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The Police State Is Closer Than
You Think
By Paul Craig Roberts
10/08/05 "ICH"
-- -- Police states are easier to acquire than Americans
appreciate.
The hysterical aftermath of September 11 has put into place the
main components of a police state.
Habeas corpus is the greatest protection Americans have against a
police state. Habeas corpus ensures that Americans can only be
detained by law. They must be charged with offenses, given access
to attorneys, and brought to trial. Habeas corpus prevents the
despotic practice of picking up a person and holding him
indefinitely.
President Bush claims the power to set aside habeas corpus and to
dispense with warrants for arrest and with procedures that
guarantee court appearance and trial without undue delay. Today in
the US, the executive branch claims the power to
arrest a citizen on its own initiative and hold the citizen
indefinitely. Thus, Americans are no longer protected from
arbitrary arrest and indefinite detention.
These new "seize and hold" powers strip the accused of
the protective aspects of law and give rein to selectivity and
arbitrariness. No warrant is required for arrest, no charges have
to be presented before a judge, and no case has to be put before a
jury. As the police are unaccountable, whoever is selected for
arrest is at the mercy of arbitrariness.
The judiciary has to some extent defended habeas corpus against
Bush’s attack, but the protection that the principle offers
against arbitrary seizure and detention has been breeched. Whether
courts can fully restore habeas corpus or whether it continues in
weakened form or passes by the wayside remains to be determined.
Americans may be unaware of what it means to be stripped of the
protection of habeas corpus, or they may think police authorities
would never make a mistake or ever use their unbridled power
against the innocent. Americans might think that the police state
will only use its powers against terrorists or "enemy
combatants."
But "terrorist" is an elastic and legally undefined
category. When the President of the United States declares:
"You are with us or against us," the police may perceive
a terrorist in a dissenter from the government’s policies.
Political opponents may be regarded as "against us" and
thereby fall in the suspect category. Or a police officer may
simply have his eye on another man’s attractive wife or wish to
settle some old score. An enemy combatant might simply be an
American who happens to be in a foreign country when the US
invades. In times before our own when people were properly
educated, they understood the injustices that caused the English
Parliament to pass the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679 prohibiting the
arbitrary powers that are now being claimed for the executive
branch in the
US.
The PATRIOT Act has given the police autonomous surveillance
powers. These powers were not achieved without opposition. Civil
libertarians opposed it. Bob Barr, the former US Representative
who led the impeachment of President Clinton, fought to limit some
of the worst features of the act. But the act still bristles with
unconstitutional violations of the rights of citizens, and the
newly created powers of government to spy on citizens has brought
an end to privacy.
The prohibition against self-incrimination protects the accused
from being tortured into confession. The innocent are no more
immune to pain than the guilty. As Stalin’s show trials
demonstrated, even the most committed leaders of the Bolshevik
revolution could be tortured into confessing to be
counter-revolutionaries.
The prohibition against torture has been breeched by the practice
of plea bargaining, which replaces jury trials with negotiated
self-incrimination, and by sentencing guidelines,
which transfer sentencing discretion from judge to prosecutor.
Plea bargaining is a form of psychological torture in which
innocent and guilty alike give up their right to jury trial in
order to reduce the number and severity of the charges that the
prosecutor brings.
The prohibition against physical torture, however, held until the
US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. As video, photographic, and
testimonial evidence make clear, the US military has been
torturing large numbers of people in its Iraq prisons and in its
prison compound at Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the detainees were
people picked up in the equivalent of KGB Stalin-era street
sweeps. Having no idea who the detainees are and pressured to
produce results, torture was applied to coerce confessions.
Everyone is disturbed about this barbaric and illegal practice
except the Bush administration. In an amendment to a $440 billion
defense budget bill last Wednesday, the US Senate voted 90 to 9 to
ban "cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment" of anyone in US
government custody. President Bush responded to the Senate’s
will by repeating his earlier threat to veto the bill. Allow me to
torture, demands Bush of the Senate, or you will be guilty of
delaying the military’s budget during wartime. Bush is
threatening the Senate with blame for the deaths of US soldiers
who will die because they don’t get their body armor or humvee
armor in time.
It will be a short step from torturing detainees abroad to
torturing the accused in US jails and prisons.
The attorney-client privilege, another great achievement, has been
breeched by the Lynne Stewart case. As the attorney for a
terrorist, Stewart represented her client in ways disapproved by
prosecutors. Stewart was indicted, tried, and convicted of
providing material support to terrorists.
Stewart’s indictment sends a message to attorneys not to
represent too dutifully or aggressively clients who are unpopular
or
demonized. Initially, this category may be limited to terrorists.
However, once the attorney-client privilege is breeched, any
attorney who gets too much in the way of a prosecutor’s case may
experience retribution. The intimidation factor can result in an
attorney presenting a weak defense. It can even result in
attorneys doing as the Benthamite US Department of Justice (sic)
desires and helping to convict their client.
In the Anglo-American legal tradition, law is a shield of the
accused. This is necessary in order to protect the innocent. The
accused is innocent until he is proven guilty in an open court.
There are no secret tribunals, no torture, and no show trials.
Outside the Anglo-American legal tradition, law is a weapon of the
state. It may be used with careful restraint, as in Europe today,
or it may be used to destroy opponents or rivals as in the Soviet
Union and Nazi Germany.
When the protective features of the law are removed, law becomes a
weapon. Habeas corpus, due process, the attorney-client privilege,
no crime without intent, and prohibitions against torture and ex
post facto laws are the protective features that shield the
accused. These protective features are being removed by zealotry
in the "war against terrorism."
The damage terrorists can inflict pales in comparison to the loss
of the civil liberties that protect us from the arbitrary power of
law used as a weapon. The loss of law as Blackstone’s shield of
the innocent would be catastrophic. It would mean the end of
America as a land of liberty.
Dr. Roberts <mailto:paulcraigroberts@yahoo.com> is John M.
Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, former contributing editor for
National Review, and a former assistant secretary of the U.S.
Treasury. He is the co-author of The Tyranny of Good
Intentions.
Copyright © 2005 Creators Syndicate
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