DAVID COLE, a law professor at Georgetown University and a volunteer
attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights, was co-counsel to the
plaintiffs in Turkmen vs. Ashcroft. He wrote this article for the Los
Angeles Times.
Joe W. (Chip) Pitts III, "Tough Patriot
Act Followed by 40 Nations," Washington Post, September 14, 2003
Suzanne Goldenberg, "More Than
80,000 Held by US Since 9/11 Attacks," Guardian, November 18, 2005
Editorial: "The Abuse Can Continue: Senators won't
authorize torture, but they won't prevent it, either," Washington
Post, September 22, 2006
[Congress passed a tyrannical law that will be ranked with the low
points in American democracy, our generation's version of the Alien and
Sedition Acts.--Editorial: "Rushing Off a
Cliff," New York Times, September 28, 2006]
R. Jeffrey Smith, "Many Rights in U.S. Legal System Absent in New
Bill," Washington Post, September 29, 2006
Martha Mendoza, "1 Man Still
Locked Up From 9/11 Sweeps," Associated Press, October 14, 2006
Scott Horton, "Pulitzer
Prize-winning Photojournalist Completes One Year in U.S. Military Custody in
Iraq," Harper's Magazine, April 12, 2007
David Cole, "Less
Safe, Less Free: Why America Is Losing the War on Terror," New
Press (February 2, 2009)
[ . . . take the government's aggressive focus on Arab and Muslim immigrants
in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. By its own accounts, it locked up over
5,000 foreign nationals in preventive detention in the first 2 years after
9/11, sought out 8,000 Arab and Muslim men for FBI interviews, and called in
80,000 Arab and Muslim foreign nationals for special registration,
fingerprinting and photographing. The idea was that we might find a
terrorist. But the government's record in this regard is 0 for 93,000. Not
one of these men has been convicted of a terrorist offense.
Q. But doesn't the government claim that it has indicted over 400 people in
terrorism-related cases and convicted over 200?
A. It does, but those statistics are misleading. First, none of them are
those foreign nationals that we referred to above. Second, the vast
majority of these cases actually had no terrorism charge at all - they
mostly involve minor charges of credit card fraud and the like. The Justice
Dept's own Inspector General found that the statistics were misleading and
that many cases had no terrorism ties whatsoever. The Washington Post and
New York Times looked at all these cases and found that only 39 individuals
were convicted of any terrorism charge. And virtually all of them were for
the crime of "providing material support" to a proscribed organization, not
for engaging in or conspiring to engage in any kind of actual
terrorism.--"Questions and Answers for David Cole
and Jules Lobel"]
[In a harshly worded ruling handed down Friday, a three-judge panel of the
9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals called the government's use of material
witnesses after Sept. 11 "repugnant to the Constitution and a painful
reminder of some of the most ignominious chapters of our national history."
. . . "Sadly, however, even now, more than 217 years after the ratification
of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, some confidently assert that
the government has the power to arrest and detain or restrict American
citizens for months on end, in sometimes primitive conditions, not because
there is evidence that they have committed a crime, but merely because the
government wishes to investigate them for possible wrongdoing, or to prevent
them from having contact with others in the outside world," Judge Milan D.
Smith Jr., for the majority. "We find this to be repugnant to the
Constitution and a painful reminder of some of the most ignominious chapters
of our national history."--"Court Says
9/11 Witnesses Can Sue Ashcroft: Former Student Filed Lawsuit Claiming Civil
Rights Were Violated," Associated Press, September 4, 2009]
[The suit charges that the detainees were kept in solitary confinement with
the lights on 24 hours a day; placed under a communications blackout so that
they could not seek the assistance of their attorneys, families, and
friends; subjected to physical and verbal abuse; forced to endure inhumane
conditions of confinement; and obstructed in their efforts to practice their
religion.--William Fisher, "Ashcroft's Post-9/11 Roundups Spark
Lawsuit," antiwar.com, September 28, 2010]