Northwestern University Law Review : Colloquy : 2008 : DavisThe Influence of Ex Parte Quirin and Courts-Martial on Military CommissionsBy Morris D. Davis[*] Professor Greg McNeal was an academic consultant to the prosecution during my tenure as the Chief Prosecutor for the military commissions at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. We had similar perspectives on many issues, and we still confer on detainee matters. I concur with the views expressed in his essay.[1] I write to address two issues Professor McNeal identified and comment on how they affect the military commissions. First, I examine the case of the Nazi saboteurs—captured, tried, and executed in the span of seven weeks in 1942—and its influence on the decision in 2001 to resurrect military commissions. Second, I assess the conflicting statutory provisions in the Military Commissions Act and the impact on full, fair, and open trials. I. Attempting to Repeat History Professor McNeal argues that the
administration chose military commissions to protect information collected for
intelligence (intel) purposes from disclosure. Safeguarding intel, particularly the sources and methods used to acquire
information, was a key factor, but I believe the decision had a broader basis
heavily influenced by a precedent-setting trial in 1942 that became the
template for the President's Military Order of November 13, 2001.[2] Shortly after midnight the morning of June 13, 1942, four men left a German submarine and came ashore at Amagansett Beach, New York.[3] They wore military uniforms in hopes that if captured during the landing they would receive prisoner of war treatment. Four days later, at Ponte Vedra Beach near Jacksonville, Florida, another group of four men did the same. The eight men infiltrated the United States to execute a plan developed by the German High Command at the insistence of Adolph Hitler to attack factories, bridges, rail yards, and utilities to disrupt wartime production, intimidate the American public, and weaken the will to fight. The men were selected because they had lived in the United States before and were unlikely to attract attention as they moved about the country committing sabotage. Mission success was in jeopardy from the start. The first team that landed in New York encountered a Coast Guardsman walking his nightly patrol along the beach. The leader of the four-man team, George Dasch, lived in the United States for nearly two decades, was married to an American, and served in the U.S. Army before returning to Germany. He spoke nearly flawless American English. Dasch told Seaman Second Class John Cullen that he did not want to kill him, and he offered Cullen $260 to forget what he had seen. Cullen was unarmed and outnumbered, so he took the money, returned to the Coast Guard station, and reported the encounter. A group of armed Coast Guardsmen returned to the beach, too late to capture Dasch's team, but in time to smell diesel fuel, hear the rumble of an engine in the distance, and see the superstructure of a submarine heading out to sea. Similarly, within hours of the landing near Jacksonville fishermen discovered explosives and uniforms the saboteurs tried to hide in the sand on the beach. The effort to sneak the saboteurs ashore unnoticed was unsuccessful. But the event that doomed the effort to failure was the decision by George Dasch, with the acquiescence of his travel partner Ernest Burger, to abandon the plan and report it to the FBI. Dasch encountered skepticism when he telephoned the FBI in New York City. He traveled to Washington a few days later expecting a hero's welcome and a face-to-face meeting with J. Edgar Hoover, but encountered more doubters. It was not until he dumped $82,000 in cash onto a table at FBI headquarters the morning of June 19 that he was taken seriously. Dasch prepared a 254 page single-spaced typewritten statement outlining the plan. The eight saboteurs were all in custody and had confessed by June 27. President Roosevelt debated what to do with the saboteurs. A trial in the civilian courts was rejected because the group had committed no acts of sabotage and likely faced charges of conspiracy to commit sabotage and a maximum sentence of confinement for three years. Roosevelt told Attorney General Francis Biddle that he was considering a court-martial where the death penalty was available, but like a civilian court, a court-martial required proof beyond a reasonable doubt and employed restrictive rules of evidence and procedure. Provost Marshall General Oscar Cox proposed a military commission, an idea that Secretary of War Henry Stimson supported despite the concerns of some in the Justice Department over holding a military commission when civilian courts were functioning.[4] President Roosevelt concurred with Cox and Stimson, and he signed an order on July 2 naming the members of the military commission (in essence, the judge and jurors), the prosecutors, and the defense counsel. The order directed that evidence having probative value to a reasonable man would be admitted and the record of trial would be sent directly to the President when the trial ended. Attorney General Biddle and The Judge Advocate General of the Army, Major General Myron Cramer, were the lead prosecutors.[5] Colonel Kenneth Royall spearheaded the defense.[6] The military commission assembled on July 8, 1942, in Room 5235 at the Justice Building in Washington, a few blocks from the White House, the Capitol, and the Supreme Court. Everyone except the accused was sworn to secrecy and no one else was allowed in the room. Despite the President's order prohibiting the federal courts from considering an action by anyone charged with a law of war violation before a military tribunal, Royall filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus with the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia challenging the constitutionality of the military commission. The application was denied the evening of July 28, citing the President's order.