label is applied to every individual Bush grants permission to detain. In effect, under this law, the mere act by the president of detaining someone takes away their presumption of innocence which is the most basic of protections against any prosecution, in any system.
Further, the detainee/torture legislation puts even more of a burden of proof on the accused by allowing the introduction of hearsay evidence by the prosecution if the defendant can't discredit it. In effect, the government won't have to present any evidence at all against those Bush decides to hold indefinitely, without charges, to convict them. All they have to say is they have knowledge of their guilt, and, that knowledge they intend to suffice for due process and justice done. There is no opportunity for any real measure of defense.
There will be zero convictions under these tribunals which will stand any judicial review, despite the provisions which limit appeals based on the Geneva provisions. Just basic jurisprudence would tell you that. This mock court is no different from the one the Supreme Court already struck down, except in the provisions which are even more pernicious and unconstitutional. I find it hard to imagine this law will end up effecting anything except the upcoming congressional campaign.
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