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Home Front: WoT
Justice Dept to Try to Toss Gitmo Challenges
2006-01-04
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department will seek dismissal of lawsuits from more than 300 Guantanamo Bay detainees fighting the legality of their confinement, using a new law that the Bush administration says sharply limits existing challenges. Advocates for detainees quickly registered their opposition Tuesday.

The measure, part of the Defense Appropriations Act that President Bush signed last week, was intended to allow detainees at the U.S. naval base in Cuba to appeal their detention status and punishments to a federal appeals court in Washington. That avenue replaces the one tool the Supreme Court gave detainees in 2004 to fight the legality of their detentions - the right to file habeas corpus lawsuits, which demand that the government justify someone's continued imprisonment, in any federal court.

The new provision won broad support only after its chief Democratic sponsor, Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, said it had been altered so it would not apply to pending cases.

But on Tuesday, the Justice Department notified judges at U.S. District Court in Washington that it will ask them to dismiss 187 cases involving more than 300 people because the law eliminates the jurisdiction of district courts to consider the legality of detentions at the naval base.

The decision to try to stop pending cases in their tracks drew an immediate whine rebuke from advocates for the detainees, who said the provision should apply only to new challenges. "The battle about what that provision means has only just begun," said Elisa Massimino, director of the Washington office of Human Rights First.
The nice thing about all the court challenges is that the mooks sitting in Gitmo have to stay there until the wheels of justice grind to a finish.
Administration officials and supportive lawmakers have argued that the United States gives the detainees unprecedented access to U.S. courts, in some cases more than U.S. military personnel who have been convicted of crimes by military courts. Under the new law, detainees still may appeal their classification as enemy combatants or their conviction by a military commission to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.
Posted by:Steve White

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