Monday, November 28, 2005

What Is Going On In This Country?

That's the question being posed by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in response to the appalling way Jose Padilla is being treated by his country - the United States.
Mr. Padilla, a 35-year old civilian, was first detained by federal authorities in Chicago in 2002. His arrest came in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. He was said to have been planning to set off a "dirty bomb" and was labeled an "enemy combatant" in spite of his American citizenship. But no indictment was returned and he was imprisoned under military custody with no lawyer. The U.S. Navy tossed Mr. Padilla in jail and threw away the key for the next 30 months.

Various legal appeals were made on his behalf to attempt to insert him and any charges that were to be made against him in court into the American civilian judicial system. Days before the U.S. Supreme Court was to become involved, the Bush administration pulled him out of U.S. military imprisonment and turned him over to the civilian justice system for disposition.

From the point of view of Mr. Padilla himself and his right to be dealt with under due process of U.S. law, which includes habeas corpus -- charge or release -- not much has changed. He is still locked up; he has still not been tried, although he has now been charged with conspiracy.

Guilty or not, Jose Padilla is an American citizen, and he is entitled to the same rights we all expect from our government. To treat him any differently put us in the same light as those countries we're quick to criticize for their abuse of human rights.
The injustice done Mr. Padilla is a case of executive authority out of control and a total betrayal of American standards.

What is going on in this country?

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