[7] In the interim, Royall lobbied members of the Supreme Court, who were on summer break, to hear the case and they agreed to do so. Remarkably, the Supreme Court held oral arguments sixteen hours after the District Court denied the application, beginning around noon on July 29 and continuing on July 30, for a total of nine hours of arguments.[8] Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone announced the Court's unanimous decision orally at noon on July 31. The Court upheld the military commission. On August 3, the military commission found all eight men guilty and sentenced them to death. The President reviewed the 3,000 page trial transcript the next day and approved death sentences for six of the eight men. He commuted the death sentences for Dasch and Burger, and they were deported to Germany years later. The six condemned men died in the electric chair at the District of Columbia Jail on August 8, 1942 and were buried in unmarked graves on government property near the River. The Court's opinion, Ex Parte Quirin,[9] proved to be a challenge to write and was not released until October 29, twelve weeks after the executions. In total, it took only seven weeks for the President to create and convene a military commission, for prosecutors and defense counsel to prepare their cases, to litigate a joint trial for eight men, for an appeal to the district court to be filed and denied, for the Supreme Court to hear oral arguments and render a decision, and for six men to be executed and buried.[10] I agree with Professor McNeal that protecting intel was a factor in the decision to revive the dormant military commission option, but it was not the sole factor. The history of the Nazi saboteurs was to some a precedent that proved that military commissions were swift, secret, and successful, and that the judicial branch would exhibit fawning obeisance to the President on matters of national security. The 1942 trial became the template for the plan to prosecute detainees in the global war on terrorism.[11] Combine that template with the view that detainees are unlawful enemy combatants exempt from Geneva Convention protections, the internationally accepted right to detain enemy combatants for the duration of an armed conflict, a belief that Guantánamo Bay was a law-free zone beyond the reach of the courts, and a desire to maximize executive authority, and the roadmap leads to where we are today. In other words, it was assumed that we could detain and exploit enemy combatants at Guantánamo Bay for as long as we wanted. We could then prosecute them in military commissions that would be swift, secret, and successful. It would all be free of outside interference, and it would bolster executive power. Safeguarding intel was securely within that circle. Rather than relying on Quirin, the decisionmakers should have considered how Roosevelt responded when a chance to repeat the process arose a few years later. In late November 1944, a German submarine dropped two would-be saboteurs off along the coast of Maine, and by the end of the year both men were in FBI custody. One would assume that if the prosecution of the saboteurs in 1942 was a precedent-setting success President Roosevelt would simply repeat the process, and the Attorney General and Army Judge Advocate General advocated for exactly that.[12] Secretary of War Stimson, however, persuaded the President that repeating the process might have adverse consequences. Stimson believed an extraordinary trial process under the direction and control of very senior government officials like Biddle and Cramer would cause excessive publicity and set a precedent that might encourage the Germans to use extraordinary measures against American prisoners of war.[13] Roosevelt sided with Stimson and authorized a military commission that differed in material respects from the 1942 trial. The military commission was convened, and rather than the President, Major General Thomas Terry—an active duty military officer and Commander of the Second Services Command—selected the members and counsel.[14] The trial was held on a military post, Fort Jay, on Governors Island,New York, rather than in the Justice Building in Washington. Biddle and Cramer were not allowed to prosecute, despite their desire to do so.[15] And when the trial ended, the record of trial went through the normal post-trial review process set out in the Articles of War, the same as a court-martial, rather than directly to the President. There were, however, some similarities to 1942: the military commission proceedings were closed to the public, and the accused were found guilty and sentenced to death.[16] Roosevelt died in April 1945 not long before the death sentences were to be carried out and while the case was in the post-trial review phase. President Truman commuted the death sentences to confinement for life and later reduced them to set periods of confinement.[17] Whether it was because World War II ended
shortly after the trial or because more ordinary processes that Stimson
advocated were used, the second trial generated far less attention than
the
first, and today it is virtually forgotten. Regardless, Stimson's
concerns merit consideration today. If we employ and condone
extraordinary measures,
we weaken our moral authority to condemn others when they do the same.
