Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Justices reject detainee’s case

High court turns down appeal of former aide to bin Laden

- ROBERT BARNES Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ann E. Marimow of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — The appeal of one of Osama bin Laden’s top aides ended Tuesday, as the Supreme Court declined to review whether his conviction by a military tribunal exceeded that body’s authority.

Without comment, the justices turned down an appeal by Ali Hamza Ahmad Suliman al Bahlul, a propagandi­st for al-Qaida and former media secretary for bin Laden. He was convicted of conspiracy by a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba in 2008 and sentenced to life imprisonme­nt.

Lawyers for Bahlul claimed that the Yemeni man’s conviction violated a constituti­onal requiremen­t that most criminal prosecutio­ns take place in federal courts. The charge against Bahlul was a domestic one, not a violation of internatio­nal law.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has debated the powers of the military tribunal system ever since the Supreme Court ruled in 2008 that those held at Guantanamo Bay have some rights in federal courts to challenge their detention.

Constituti­onal and internatio­nal law experts and civil-rights groups had joined Bahlul’s attorneys in urging the justices to take the case, saying it raised constituti­onal questions only the Supreme Court could answer.

But the court has steadfastl­y refused requests to take a case that would amplify its ruling in Boumediene v. Bush.

Bahlul, who has been held at Guantanamo Bay since 2002, was originally convicted of conspiracy to commit war crimes, solicitati­on of others to commit crimes and providing material support for terrorism.

Only the conspiracy charge remained, however, and the circuit court split in upholding that conviction.

Judge Brett Kavanaugh wrote for several other judges to say that Congress may designate military commission­s to try domestic offenses typically heard by civilian courts.

“The Constituti­on does not give foreign nations (acting through the internatio­nal law of war or otherwise) a de facto veto over Congress’s determinat­ion of which war crimes may be tried by U.S. military commission­s,” Kavanaugh wrote in an opinion joined by Judges Janice Rogers Brown and Thomas Griffith.

Other judges, endorsing more limited legal reasoning, joined to make a six-member majority to uphold the conviction.

In a 67-page dissent, three judges said there are “constituti­onally prescribed boundaries” between military and civilian courts and that the prosecutio­n could have instead charged Bahlul with recognized war crimes or charged him in federal court.

Judges David Tatel, Judith Rogers and Cornelia Pillard said in their dissent that even though Bahlul has admitted to serving as bin Laden’s personal secretary and to making al-Qaida recruitmen­t videos, the “challenges of the war on terror do not necessitat­e truncating the judicial power to make room for a new constituti­onal order.”

A ruling against the government would have made it more difficult to prosecute low-level detainees at Cuba’s Guantanamo Bay.

The Supreme Court gave no reason for not accepting Bahlul v. United States, and new Justice Neil Gorsuch took no part.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States