Here is a link to a story about the Supereme Court turning down the review of a case about extradition (presumably) for Manuel Noriega. That's interesting, but not so important. What I found
really interesting was that although the Court turned down the request for review, Justices Thomas and Scalia
wanted to hear the case because of they felt the Court had something more to say (probably on the nature of extra-judicial detention
a la Guantanamo).
I can only imagine what views they have, that they're chomping at the bit to push on us, but it's predicatable what direction they want to take our country.
Here are a few excerpts covering the point I'm talking about:
Though the majority on the court rejected the appeal without comment, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote to say that he wanted to hear the case -- though not out of any particular sympathy for Noriega. Thomas wrote that he wanted to help clarify what has been a somewhat messy aftermath of the high court's 2008 decision that gave detainees at Guantanamo Bay the right to challenge their detentions in American courts.
Thomas was joined by Justice Antonin Scalia to say that taking the case and addressing issues over the detainees "will spare detainees and the government years of unnecessary litigation."
They contended that Noriega's case would have given the court an opportunity to rule on that issue in a case uncomplicated by military commissions, classified information or the "extraterritorial detention" of the detainees.
Noriega, 75, was scooped up by the U.S. military in 1989 and was convicted for his role as a major international drug trafficker. Noriega was eligible for release in 2007, but he has remained locked up in the United State while fighting extradition. He wants to return to his home country where he also faces numerous charges including murder, but his advanced age means any sentence in Panama will likely be served under house arrest.
Noriega claimed that under terms of the Geneva Conventions the United States is required to send him home. But lower courts ruled the treaty doesn't force that requirement on the government.
Thought I'd pass on that little sickening tidbit. Sickening but worth knowing.
PB