Lloyd Cutler, the youngest of the prosecutors
in the 1942 trial, published an article in December 2001, citing
lessons
learned six decades earlier. Cutler
suggested the administration allow the accused access to the federal
courts,
minimize secret proceedings as much as possible, and ensure that each
accused
has competent and conflict-free representation by his counsel of
choice. Cutler concluded, "In a very real sense, it
is the American legal system, not just al Qaeda's leaders, that [will]
be on
trial."[18] Some senior officials portray the current
military commissions as ordinary processes, but the claim rings hollow. Brigadier General Thomas Hartmann, the Legal
Advisor to the Convening Authority, at a Pentagon press conference in February
2008 announcing charges against the 9/11 detainees, said: "These processes that
we have before the military commissions in many ways parallel the military
justice system which, I think, is very well regarded by the defense community
as giving tremendous rights to [defendants]."[19] He
told Newsweek:
But saying it is essentially the same as the
widely respected court-martial system does not make it so.[21] On
July 11, 2008, for example, 375 European officials filed a friend-of-the-court
brief with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in the Hamdan
case arguing the procedures for the military commissions "are clearly at odds
with the most basic norms of fair trial and due process."[22] These
deficiencies set military commissions apart from the American military justice
system. If a military commission is, as Brigadier General Hartmann claims, essentially an ordinary court-martial, why is an extraordinary process even necessary? The Roosevelt administration learned from its experience with the saboteurs in 1942 and chose not to follow the same course again in 1945. It has been nearly seven years since the President authorized military commissions and the results, or lack thereof, speak for themselves. Lloyd Cutler's prediction in December 2001 that military commissions would be as much a trial of the American legal system as a trial of al Qaeda proved accurate. I doubt he would like the verdict. II. Military Commissions and Courts-Martial Are Not Two Sides of the Same Coin Professor McNeal accurately describes the
tension created by portions of the Military Commissions Act (MCA)[23] that allow the Secretary of Defense, or any
officer or official of the United States that he designates, to send a case to
a military commission,[24] and prohibit any person from attempting to
coerce or by any unauthorized means influence a prosecutor's exercise of
professional judgment.[25] These
provisions are similar to ones in the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)
that allow the President, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the
service to which the accused belongs, and a number of different commanding
officers to send a case to a general court-martial.[26] The
UCMJ also contains a prohibition on exerting unlawful influence, although it
lacks the MCA's extra protection for a prosecutor's exercise of professional
judgment.[27] The reason for the MCA's special protection
for the exercise of professional judgment is as Professor McNeal describes.[28] Some
from outside the prosecution took great interest in our efforts, to put it
charitably, after the high value detainees were transferred to the Department
of Defense from the Central Intelligence Agency in September 2006. A short time later, I asked Senators Lindsey
Graham and John McCain to add some extra protection to the MCA to insulate the
prosecution from external interference. The importance of this protection was tested in the first contested
trial. Salim Hamdan's counsel moved to
dismiss the charges because of undue influence over the prosecution by
Brigadier General Hartmann.[29] The
Military Judge, Navy Captain Keith Allred, found that Hartmann tread too far
into the prosecution function and violated the ban on unlawful influence, but
instead of dismissing charges he disqualified Hartmann from further involvement
in the case.[30] In
his ruling, Judge Allred said:
