Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 75, No. 12, December
2002
The Evolving Judicial Response to the War on Terrorism
Following the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, does the United
States need to relinquish some civil liberties to remain safe? If so,
which liberties and who decides? Does the judicial branch take a back
seat to the executive and legislative branches and their determinations
on how the nation should fight terrorism? Or is this the time that the
courts' scrutiny is most essential?
by Kendall W. Harrison
The choice is not between order and liberty. It is between liberty
with order and anarchy without either. There is danger that, if the
court does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical
wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide
pact." Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S. 1, 37 (1949) (Jackson,
J., dissenting).
* * *
eptember 11, 2001, changed the face of America.
The horrific events of that tragic day have challenged the country's
sense of security, its trust of those unlike us, and its faith in the
future. But the long shadows of Sept. 11 stretch beyond any individual's
sense of personal well-being. They have placed America's constitutional
legacy under great strain as well.
The United States is waging an unprecedented and undefined "war" on
terrorism. Congress has contributed to the war effort with its passage
of the USA Patriot Act but otherwise has largely ceded control of the
battle against terrorism to President George W. Bush.1 In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, Congress
granted President Bush authority "to use all necessary and appropriate
force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines
planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks" or
"harbored such organizations or persons."2
More recently, Congress gave President Bush authorization "to use the
Armed Forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and
appropriate in order to - (1) defend the national security of the United
States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and (2) enforce all
relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding
Iraq."3
The U.S. Justice Department, under the direction of Attorney General
John Ashcroft, has largely tried to eliminate any judicial involvement
in the war on terrorism, taking the position that federal judges have no
jurisdiction to review executive branch decisions on national security
measures. But the courts are not sitting idle while the Justice
Department independently draws the line between national security and
individual liberty. Instead, federal judges are taking an increasingly
active role in resolving questions of individual constitutional rights,
rights that come under immense pressure during times of war. Decisions
such as Korematsu v. United States,4 in which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the World
War II internment of Japanese-Americans, are reminders that the nation's
sense of what national security requires during the heat of battle can
look exaggerated through the lens of time. In making national security
decisions, however, the executive branch must act without the benefit of
hindsight.
No post-Sept. 11 terrorism cases have yet reached the U.S. Supreme
Court. When they do, perhaps as early as the end of this current term,
the difficulty of reconciling individual liberties with national
security during times of war will not be lost on Chief Justice William
H. Rehnquist, who, in 1998, wrote a book on the subject, All the
Laws But One: Civil Liberties in Wartime. He has stated:
"While we would not want to subscribe to the full sweep of the Latin
maxum inter arma silent leges - in time of war the laws are
silent - perhaps we can accept the proposition that though the laws are
not silent in wartime, they speak with a muted voice."5
Does the country need to relinquish some civil liberties to remain
safe? If so, which liberties? The question of where to draw the
appropriate line between national security and individual liberty is
exceptionally difficult. Yet perhaps an even more complicated question
is who should draw that line. Does the judicial branch necessarily take
a back seat to Congress and President Bush and their determinations
regarding how the nation should fight terrorism? Or is this the time
when the courts' scrutiny is most essential?
This article briefly examines some of these questions in light of
three specific areas in which the federal courts have faced the
individual liberty/national security tension in the post-Sept. 11 world:
closed immigration proceedings; secret detentions; and the definition of
enemy combatants. (A fourth area, involving the U.S. Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court's rejection of some of the attorney
general's new guidelines for terrorism searches and wiretaps, is
fascinating, but beyond the scope of this article.)
These cases cut to the core of American constitutional democracy.
With a remarkable 88 percent of Wisconsin residents approving President
Bush's performance in the war on terrorism, Wisconsin attorneys should
keep a careful eye on the consequences of that war effort.6 The decisions made now about the appropriate
division of power between the political and judicial branches of
government regarding terrorism will remain long after al-Qaida is
vanquished.
