Padilla jury opens Pandora’s Box
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Guest Writer
Aug 21, 2007, 00:47
Jose
Padilla's conviction on terrorism charges on August 16 was a victory, not for
justice, but for the US Justice [sic] Department's theory that a US citizen can
be convicted, not because he committed a terrorist act but for allegedly
harboring aspirations to commit such an act. By agreeing with the Justice [sic]
Department's theory, the incompetent Padilla Jury delivered a deadly blow to
the rule of law and opened Pandora's Box.
Anglo-American law is a human achievement 800 years in the
making. Over centuries law was transformed from a weapon in the hands of
government into a shield of the people from unaccountable power. The Padilla
Jury's verdict turned law back into a weapon.
The jury, of course, had no idea of what was at stake. It
was a patriotic jury that appeared in court with one row of jurors dressed in
red, one in white, and one in blue (Peter Whoriskey, Washington Post, August
17, 2007).
It was a jury primed to be psychologically and emotionally
manipulated by federal prosecutors desperate for a conviction for which there
was little, if any, supporting evidence. For the jury, patriotism required that
they strike a blow for America against terrorism. No member of this jury was
going to return home to accusations of letting off a person who has been
portrayed as a terrorist in the US media for five years.
The "evidence" against Padilla consists of three
items: (1) seven intercepted telephone conversations, (2) a 10-year old
nonrelevant video of Osama bin Laden, and (3) an alleged application to a
mujahideen (not terrorist) training camp with Padilla's fingerprints. We will
examine each in turn.
The International Herald Tribune and Associated Press reported
in detail on the telephone intercepts (June 19, 2007): "Accused al-Qaida
operative Jose Padilla was never overheard using purported code words for
violent jihad in intercepted telephone conversations and spoke often about his
difficulties in learning Arabic while studying in Egypt, the lead FBI case
agent testified Tuesday. The questioning of FBI Agent James T. Kavanaugh by
Padilla's attorney, Michael Caruso, focused on seven intercepted telephone
calls on which Padilla's voice is heard mostly talking about his marriage and
his studies but never about Islamic extremism. . . . Caruso asked Kavanaugh if
Padilla ever was heard using what prosecutors say were code words for violent
jihad . . . 'No, he does not,' Kavanaugh replied. . . . Caruso asked Kavanaugh
if Padilla was ever overheard discussing jihad training. 'No jihad training
that I've seen,' Kavanaugh said. . . . 'He's not referring to anything here but
studying Arabic, correct? Study means study, right?' Caruso asked. 'That's what
they're talking about,' Kavanaugh testified."
Despite the FBI's testimony that the intercepted telephone
messages contained no incriminating evidence, the "patriotic" jury
accepted the federal prosecutor's unsupported accusation that there were hidden
code words in the message indicating that Padilla was a terrorist. After all,
who but a terrorist would want to learn Arabic?
The video of bin Laden had no relevance whatsoever to the
charges in the case. The video is 10 years old and makes no reference to any of
the defendants. Moreover, none of the defendants were accused of ever being in
contact with bin Laden. The only purpose of the video was to arouse in jurors
fear, anger, and disturbing memories associated with September 11, 2001. The
fact that the judge let prosecutors sway a fearful and vengeful patriotic jury
with emotion and passion rather than evidence is obviously grounds for appeal.
Whoriskey reports that in their closing arguments
prosecutors mentioned al-Qaeda more than 100 times and urged jurors to think of
al-Qaeda and groups alleged to be affiliated with it as an international murder
conspiracy. Padilla "trained to kill,' Assistant US Attorney Brian Frazier
misinformed the jury in his closing statement.
Who Padilla wished to kill was never identified, but according
to the prosecutors he had been wanting to kill persons unknown since 1998.
Padilla was convicted for harboring alleged intentions, not for committing any
acts. Indeed, no harmful acts are charged to Padilla. The incompetent jury fell
for the prosecutors' wild tale of a murder conspiracy many years old that had
no results.
As Andrew Cohen put it, Padilla and the two co-defendants
were convicted on the charge of "terrorist-wannabes" on the basis of
"evidence that federal authorities did not believe amounted to a crime
when it was gathered back before 2001." Cohen concludes: "it's
further proof that if you can convince an American jury that a man in the dock
had anything to do with al-Qaeda, you can pretty much bank on a conviction no
matter how tenuous the evidence" (washingtonpost.com, August 16, 2007).
The training camp application form is as suspect as any
evidence can be.
Moreover, the prosecution had no evidence that Padilla
actually attended such a camp. Padilla was held illegally for 3.5 years and
tortured. At any time during his illegal detention and torture, Padilla could
have been handed a form, thus tainting it with his fingerprints.