I did not anticipate a problem from within the Office of Military Commissions when I asked for added protection from undue influence. At that time, in September 2006, the Convening Authority was Major General (retired) John Altenburg[32] and his Legal Advisor was Brigadier General Thomas Hemingway.[33] These two career military officers had over sixty years of active duty military service between them, including service at the most senior levels of the Army and Air Force JAG Corps. They maintained their detachment from both the prosecution and defense and went to great lengths to avoid even the appearance of partiality. For example, when I arrived in late 2005, the prosecution occupied a suite of offices adjacent to the Convening Authority in a building near the Pentagon. A common doorway, normally propped open, connected our offices, allowing prosecutors and members of the Convening Authority's staff to mingle freely. To avoid any perception that we were too close, Altenburg and Hemingway had a door with a Pentagon monitored alarm installed, physically separating the prosecutors and the Convening Authority's staff. Altenburg and Hemingway were replaced by Susan Crawford and Hartmann, respectively.[34] Susan Crawford never served a day in a military uniform, yet as the Convening Authority she sits atop the military commission hierarchy.[35] Brigadier General Hartmann served as an active duty judge advocate for less than eight years before leaving in 1991 to enter the Air Force Reserve and pursue a private sector career.[36] Until July 2007 when he became the Legal Advisor to Crawford, Hartmann was the general counsel of MXenergy, a Stamford, Connecticut company with some Defense Department contracts.[37] Military justice is unique, with some
features that are analogous and others totally foreign to the civilian justice
system. It is designed to help military
commanders maintain mission readiness and unit discipline. As some experienced military justice
commentators said: By its very nature, the military criminal legal system
operates in an awkward fashion. Commanders are given extensive responsibilities and powers in order to
make it work. Yet, commanders who stray
from the system's clear constraints run the risk of affecting the fairness of
individual trials and subverting the legitimacy of the entire system.[38] It is the military justice system's focus on
readiness rather than civilian system's focus on retribution that justifies
military justice operating in such "an awkward fashion." From 2001 through 2007, the Army, Navy, Air
Force, and Marine Corps convened more than 50,000 courts-martial.[39] Despite the fact that the UCMJ, like the MCA, allows designated civilian
officials to be convening authorities, to the best of my knowledge not one
court-martial was convened by a civilian, which raises the question: if
military commissions are based on courts-martial, why are they alone convened
by a civilian political appointee rather than a military commanding officer? If these truly are military commissions intended to dispense military justice then this is a military mission that ought to be performed by the military. President Roosevelt chose to appoint a military commanding officer as the convening authority when he had a second chance, and he allowed the case to proceed through the normal military appellate review process afterwards. His handling of the saboteurs in 1945 is a better model for a military commission than the more famous 1942 case. Courts-martial convening authorities—career military officers—understand that unlawful influence is, as Chief Judge Robinson O. Everett said years ago, "the mortal enemy of military justice."[40] Generals Altenburg and Hemingway understood that and ensured that prosecution and convening authority functions remained separate to avoid too close a relationship casting doubt on the legitimacy of the process. Replacing their sixty-plus years of active duty military legal experience with a career political appointee having no prior military service and a Reserve attorney from a company doing business with the Defense Department, in my view, indicates military commissions are not as military as the wording of the title suggests.[41] Conclusion My comments are limited to two aspects of military commissions, but there are other aspects to consider.[42] Additionally, important questions about the appropriate standard of review for detainees held as unlawful combatants who will not face war crimes charges, and proper techniques for obtaining intelligence and evidence exceed the scope of this Essay. With an election on the horizon and a new administration soon to take responsibility for Guantánamo Bay and the war on terrorism, debate on these questions will lead to a new course of action and perhaps begin to restore our reputation. I remain hopeful. ———— *. Morris D. Davis served as Chief Prosecutor for the military commissions at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, from September 2005 to October 2007. After twenty-five years of service as an Air Force Judge Advocate, he will retire on October 1, 2008 as a Colonel. Opinions expressed herein are his own and do not reflect the views of the Department of Defense or the Air Force. 1. Gregory
S. McNeal, Beyond Guantánamo, Obstacles
and Options, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev.
Colloquy 29 (2008). 2.
See Military Order of November 13, 2001: Detention Treatment, and Trial
of Certain Non Citizens in the War Against Terrorism, 66 Fed. Reg.
57,833 (Nov.
