Submit your comments on this article | ||
Home Front: WoT | ||
Judge strikes down Bush on terror groups | ||
2006-11-29 | ||
![]() "This law gave the president unfettered authority to create blacklists," said David Cole, a lawyer for the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Constitutional Rights that represented the group. "It was reminiscent of the McCarthy era." The case centered on two groups, the Liberation Tigers, which seeks a separate homeland for the Tamil people in Sri Lanka, and Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan, a political organization representing the interests of Kurds in Turkey.Both groups consider the Nov. 21 ruling a victory; both had been designated by the United States as foreign terrorist organizations.U.S. District Judge Audrey Collins enjoined the government from blocking the assets of the two groups.
The judge's 45-page ruling was a reversal of her own tentative findings last July in which she indicated she would uphold wide powers asserted by Bush under an anti-terror financing law. She delayed her ruling then to allow more legal briefs to be filed. She also struck down the provision in which Bush had authorized the secretary of the treasury to designate anyone who "assists, sponsors or provides services to" or is "otherwise associated with" a designated group. However, she let stand sections of the order that penalize those who provide "services" to designated terrorist groups. She said such services would include the humanitarian aid and rights training proposed by the plaintiffs. The Humanitarian Law Project planned to appeal that part of the ruling, Cole said. "We are pleased the court rejected many of the constitutional arguments raised by the plaintiffs, including their challenge to the government's ban on providing services to terrorist organizations," Miller said Tuesday. "However, we believe the court erred in finding that certain other aspects of the executive order were unconstitutional." The ruling was still considered a victory, Cole said. "Even in fighting terrorism the president cannot be given a blank check to blacklist anyone he considers a bad guy or a bad group and you can't imply guilt by association," Cole said. | ||
Posted by:Seafarious |
#4 More 9th circuit idiocy. |
Posted by: mojo 2006-11-29 10:26 |
#3 Islamic terrorist: any Muslim who There. Fixed that for you. :-) |
Posted by: gorb 2006-11-29 03:40 |
#2 Another CIRCUS COURT OF APPEALS ruling. They are always overturned by the adults. |
Posted by: 3dc 2006-11-29 03:39 |
#1 Terrorist: both any person who uses violence or threat of violence for political ends, or any person who has acted or conspires to incite, finance, harbor, arm, train and/or who, generally, aids and abets said use of political violence, by either accession to terror or obstruction of just law enforsement against terrorism. Islamic terrorist: any Muslim who reads and understands the koran. |
Posted by: Sneaze Shaiting3550 2006-11-29 01:31 |