Closed Immigration Proceedings
On Sept. 21, 2001, less than two weeks after the terrorist attacks,
Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy issued a directive to all U.S.
immigration judges and court administrators, informing them that the
attorney general had "implemented additional security procedures for
certain cases in the Immigration Court."7
Under the "Creppy Directive," as it has become known, the attorney
general has the authority to designate an immigration case as one of
"special interest." Once the attorney general makes that designation,
all proceedings in the case become closed to the news media and the
public (including the deportee's family members). Courts are forbidden
from even "confirming or denying whether (a special interest case) is on
the docket or scheduled for a hearing."8 The
Creppy Directive does not require particularized reasons for closing a
given deportation proceeding.9
In the year that followed the Creppy Directive, the attorney general
designated approximately 600 immigration matters as special interest
cases.10 It did not take long for special
interest designations to be challenged. Two of these challenges have
already reached the federal courts of appeals. On Aug. 26, 2002, in
Detroit Free Press v. Ashcroft,11
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled that the blanket
closing of deportation proceedings pursuant to the Creppy Directive was
unconstitutional. Six weeks later, in Ashcroft v. North Jersey Media
Group Inc.,12 the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit reached the opposite conclusion.
The Sixth Circuit opinion is replete with eloquent rhetoric,
extolling the importance of open government:
- "A government operating in the shadow of secrecy stands in complete
opposition to the society envisioned by the Framers of our
Constitution."13
- "Democracies die behind closed doors."14
- "By the simple assertion of 'national security,' the Government
seeks a process where it may, without review, designate certain classes
of cases as 'special interest cases' and, behind closed doors,
adjudicate the merits of these cases to deprive noncitizens of their
fundamental liberty interests."15
Openness is especially critical in deportation proceedings, explained
the court, because the political branches of government can deport
noncitizens based on reasons as simple as their race or beliefs. The
Bill of Rights, which protects American citizens from such treatment,
does not apply to noncitizens. Thus, "[t]he only safeguard on this
extraordinary governmental power [of deportation] is the public,
deputizing the press as the guardians of their liberty."16
The court readily acknowledged the government's compelling interest
in preventing terrorism and agreed that the executive branch was much
better positioned than the judicial branch to understand how to
accomplish that goal.17 Nonetheless, the
court found that the Justice Department had not sufficiently explained
why national security concerns could not be addressed case by
case.18 The Sixth Circuit saw no reason
that the Justice Department could not seek to keep sensitive
intelligence information confidential, as the need arose, in individual
cases.19
The Third Circuit ruled otherwise, in a decision far more circumspect
about the role of openness in deportation proceedings. The court found
that the principle of Richmond Newspapers Inc. v.
Virginia,20 a case relied upon by the
Sixth Circuit in Detroit Free Press that firmly established the
public's right to attend criminal proceedings, did not extend to
deportation proceedings.21 The history of
deportation proceedings, said the Third Circuit in North Jersey
Media Group, contained no long tradition of openness.22 Moreover, any positive role that public access
might play in these proceedings did not outweigh the critical national
security interests at stake.23 In a
dissenting opinion, Judge Anthony J. Scirica agreed with his colleagues
that the judiciary should give the executive branch considerable
deference in these matters but sided with the Sixth Circuit in finding
that national security interests could be protected case by case.24
With this clear circuit split on the first major post-Sept. 11
terrorism issue, U.S. Supreme Court review is highly likely. If the
Court accepts review of one or both of these cases, its ultimate ruling
will depend, in large part, on whether it views the "war" on terror as
equivalent to more traditional wars during which it has accorded the
political branches considerable leeway to take whatever measures they
deem appropriate. If another large-scale terrorist attack occurs on
American soil, or United States military forces become bogged down in
prolonged conflict in Iraq, the Court will be hesitant to rule against
the president. The fact that Congress has explicitly authorized
President Bush to fight the war on terror also makes substantial
judicial deference likely. Nonetheless, some justices may not want to
simply rubber-stamp the president's and the attorney general's decisions
about the constitutional sacrifices necessary to maintain national
security.
Secret Detentions
One of the hallmarks of American democracy has long been its
prohibition on secret arrests and detentions.25 The United States has avoided the midnight
"disappearances" that have plagued Latin American and other countries.
Generally, when the government arrests someone in this country, it
enters his or her name in an arrest log open to the public and provides
him or her an initial appearance or arraignment before a judge, which
also is open to the public. People do not languish in prison without
being charged and without their families knowing of their plight. Sept.