16, 2001), available at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/11/20011113-27.html (authorizing
the detention and prosecution of enemy combatants) (link). 3. Multiple
accounts of the capture and trial of the Nazi saboteurs were used to construct
this narrative description. They
include: Louis Fisher, Cong. Research
Serv., Military Tribunals: The
Quirin Precedent, Order Code RL31340 (2002), available at http://www.fas.org/irp/crs/RL31340.pdf (link); George Lardner, Jr., Nazi Saboteurs Captured! FDR Orders Secret
Tribunal; 1942 Precedent Invoked by Bush Against al Qaeda, Wash. Post, Jan. 13, 2002, at W12, available at
http://www.law.uchicago.edu/tribunals/wp_011302.html (link); and FBI
History: Famous Cases: George John Dasch and the Nazi Saboteurs,
http://www.fbi.gov/libref/historic/famcases/nazi/nazi.htm (link). 4. See Lardner, supra note 3. That concern almost certainly stemmed from
the Supreme Court's decision in Ex
Parte Milligan, 71 U.S. 2 (1866), holding that military
tribunals could not be used to try citizens in states where Article III courts
were operating and available. Id.at 121–22. 5. See Lloyd Cutler, What I Saw
at a Military Tribunal, time.com,
Nov. 19, 2001, http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,185167,00.html
(link). The
youngest member of the prosecution was Lloyd Cutler, who later served as White
House Counsel to Presidents Carter and Clinton, and who co-founded Wilmer,
Cutler & Hale, one of the largest law firms in the world and one of the
first to represent Guantánamo Bay detainees. Id.; Frank Stockman, Detainee Fight Gets Bigger, Costlier for Long-Battling Boston Law Firm, Bost. Globe, Jun. 25, 2008, at A1. 6. See Jack Betts, Sabotage and Secrecy;
Lessons from a WWII Tribunal, Charlotte Observer, Dec. 9, 2001, at 1D. Colonel Kenneth Royall went on to be the last
person to hold the office of Secretary of War and later served as Secretary of
the Army. He became a partner in a law
firm that today, as the result of mergers, is Clifford Chance, the largest law
firm in the world and one that represents Guantánamo Bay detainees. Biographical Note, Kenneth C.
Royall Papers, University of North Carolina Library,
Collection 4651, available at http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/r/Royall,Kenneth%5FC.html#d0e263
(link). 7. See Fisher, supra note 3, at 12. The district court judge, without explanation, "did not consider Ex Parte Milligan 'controlling in the
circumstances of this petitioner.'" Id. (quoting Ex
Parte Quirin, 47 F. Supp. 431 (D.D.C. 1942). 8. See id. at 20. Justice Frank Murphy declined to participate
because he was on an active duty Army tour at the time. See id.
Justice William O. Douglas missed
the first day due to difficulties returning to Washington
from his home in Oregon. See id.
Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone
considered disqualifying himself because his son, an Army Major, was a member
of Royall's defense team, but chose to participate after Royall and Biddle
waived objection. See id. Justice Felix
Frankfurter did not publicly consider disqualifying himself even though he had
dinner with Secretary of War Stimson on June 29, and suggested that the
administration consider a military commission, the very issue before the Court
a month later. See id. 9. 317 U.S. 1 (1942). 10. See Fisher, supra note 3, at 27–35; Larner,
supra note 3. 11. See Charlie
Savage, Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of
American Democracy 137–38 (2007) ("[T]he order [establishing military
commissions] was modeled on a World War II military commission."). In addition to providing a model for the
basic operation of the commissions, government attorneys cited Roosevelt's handling of the saboteurs in 1942 and the
Court's acquiescence in Quirin as the
"primary precedent" for claiming that the President had the power to establish
military commissions without prior approval from Congress. Id. at 136–37
(citing the handling of the saboteurs in 1942 to as the "primary precedent" government
attorneys relied upon in choosing military commissions). 12. See Fisher, supra note 3, at 42. 13. See id. 14. See id. at 44. 15. See id. at 42–43. 16. See id. at 44; Richard Willing, An American Was the Nazi Spy Next Door, USA Today, Feb. 28, 2002, at A1, available at http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002/02/28/usatcov-traitor.htm
(link). 17. Fisher, supra note 3, at 44. Both
men were eventually released from prison. Erich Gimpel settled in Brazil and wrote an autobiography entitled Agent
146: The True Story of a Spy in America, published in the U.S. in 2003 (available from
Thorndike Press). See Gregory Kesich, When
Spies Came to Maine, Portland Press
Herald (Maine), Apr. 13, 2003, at A1; Richard Sassaman, Nazi Spies Come Ashore, America in WWII, Oct. 2005, available at http://www.americainwwii.com/stories/nazispiescomeashore.html
(link). William Colepaugh, an American citizen who
attended MIT, served in the U.S. Navy, and later defected while serving as a merchant
seaman, became a successful businessman in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania,
where he was an active member of the Rotary Club. See
Willing, supra note 16. 18. Lloyd Cutler, Lessons on Tribunal—From 1942, Wall
St. J., Dec. 31, 2001, at A9, available
at http://www.opinionjournal.com/forms/printThis.html?id=95001664 (link). Mr. Cutler died in May 2005 at the age of
87. Adam Bernstein, Lloyd Cutler, 1917-2005: Consummate Lawyer Played an Array of Roles,
Wash. Post, May 9, 2005, at A1. 19. Brig. Gen. Thomas Hartmann, Legal
Advisor to the Convening Auth. for the Office of Military Comm'ns, Dept. of
Def. News Briefing with Brig. Gen. Hartmann from the Pentagon (Feb. 11, 2008) available at http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=414
(link). 20. Dan Ephron, "Fair, Open, Just, Honest": A Chat with the Adviser to the Gitmo
Military Commissions, newsweek.com, Jun.
