tephen C. Webster
Published: Monday July 21, 2008
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http://rawstory.com//news/2008/ACLU_Mukasey_calls_on_Congress_to_0721.html Attorney General Michael Mukasey prompted Congress Monday morning, during a speech to the conservative American Enterprise Institute, to create new rules governing the rights of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The American Civil Liberties Union immediately responded to Mukasey's request, calling his proposals nothing short of asking Congress to subvert the Constitution.
"Mukasey is asking Congress to expand and extend the war on terror forever," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office, in a media advisory. "Anyone that this president or the next one declares to be a terrorist could then be held indefinitely without a trial. This is clearly the last gasp of an administration desperate to rationalize what is a failed legal scheme that was correctly rejected four times by the Supreme Court."
The Associated Press, acknowledging a Congress eager to transition into a busy election season, notes the rules are not likely to be approved. Mukasey's requests comes on the heels of a Supreme Court decision granting detainees the right to challenge their captivity in US federal court. Under Mukasey's proposals, a detainee would be able to challenge their detention, but would receive no extradition to the United States for the proceedings.
According to the Washington Post: "Under the Justice plan that Mukasey talked about today, the U.S. government could hold prisoners indefinitely so long as the armed conflict with al-Qaeda persisted."