11 has raised questions about this simple, yet bedrock, concept.
Within six weeks of that fateful day, the Justice Department had
"detained" many more than 1,000 people in connection with
terrorism-related investigations - without making public the precise
number of people arrested, their names, their attorneys' names, the
reasons for their detention, or their location.26 Despite demands from some members of Congress,
and civil liberties and media organizations, the Justice Department
refused and still refuses to release all this information.
Accordingly, on Oct. 29, 2001, the Center for National Security
Studies and other groups and individuals filed Freedom of Information
Act requests with the FBI, the INS, and the Office of Information
Privacy, asking for certain categories of information:
- the identities of each detainee, the circumstances of the detention
or arrest, and the charges brought against the detainee;
- the identities of the detainees' attorneys; and
- the identities of the courts involved and any orders issued, along
with the government's rationale for holding each individual.27
In response to these requests, the Justice Department eventually
acknowledged that it had detained 751 individuals on immigration
violations and 129 people on federal criminal charges.28 Only one individual had been charged
specifically in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks.
For most of the individuals detained on immigration violations, the
government disclosed their places of birth, their citizenship status,
and the nature of the immigration charges.29 The government refused, however, to
disclose their names, the dates and locations of their arrests and
detentions, the names of their attorneys, and the dates of release for
those released.
With respect to the individuals charged criminally, the Department of
Justice released their names, as well as the dates charges were filed,
the nature of the charges filed, the dates any of them were released,
and their lawyers' identities. It refused to disclose, however, the
dates and locations of their arrests and subsequent detentions.30 The Department of Justice released no
information regarding individuals held on material witness
warrants.31
Not satisfied, several public interest groups brought a lawsuit
against the Department of Justice in the District Court of the District
of Columbia seeking the rest of the information they had requested. The
Justice Department asserted that any further disclosure would interfere
with law enforcement proceedings and endanger national security. The
court accepted that argument but only in part:
"The Court fully understands and appreciates that the first priority
of the executive branch in a time of crisis is to ensure the physical
security of its citizens. By the same token, the first priority of the
judicial branch must be to ensure that our Government always operates
within the statutory and constitutional constraints which distinguish a
democracy from a dictatorship."32
Expressing considerable skepticism in response to the government's
asserted need for blanket secrecy, the court ordered the disclosure of
the identities of the immigration and criminal detainees and their
attorneys. Nonetheless, it refused to force the Justice Department to
provide the dates or locations of arrest or the locations of detention
or release, accepting the government's contention that, with this
information, terrorist organizations might be able to piece together a
pattern of the government's investigation. This theory, known as the
"mosaic theory," posits that terrorists might use seemingly innocuous,
disparate pieces of information to build a picture of what the United
States is doing to combat terrorism and thereby expose governmental
weaknesses and possibly render detention facilities vulnerable to
attack.
The district court has stayed its order pending appeal, recognizing
that disclosure of the names would effectively moot any appeal.33 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
heard oral argument on the appeal on Nov. 18, 2002. The court's
acceptance or rejection of the mosaic theory will directly affect other
terrorism-related cases and will signal just how much secrecy the war on
terror demands.
Enemy Combatants
Two American citizens, Yaser Hamdi and José Padilla, are
presently being held, indefinitely and incommunicado, in United States
military facilities. The government maintains that the men are "enemy
combatants," and that despite their status as American citizens, they
are entitled to none of the constitutional protections available to
criminal defendants. Instead, they are subject to the laws of war and
military detention. Accordingly, the government contends that there is
no need to file charges against Hamdi or Padilla or to provide them the
right to counsel.