2, 2008, http://www.newsweek.com/id/139664/output (link). Hartmann repeated the claim in an ABC World News interview on the eve of
the Hamdan trial. ABC News: The Trial of Salim Hamdan (ABC television broadcast Jul. 20, 2008), available at http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=5413350 (link). 21. One commentator made the point
more colorfully: "Clearly, Hartmann attended the George Costanza school of
public relations, where they abide by the principle that 'it's not a lie if you
believe it.' And the corollary that if
you repeat something enough, it will be true." Posting of Phillip Carter to Intel Dump,
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/inteldump/2008/06/general_sings_the_gitmo_blues.html
(Jun. 5, 2008, 13:26 EST) (link). 22. The Associated Press, European Officials Ask to Delay Guantánamo
Trial, Jul. 14, 2008, available at
http://www.newser.com/article/d91u09ig0/european-officials-ask-judge-to-delay-guantanamo-trial-for-osama-bin-ladens-former-driver.html
(link). 23. Military
Commissions Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-366, 120 Stat. 2600
(codified in scattered sections of 10, 18, 28, 42 U.S.C.) (link). 24. Military
Commissions Act, 10 U.S.C. § 948h. 25. Id. § 949b(a)(2)(C). 26. The
Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 822 (2008). 27. Id. § 837. 28. See McNeal, supra note 1, at 36–37. 29. See Defense Motion to Dismiss the
Charges and Specifications for Unlawful Influence, United States v.
Hamdan, D-026 (Military Comm'n, Mar. 29, 2008), available at
http://www.nimj.com/documents/UCI%20Motion%20with%20Attachments.pdf (link). 30. See Ruling on Motion to Dismiss
(Unlawful Influence) at 10–12, United States v. Hamdan, D-026 (Military Comm'n, May 9, 2008), available at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2008/D026.pdf (link). 31. Id. at 9–10. On August 14, 2008, a
different military judge presiding over the case of Mohammed Jawad disqualified
Brigadier General Hartmann for similar reasons. See Mike Melia, Pentagon Official Removed from 2nd Gitmo
Trial, Associated Press, Aug.
14, 2008; Carol Rosenberg, Judge Bans
General from Guantánamo Trial Role, MiamiHerald.com,
Aug. 14, 2008, http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/guantanamo/story/642000.html
(link). On September 4, 2008, a third judge
disqualified him from involvement in another case. Despite being disqualified three times for
having compromised his objectivity by becoming too involved with the
prosecution, as of September, Brigadier General Hartmann was still Legal
Advisor to the Convening Authority and actively engaged in moving military
commission cases to trial. Carol
Rosenberg, Replace Guantánamo Lawyer,
ex-Bush Official Urges, Chi. Trib., Sep.
