El Dorado News-Times

Due Process is vital to freedom

- Andrew Napolitano

The clash in American history between liberty and safety is as old as the republic itself. As far back as 1798, notwithsta­nding the lofty goals and individual­istic values of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on, the same generation — in some cases the same human beings — that wrote in the First Amendment that “Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech” enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts, which punished speech critical of the government.

Similarly, the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process has been ignored by those in government charged with enforcing it when they deal with a criminal defendant whom they perceive the public hates or fears. So it should come as no surprise that no sooner had the suspect in the recent New Jersey and New York City bombings been arrested than public calls came to strip him of his rights, send him to Gitmo and extract informatio­n from him. This is more Vladimir Putin than James Madison.

I have often argued that it is in times of fear — whether generated by outside forces or by the government itself — when we need to be most vigilant about protecting our liberties.

I make this argu- ment because when people are afraid, it is human nature for them to accept curtailmen­t of their liberties — whether it be speech or travel or privacy or due process — if they become convinced that the curtailmen­t will keep them safe. But these liberties are natural rights, integral to all rational people and not subject to the government’s whim.

I can sacrifice my liberties, and you can sacrifice yours, but I cannot sacrifice yours; neither can a majority in Congress sacrifice yours or mine.

The idea that sacrificin­g liberty actually enhances safety enjoys widespread acceptance but is erroneous. The Fort Hood massacre, the Boston Marathon killings, the slaughters in San Bernardino and Orlando, and now the bombings in New Jersey and New York all demonstrat­e that the loss of liberty does not bring about more safety.

The loss of liberty gives folks the false impression that the government is doing something — anything — to keep us safe. That impression is a false one because in fact it is making us less safe, since a government intent on monitoring our every move and communicat­ion loses sight of the moves and communicat­ions of the bad guys. As well, liberty lost is rarely returned. The Patriot Act, which permits federal agents to bypass the courts and issue their own search warrants, has had three sunsets since 2001, only to be re-enacted just prior to the onset of each — and re-enacted in a more oppressive version, giving the government more power to interfere with liberty, and for a longer period of time each time.

We know from the Edward Snowden revelation­s and the National Security Agency’s own admissions that the NSA has the digital versions — in real time — of all telephone calls, text messages and emails made, sent or received in the U.S. So if the right person is under arrest for the bombings last weekend, why didn’t the feds catch this radicalize­d U.S. citizen and longtime New Jersey resident before he set off his homemade bombs? Because the government suffers from, among other ailments, informatio­n overload. It is spread too thin. It is more concerned with gathering everything it can about everyone — “collect it all,” one NSA email instructed agents — than it is with focusing on potential evildoers as the Fourth Amendment requires.

Why do we have constituti­onal guarantees of liberty?

The Constituti­on both establishe­s the federal government and confines it. It presents intentiona­l obstacles in the path of the government. Without those obstacles, we might be safe from domestic harm, but who would keep us safe from the government? Who would want to live here if we had no meaningful, enforceabl­e guarantees of personal liberties? When our liberties are subject to the needs of the police, we will end up in a police state. What does a police state look like? It looks like the Holocaust and communism.

Everyone who works in government has taken an oath to uphold the Constituti­on. Hence, it is distressin­g to hear lawmakers calling for the abolition of due process for certain hateful and hurtful

“No person shall … be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law…”

— Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on

defendants. Due process — fairness from the government, the right to silence, the right to counsel and the right to a jury trial with the full panoply of constituti­onal requiremen­ts and protection­s — is vital to our personal liberties and to our free society as we have known it.

If anyone who appears to have been motivated to attack Americans or American values based on some alleged or even proven foreign motivation could be denied the rights guaranteed to him under the Constituti­on by a government determinat­ion before trial, then no one’s rights are safe.

The whole purpose of the guarantee of due process is to insulate our liberties from subjective government interferen­ce by requiring it in all instances when the government wants life, liberty or property — hence the clear language of the Fifth Amendment. The star chamber suggested by those who misunderst­and the concept of guaranteed rights is reminiscen­t of what King George III did to the colonists, which was expressly condemned in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and which sparked the American Revolution.

Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurte­r once wrote that the history of American freedom is, in no small measure, following fair procedures — which means enforcing the guarantee of due process. Without due process for those we hate and fear — even those whose guilt is obvious — we will all lose our freedoms.

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