Hamdi, who, like John Walker Lindh, apparently had "affiliated"
himself with the Taliban, surrendered to Northern Alliance Forces in
Afghanistan in late 2001 and eventually was transferred to the Norfolk
Naval Station Brig in Virginia in April 2002.34 Padilla was arrested by FBI agents in Chicago on
May 8, 2002, and transferred to New York.35
The government maintains that Padilla was in Afghanistan and Pakistan
after the Sept. 11 attacks, and that he met with senior al-Qaida
operatives to discuss plans to detonate a "dirty bomb" in the United
States.36 On or about June 9, 2002,
President Bush signed an order directing that Padilla be detained
indefinitely for interrogation.37 Padilla
then was transferred to the Consolidated Naval Brig in Charleston, South
Carolina.38
Both men have filed habeas corpus petitions through counsel with whom
they are not permitted to communicate. When Hamdi's habeas action was
filed in the Eastern District of Virginia, the judge issued an order
providing Hamdi's appointed attorney unmonitored access to him.39 The court stayed its decision while the Justice
Department appealed. In its appellate brief, the Justice Department
argued that the federal judiciary could not even review the executive
branch's designation of an American citizen as an enemy combatant:
"[G]iven the constitutionally limited role of the courts in reviewing
military decisions, courts may not second-guess the military's
determination that an individual is an enemy combatant and should be
detained as such."40
The Fourth Circuit agreed in large part, but it refused to grant the
executive branch blanket authority on enemy combatant designations. The
court explained that although courts need to extend considerable
deference to the executive branch on such designations, they do not have
to cede all oversight. The court nevertheless reversed the district
court's decision to allow Hamdi access to counsel and instructed it to
give appropriate deference to the executive branch.41 The habeas petition remains pending, with the
district court having ruled on remand, even after the Fourth Circuit's
decision, that the sole authority the government has tendered to support
Hamdi's continued detention - a two-page, nine-paragraph affidavit - is
insufficient. The Fourth Circuit heard oral argument on the Justice
Depart-ment's appeal of that decision on Oct. 28, 2002. Hamdi is
supported by a coalition of 18 civil liberties groups and 139 law
professors, as well as an American Bar Association task force.42
Padilla's habeas petition, filed in the Southern District of New
York, has not yet been the subject of any rulings. Nonetheless, the
Justice Department and Padilla's counsel and amici have engaged in a
heated brief-writing battle.43 The Justice
Department has raised several procedural concerns - whether Padilla has
named the proper respondents, for example, and whether the Southern
District of New York has jurisdiction over Padilla, who now is held in
South Carolina. In addition, the government has backed off slightly on
its argument, articulated in Hamdi, that the courts have no
role in reviewing enemy combatant designations. Now, the government
maintains that the judicial branch owes "great deference in matters of
national security and military affairs, and deference is particularly
warranted in respect to the exceptionally sensitive and important
determination at issue here."44
The U.S. Supreme Court will, in all likelihood, review one or both of
these cases. The separation of power stakes are simply too high to allow
lower courts to have the final word. As with the closed immigration
proceedings cases, moreover, the Court will almost certainly speak with
multiple voices when it issues its final ruling.
Conclusion
The executive branch is engaged in a jurisdictional struggle with the
judicial branch over the war on terrorism. Attorney General Ashcroft and
other administration officials do not want the courts second-guessing
their decisions about how best to preserve national security.
Interestingly, the attorney general has expressed the belief that
keeping the courts out of the terrorism battle will ultimately preserve
civil liberties rather than endanger them: "The fight against terrorism
is a fight to secure civil liberties. Security secures something and
what we're securing is freedom .... Our effort is not to impair civil
liberties but to save them."45
The attorney general's comments echo those of former U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, set forth at the outset of this
article. Are Ashcroft and Jackson correct? Do Americans risk the loss of
all civil liberties if a few constitutional corners are not cut in this
time of terror? Although there is no clear answer, Americans should at
least acknowledge the gravity of this question, the resolution of which
will leave an indelible mark on the nation's constitutional history.
Kendall W.
Harrison, U.W. 1995, is an attorney with LaFollette Godfrey
& Kahn, Madison, concentrating in commercial, insurance,
constitutional, and appellate litigation, as well as media law. He is
also a lecturer in constitutional law at the U.W. Law School. He can be
reached at kharrison@gklaw.com.
This article grew out of a presentation the author gave to the James E.
Doyle Chapter of the American Inns of Court on Sept. 18, 2002.
Endnotes
1 Uniting
and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act (USA Patriot Act), Pub. L. No.
107-56, 115 Stat. 272 (2001). All of Wisconsin's congressional
delegation voted for the Patriot Act, except for Sen. Feingold and Reps.