8, 2008, at C8, available at
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-guantanamosep07,0,1735370.story
(link). A Defense Department spokesperson said
Hartmann "remains focused on doing his job as the Legal Adviser to the
Convening Authority and he will continue to do it." Id. 32. See Biography of John D. Altenburg, Jr.,
Greenberg Traurig, http://www.gtlaw.com/People/JohnDAltenburgJr (link). 33. See Biography of Brigadier General
Hemingway, United States Air Force, http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=7760 (link). 34. See Press Release, Dept. of Def., Seasoned Judge Tapped Head Detainee Trials
(Feb. 7, 2007), available at
http://www.defenselink.mil/Releases/Release.aspx?ReleaseID=10493 (discussing Susan
Crawford's appointment as Convening Authority) (link);
Brigadier General Hartman, United States Air Force,
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/d20070207crawford.pdf (link). 35. Ms.
Crawford's biography is available at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/d20070207crawford.pdf
(link). She was General Counsel of the Department of
the Army from 1983 to 1989 in the Reagan-Bush administration. In November 1989, President George H.W. Bush
nominated her to be DoD Inspector General under Secretary of Defense (now Vice
President) Richard Cheney. John T. Woolley & Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=17781 (link). 36. See United States Air Force Biography of
Brigadier General Thomas W. Hartmann, http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=10078
(link). 37. Hartmann
became MXenergy's general counsel in January 2005. See
MXenergy Services, Inc., Registration Statement for Securities to Be Issued in
Business Combination Transactions (Form S-4/A), at 90 (Jan. 17, 2007), available at http://sec.edgar-online.com/2007/01/17/0001047469-07-000232/Section22.asp
(link). The "Active Parties List" in New York State
Department of Public Service case number 07-E-1507, Long-Range Electric
Resource Plan and Infrastructure Planning Process, lists Thomas W. Hartmann as
the party of record for MXenergy as of July 7, 2008. See
Active Parties List as of July 7, 2008 at 6, Proceeding on Motion
of the Commission to Establish a Long-Range Electric Resource Plan and
Infrastructure Planning Process, 2008 WL 2809944
(N.Y.P.S.C. 2008), available at http://www3.dps.state.ny.us/pscweb/WebFileRoom.nsf/0/AFA48CBE6994DE7D852573CC00595F94/$File/APLJuly708.pdf?OpenElement
(link). MXenergy secured its first Department of
Defense contract in May 2007. See
Contracts to MXenergy, Inc. (FY
2000–2008), USASpending.gov,
http://www.usaspending.gov/fpds/fpds.php?company_name=MXenergy&sortby=r&detail=0&datype=T&reptype=r&database=fpds&fiscal_year=&submit=GO
(link). The Department of Defense awarded MXenergy
another contract valued at $28 million in June 2008. Press Release, Dept. of Def., Contracts (June 26, 2008), available at
http://www.defenselink.mil/contracts/contract.aspx?contractid=3806 (link). 38. Frederic
I. Lederer and Barbara Hundley Zeliff, Needed,
an Independent Military Judiciary: A Proposal to Amend the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, in Evolving Military Justice 27, 38 (Fidell
& Sullivan ed., Naval Institute Press, 2002). 39. The
total comes from data reported annually by each service and published in the
Annual Reports of the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. The appendices of those reports detail the
total numbers of courts-martial tried by each branch of the military. Each of those reports is available at
http://www.armfor.uscourts.gov/Annual.htm (link). 40. United States v. Thomas, 22 M.J. 383, 393 (C.M.A.
1986). 41. For
example, the prosecution's closing argument in the Hamdan case, the first fully
litigated military commission trial in over sixty years, was delivered by a
civilian attorney from the Justice Department rather than a military Defense
Department prosecutor. See Jerry Markon, Hamdan Case Heads to Jury, Wash.
Post, Aug. 4, 2008, available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/04/AR2008080401269.html
(link);
Jerry Markon, Detainee's Trial in Military
System Begins Today, Wash. Post,
Jul. 21, 2008, at A3, available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/20/AR2008072001604_pf.html
(link). 42. For
instance, Judge Allred determined the Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination did not apply in the Hamdan trial despite the Supreme Court's
decision in Boumediene v. Bush, No. 06-1195 (U.S. June 12, 2008), available at http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/07pdf/06-1195.pdf
(extending the constitutional right of habeas corpus to detainees at Guantánamo
Bay) (link). ———— Copyright 2008 Northwestern University Cite as: 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. Colloquy 121 (2008). Persistent URL: http://www.law.northwestern.edu/lawreview/colloquy/2008/34 (Comments) |