Amy Goodman, the forensic psychiatrist Dr. Angela Hegarty,
the Christian Science Monitor and others have described how US interrogators
abused Padilla and destroyed his mind. To expect a person as badly tortured and
abused as Padilla to retain the wits not to touch a piece of paper handed to
him, or forced into his hands, is unreasonable.
When Padilla was arrested five years ago in 2002, the US
government charged that he was about to set off a radioactive "dirty
bomb" in a US city that would kill tens or even hundreds of thousands of
Americans. The story was a total lie, a fabrication designed to keep the fear
level high after 9/11, in order to keep support for the Bush regime's wars and
domestic police state. None of the charges on which Padilla was illegally held,
during those years before the US Supreme Court intervened and ordered the Bush
regime to release Padilla or bring him to trial, were part of the charges on
which Padilla was tried.
There is little doubt that Padilla's conviction, and
probably also the convictions of the two co-defendants, is a terrible
injustice. But the damage done goes far beyond the damage to the defendants.
What the red, white, and blue "Padilla Jury" has done is to overthrow
the US Constitution and give us the rule of men.
The US Constitution and Anglo-American legal tradition
prevent indictments, much less convictions, based on a prosecutor's theory that
a person wanted to commit a crime in the past or might want to in the future.
Padilla has harmed no one. There is no evidence that he made an agreement with
any party to harm anyone whether for money or ideology or any reason. The FBI
testified that the telephone calls were innocuous. The bin Laden video was
evidence of nothing pertaining to the defendants. The piece of paper, alleged
to be a personnel form recovered from an al-Qaeda camp in Afghanistan is
nothing but a piece of paper and an assertion.
As Lawrence Stratton and I demonstrated in our book, The Tyranny of Good Intentions
(2000), the protective features of law had been seriously eroded prior to the
Bush regime's assault on civil liberty in the name of "the war on
terror." The US Constitution and the Bill of Rights rest on Blackstone's
Commentaries on the Laws of England. Blackstone explained law as the protective
principles against tyranny -- habeas corpus, due process, attorney-client
privilege, no crime without intent, no retroactive law, no self-incrimination.
Jeremy Bentham claimed that these protective principles were
outmoded in a democracy in which the people controlled the government and no
longer had reasons to fear it. The problem with Blackstone's "Rights of
Englishmen," Bentham said, is that these civil liberties needlessly limit
the government's power and, thus, its ability to protect citizens from crime.
Bentham wanted to preempt criminal acts by arresting those likely to commit
crimes in advance, before the budding criminals entered into a life of crime.
Bentham, like the Bush regime, the "Padilla Jury," and the Republican
Federalist Society, did not understand that when law becomes a weapon, liberty
dies regardless of the form of government. If they do understand, they prefer
unaccountable government power to individual liberty.
The incompetent "Padilla Jury" has done Americans
and their liberty far more damage than will ever be done by terrorists, other
than those in our criminal justice [sic] system who now wield the powers that
Bentham wanted to give them.
The Padilla case was the way the Bush Justice [sic]
Department implemented its strategy for taking away the legal principles that
protect American citizens. Padilla is an American citizen. He was denied habeas
corpus and his rights to an attorney and due process. He was tortured in an
attempt to coerce him into self-incrimination. In treating Padilla in these
ways, the US Department of Justice [sic] violated both the US Constitution and
federal law. There is no doubt whatsoever that the Justice [sic] Department
committed far more crimes than did Padilla.
By the time the Supreme Court finally intervened, Padilla
was universally known as the demonized "dirty bomber," an "enemy
combatant" who was arrested before he could set off a radioactive bomb in
a US city. The Injustice Department could now simultaneously convict Padilla
and enshrine Benthamite law simply by appealing to fear and patriotism. And
that is what happened.
Under Benthamite law, the individual has no rights. The new
calculus is "the greatest good for the greatest number" as determined
by the wielders of power. On the basis of this new law, not written by Congress
but invented by the Injustice Department and made precedent by the
"Padilla Jury" verdict, the US can lock up people based on the
percentage of crime committed by their race, gender, income class, or ethnic
group.
Under Benthamite law, people can be arrested and prosecuted
for thought crimes. Under Benthamite law, it is the government that protects
the people, not the Constitution and Bill of Rights that protect the
individual. Benthamite law makes "advocacy speech," for example, a
call for the overthrow of the US government, upheld in the 1969 Supreme Court
decision, Brandenburg v. Ohio, a serious federal crime.
The "Padilla Jury" has opened Pandora's Box.
Unless the conviction is overturned on appeal, American liberty died in the
"Padilla Jury's" verdict.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.
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