The Department of Justice has secretly asked
Congress for the ability to detain arrested people
“indefinitely” in addition to other powers that one
expert called “terrifying”
By Peter Wade
March 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The
Trump
Department of Justice has asked Congress to
craft legislation allowing chief judges to
indefinitely hold people without trial and suspend
other constitutionally-protected rights during
coronavirus and other emergencies, according to
a
report by Politico’s Betsy Woodruff Swan.
While the asks from the Department of Justice
will likely not come to fruition with a
Democratically-controlled House of Representatives,
they demonstrate how much this White House has a
frightening disregard for rights enumerated in the
Constitution.
The DOJ has requested Congress allow any chief
judge of a district court to pause court proceedings
“whenever the district court is fully or partially
closed by virtue of any natural disaster, civil
disobedience, or other emergency situation,”
according to draft language obtained by Politico.
This would be applicable to “any statutes or rules
of procedure otherwise affecting pre-arrest,
post-arrest, pre-trial, trial, and post-trial
procedures in criminal and juvenile proceedings and
all civil processes and proceedings.” They justify
this by saying currently judges can pause judicial
proceedings in an emergency but that new legislation
would allow them to apply it “in a consistent
manner.”
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But the Constitution grants citizens
habeas corpus which gives arrestees the
right to appear in front of a judge and ask
to be released before trial. Enacting
legislation like the DOJ wants would
essentially suspend habeas corpus
indefinitely until the emergency ended.
Further, DOJ asked Congress to suspend the
statute of limitations on criminal
investigations and civil proceedings during
the emergency until a year after it ended.
Norman L. Reimer, executive director of the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers,
told Politico the measure was “terrifying,” saying,
“Not only would it be a violation of [habeas
corpus], but it says ‘affecting pre-arrest.’ So that
means you could be arrested and never brought before
a judge until they decide that the emergency or the
civil disobedience is over. I find it absolutely
terrifying. Especially in a time of emergency, we
should be very careful about granting new powers to
the government.”
“That is something that should not happen in a
democracy,” he added.
DOJ also asked Congress to amend the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure to have defendants
appear at a hearing via videoconference instead of
in-person with the defendant’s consent, although in
a draft obtained by Politico, the sections about
requiring consent were crossed out. But it’s not
just Americans’ rights the DOJ w
ants to violate. They also asked Congress to pass
a law saying that immigrants who test positive for
COVID-19 cannot qualify as asylum seekers.
As coronavirus spreads through the country,
activists are calling on politicians in office to
release prisoners and immigrants held in detention
centers, both of which can be a hotbed of virus
activity with so many people in close quarters and
limited or non-existent supplies of soap, sanitizer,
and protective equipment. Some states have
already begun to do so. But with this, the Trump
administration is taking steps to hold more people
in prisons for an undetermined amount of time —
showing their priority is not saving lives but
giving themselves more power.
"Source"
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