Baldwin and Barrett.
2 Pub. L.
No. 107-40, 115 Stat. 224 (2001) (authorization for use of military
force). All voting members of Wisconsin's congressional delegation voted
in favor of this authorization. Rep. Petri did not vote.
3 Pub. L.
No. 107-243, 116 Stat. 1498 (2002) (authorization for use of U.S. Armed
Forces against Iraq). Wisconsin's representatives split 6-5 on this
vote. Sen. Kohl and Reps. Green, Kind, Petri, Ryan, and Sensenbrenner
supported it, while Sen. Feingold and Reps. Baldwin, Barrett, Kleczka,
and Obey voted against it.
4 323 U.S.
214 (1944).
5 Marcia
Coyle, The Law's Wartime Silence, Nat'l L.J., Sept. 9, 2002, at
1 (quoting Chief Justice Rehnquist).
6 Brenda
Ingersoll, 88 Percent Approve of Bush's Job vs. Terror, Wis.
St. J., Oct. 9, 2002, at 1.
Retired New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis reminded the
Wisconsin legal community of that precise obligation in a Sept. 30,
2002, speech at the U.W. Law School. Aaron Nathans, Rights Being
Trampled, Writer Says, Cap. Times, Oct. 1, 2002, at 3A.
7 North Jersey
Media Group Inc. v. Ashcroft, 205 F. Supp. 2d 288, 290 (D.N.J.
2002) (quoting Creppy Directive).
8 Id.
9 Id. at
290-91.
10 Tamara Audi,
U.S. Held 600 for Secret Rulings, Detroit Free Press, July 18,
2001, at www.freep.com/news/mich/secret18_20020718.htm.
11 303 F.3d 681
(6th Cir. 2002).
12 No. 02-2524,
2002 WL 31246589 (3d Cir. Oct. 8, 2002).
13 303 F.3d at
710.
14 Id.
at 683.
15 Id.
at 710.
16 Id.
at 683.
17 Id.
at 706-07.
18 Id.
at 707.
19 Id.
at 709.
20 448 U.S. 555
(1980).
21 2002 WL
31246589, at *6.
22 Id.
at *10-16.
23 Id.
at *17-20.
24 Id.
at *26.
25 See,
e.g., Newspapers Inc. v. Breier, 89 Wis. 2d 417, 437, 279 N.W.2d
179 (1979) ("[C]urbing abuse of the arrest power is only possible if the
public can learn how that power is exercised.").
26 Center
for National Security Studies v. United States Dep't of Justice,
215 F. Supp. 2d 94, 96 (D.D.C. 2002).
27 Id.
at 97.
28 Id.
at 97-98.
29 Id.
at 98.
30 Id.
at 99.
31 Id.
at 99.
32 Id.
at 96.
33 Center
for National Security Studies, 217 F. Supp. 2d 58 (D.D.C.
2002).
34 Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld, 296 F.3d 278, 280 (4th Cir. 2002).
35 Amended
Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus at ¶¶ 15-18, Padilla v.
Bush (S.D.N.Y. June 19, 2002) (No. 02 Civ. 4445).
36 Respondents'
Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss the Amended Petition for a Writ of
Habeas Corpus at 7, Padilla (Oct. 11, 2002).
37 Amended
Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus at ¶ 22, Padilla.
38 Id.
at ¶ 25.
39 Hamdi, 296 F.3d at 279 (4th Cir. 2002).
40 Id.
at 283.
41 Id.
at 284.
42 Katharine Q.
Seelye, Court to Hear Arguments in Groundbreaking Case of U.S.
Citizen Seized With Taliban, N.Y. Times, Oct. 28, 2002, at A13.
43 These
documents, and many others pertaining to the cases discussed in this
article, can be found at the terrorism section of www.findlaw.com.
44 Respondents'
Response to, and Motion to Dismiss, the Amended Petition for a Writ of
Habeas Corpus at 15, Padilla (Aug. 27, 2002).
45 Open
& Shut, News Media & Law, Summer 2002 at 64 (quoting
Ashcroft's comments to reporters gathered in Budapest, Hungary, where he
was investigating an alleged al-Qaida plot).
Wisconsin
Lawyer