Tim Cavanaugh | February 11, 2005
Lynne Stewart, attorney for Omar Abdel-Rahman, has been convicted of aiding terrorism by helping the blind sheikh sneak messages out of his prison cell. Stories here, here, here, here, here, and here.
Jarett Decker considered the Stewart case's ramifications last year in Reason.
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This woman is obviously a freaking loon! Drawing implications from this case is silly. Don't break the rules; don't go to jail. I feel so sorry for her going to jail for helping a mass murderer get his evil word out.
What she was convicted of has zip zero nada to do with defending her client in court. I see absolutely no civil liberties implications here, any more than I see second amendment issues when someone is convicted of knocking over a liquor store with a gun.
For all of you who said that Ayn Rand wrote in caricatures...I present Lynne Stewart. Have you seen and heard the "woman"? It's like she walked off a page to spout "shopworn bromides" and she "smells like cabbage." Jokes aside, she participated in an ongoing criminal conspiracy aimed at the downfall of the US, and she did so with gusto. She's already dressed and groomed for prison, let her rot.
You lot don't read, and until you do, be quiet. I have bolded
the important part because you missed it, and included surrounding
paragraphs for background. This is from Jarett Decker's
article.
Had the timing of her actions been different, Stewart could
have been charged with violating a little-noticed provision of the
PATRIOT Act that makes it a crime to provide "expert advice or
assistance" to a terrorist group. Although the Justice Department
cannot use that provision against Stewart -- and a California
federal judge recently limited its reach -- the
department�s court submissions in her case take the position that
legal representation of alleged terrorists is a crime under the
PATRIOT Act if the lawyer can be portrayed as acting under "the
direction and control" of a foreign terrorist organization. The law
does not require any intent to further illegal activities, and the
Justice Department contends that there is no exception for "good
faith" or "bona fide" legal representation.
All lawyers work "under the direction and control" of their
clients, within the limits of the rules of ethics. If the Justice
Department�s interpretation of the PATRIOT Act is accepted by the
courts, any lawyer who represents a terrorism suspect can be
charged with a crime if the government claims his client�s
directives also represent the directives of the terrorist
organization the client is accused of serving. In virtually any
terrorism case that does not involve a "lone wolf" defendant, it
could be alleged that the defendant is acting on behalf of
his organization as well as himself in directing his lawyer (as the
government alleges in Stewart�s case).
Did she commit a crime when she violated the restrictions known as
"special administrative measures" that said, "Don't let this person
talk to anyone else"? Yes. This is clear, and she should be
punished for it. The DOJ are not limiting their case to that. They
are putting forward a doctrine where anyone who defends an accused
terrorist could be prosecuted solely for that otherwise legal
defense. The money shot:
Baker specifically rejected any notion that the government
would have to prove intent on the lawyer�s part to further illegal
activities, because that "is not constitutionally compelled and is
inconsistent with the plain text and structure of the statute."
Speaking for the Justice Department, Baker concluded that
"criminalizing attorney representation" does "not render the
prohibition [on material support] unconstitutional." Baker
allowed that "Congress could bestow upon attorneys (or others) an
express or implied right to act as an agent of a designated foreign
terrorist organization in certain circumstances." Any attorney
without such a blessing from Congress would be fair
game.
Leaving those taken in Afghanistan and imprisoned in Iraq alone, as
those are different issues, it is clear that the Bush
administration wish to stripped supposed American terrorists of due
process, as shown by Jose Padilla. This case shows another erosion
of basic rights by the Bush administration, although to be fair the
DOJ has been pushing this for years. But it happened under Bush's
watch. The right to defense counsel is slipping away. It is limited
to terrorists now, but if you think this is where it'll end you're
a sucker. Look at the exceptions carved out for the Drug War that
have metastatized. Seizing property for accused welfare fraud.
Seizing motels because the prices were too low to keep drug dealers
out.
Let me restate. This case is not important because she was
convicted. She should have been by the facts as I understand them.
It is important because the DOJ want to threaten or even prosecute
defense attornies for having the wrong client and have stated so in
their case against her.
That said, I understand that we have weathered similar assaults on
civil liberties in the past, and it would be much harder for them
to convict someone under this new legal theory. I don't even think
the DOJ is trying to be evil in pushing this, just blind as to
their proper role and the point of the adversarial system of law.
But until the DOJ no longer claims that "legal representation of
alleged terrorists is a crime under the PATRIOT Act", the rule of
law is being threatened, and I would expect libertarians and
conservatives to understand that.
Hmm. A little extra reading shows that Lynne Stewart and her
supporters really aren't helping the issue by muddying the waters
with claims of "oppression" without mentioning the violation of the
SAM and blaming the PATRIOT Act for her conviction when it didn't
matter for her. The FISA warrant used against her while she talked
to her client doesn't please me, but she shouldn't have violated
the SAM in the first place. Does anyone know if such privileged
material is being used elsewhere?
The FISA warrant used against her while she talked to her
client doesn't please me, but she shouldn't have violated the SAM
in the first place. Does anyone know if such privileged material is
being used elsewhere?
I was a bit hasty there. I still don't like it, but apparently a
seperate firewalled team goes through and removes stuff like that
from the wiretaps and such. Seems sufficient.
Anonymous,
You said we don't read, then you wrote a whole book of a post. Care
to give us the cliff notes on why you think that this America
hating terrorist sympathiser and enabler is not wrong?
Not really. If you can't even read what's on the same page, I'm not going to bother.
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