I hate to be pedantic, but a number of people are misreading Obama’s Executive Order on indefinite detention, with the result that they present the order as much less troublesome than it actually is. Here’s one example, from Ken Gude: There is now a clearly articulated standard for continued detention; gone is the so-called intelligence [...]
A Grammar Lesson: Obama’s Executive Order on Indefinite Detention |
| By: emptywheel Tuesday March 8, 2011 11:44 am |
Task Force Conclusion: “Many” Detainees Were Legally Detained |
| By: emptywheel Tuesday June 1, 2010 4:09 pm |
While I was away celebrating my 20th college reunion this weekend (thanks for filling in, bmaz), the WaPo liberated the Gitmo Review Task Force report. As the WaPo reported, the big takeaway is the government’s admission that over 55% of those reviewed by the Task Force were what it called “low level fighters” in al [...]
Court Releases Slahi Decision |
| By: emptywheel Friday April 9, 2010 3:28 pm |
Last month, we talked about Judge James Robertson’s decision that Mohamedou Slahi should be released. Robertson’s order has now been released. I’ll have comments as I read it. But the short version is that the Government abandoned its attempt to prove (first) that Slahi had knowledge of 9/11 before it happened, and (second) that any [...]
Another Reason to Use Civilian Courts |
| By: emptywheel Friday March 26, 2010 5:43 am |
This WaPo story–which tells how Mohamedou Ould Slahi and Tariq al-Sawah got special privileges and too much fast food at Gitmo in exchange for cooperation–focuses on the things the detainees get, like Subway sandwiches, their own mint garden, and their own compound. (h/t cs) But it really points to one more reason why civilian trials [...]


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