THE HILL
 
comment
Print

House members attempt to curb president's power of indefinite detention

By Pete Kasperowicz - 06/11/12 12:28 PM ET

Four members of the House are trying again to scale back the power of the president to indefinitely detain terrorist suspects, even though the House rejected a similar proposal last month.

Reps. John Garamendi (D-Calif.), Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Ed Perlmutter (D-Colo.) and House Armed Services Committee ranking member Adam Smith (D-Wash.) introduced the Civil Liberties Act on Friday, which would amend the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), passed in May.

Last month, these members supported nearly identical language as an amendment to the NDAA, known as the Amash-Smith amendment, but it was rejected 182-231. In that vote, only 19 Republicans voted for it.

Supporters of the bill, H.R. 5936, argue that under the NDAA as approved, the president could declare a U.S. citizen as an enemy of the state and indefinitely detain that person. While opponents say Americans do not lose their right to habeas corpus, or a hearing before the court, supporters say that would not necessarily be enough to save an American from indefinite detention, if it was claimed they were associating with terrorists.

Under the bill, anyone detained on U.S. soil would have all due rights and liberties under the Constitution. The bill would also terminate the ability of the administration to hold suspects in mandatory military detention in some cases.

Rather than accept the Amash-Smith amendment to the NDAA, the House accepted one from Reps. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) and Scott Rigell (R-Va.), which affirmed that U.S. citizens would not be denied habeas corpus rights. During debate, Gohmert argued that the Amash-Smith language would go too far, potentially giving illegal immigrants who commit terrorist acts rights in the United States rights to which they are not due.

Amash and Smith, however, say the Constitution grants rights to anyone arrested on US soil, not just U.S. citizens, and that their amendment was designed to protect those rights. They also argue that the courts have shown they are able to bring terrorist subjects to justice.


Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/house/232041-house-members-try-again-to-curb-presidents-power-of-indefinite-detention

More Videos »

Floor Action Twitter - Click to follow
More From The Web
bloglogo

More Briefing Room »

More Congress Blog »

More Pundits Blog »

More Twitter Room »

More Hillicon Valley »

More E2-Wire (Energy) »

More Ballot Box »

More On The Money »

More Healthwatch »

More Floor Action »

More Transportation »

More DEFCON Hill »

More Global Affairs »

More In The Know »

More RegWatch »

Get latest news from The Hill direct to your inbox, RSS reader and mobile devices.