Case 1:05-cv-02386-RBW
Case 1:05-cv-02386-RBW
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– x
:
TOFIQ NASSER AWAD AL BIHANI (ISN 893), : Case Nos.
:
ABDU LATIF NASSER (ISN 244), : 04-cv-1194 (TFH) (ISN 569)
:
SHARQAWI AL HAJJ (ISN 1457), : 05-cv-23 (UNA) (ISN 841)
:
SANAD AL KAZIMI (ISN 1453), : 05-cv-764 (CKK) (ISN 244)
:
SUHAIL SHARABI (ISN 569), : 05-cv-1607 (RCL) (ISNs 1460, 1461)
:
SAID NASHIR (ISN 841), : 05-cv-2386 (RBW) (ISNs 893, 1453)
:
ABDUL RABBANI (ISN 1460), : 08-cv-1360 (EGS) (ISN 10016)
:
AHMED RABBANI (ISN 1461), : 08-cv-1440 (CKK) (ISN 10025)
:
ABDUL RAZAK (ISN 685), : 09-cv-745 (RCL) (ISN 1457)
:
ABDUL MALIK (ISN 10025), : 10-cv-1020 (RJL) (ISN 685)
: r
ABU ZUBAYDAH (ISN 10016), :
: P
Petitioners, : e
: t
v. : i
: t
DONALD J. TRUMP, et al., : i
: o
Respondents. : n
: e
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– x r
Z
a
MOTION FOR ORDER GRANTING WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
Case 1:05-cv-02386-RBW Document 2062 Filed 01/11/18 Page 2 of 47
Petitioners, by and through their undersigned counsel, respectfully move for an order
INTRODUCTION
Petitioners are 11 Muslim men1 who have all been detained at Guantánamo without
charge or trial, many of them for nearly 15 years or more. Their detention has spanned three
presidential administrations and as many as five presidential terms. Many are suffering the
prison camp where they have endured conditions devised to break human beings, and where the
aura of forever hangs heavier than ever. Given President Donald Trump’s proclamation against
releasing any petitioners – driven by executive hubris and raw animus rather than by reason or
deliberative national security concerns – these petitioners may never leave Guantánamo alive,
Petitioners have participated in habeas corpus litigation that this Court and the higher
courts have entertained for years, but this motion, brought by detainees collectively, is different –
as it has to be. The two prior presidential administrations released a total of nearly 750 men.
circumstances in a manner that was purportedly tailored to the executive branch’s interest in
national security. President Trump, in contrast to his predecessors, has declared and is carrying
out his intention to keep all remaining detainees in Guantánamo, regardless of their individual
circumstances – presumably even those the executive branch previously determined need no
longer be detained. This defiant policy exceeds his authority under the 2001 Authorization for
1
Tofiq
Nasser Awad Al Bihani (ISN 893), Sharqawi Al Hajj (ISN 1457), Sanad Al Kazimi (ISN
1453), Suhail Sharabi (ISN 569), Said Nashir (ISN 841), Abdul Rabbani (ISN 1460), Ahmed
Rabbani (ISN 1461), Abdu Latif Nasser (ISN 244), Abdul Razak (ISN 685), Abdul Malik (ISN
10025); Abu Zubaydah (ISN 10016).
1
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Use of Military Force (“AUMF”), which permits detention only for the narrow purpose of
preventing the return of detainees to the battlefield. Instead, the policy is a symbolic,
rejection of the policy framework that has governed Guantánamo detentions for years. Not least,
it is a demonstration of his antipathy toward this prisoner population, all foreign-born Muslim
men, and toward Muslims more broadly, of the kind courts have properly rejected in recent
months. See, e.g., Washington v. Trump, 847 F.3d 1151 (9th Cir. 2017); Hawaii v. Trump, 859
F.3d 741 (9th Cir. 2017); Int’l Refugee Assistance Project v. Trump, 857 F.3d 554 (4th Cir.
2017).
For these 11 habeas petitioners, Guantánamo now sits in an even more precarious and
dubious legal space than it did in 2002, when the executive branch resisted any legal constraints
on its detention authority – a position the courts ultimately rejected in favor of judicial
intervention. See Rasul v. Bush, 542 U.S. 466 (2004). Petitioners have all been detained
between ten and sixteen years without charge or trial, and for much of that time, in subhuman
release any detainees during his administration, they face an arbitrary additional term of
detention of four, or possibly eight, years. Such an additional term of years will mean
irreparable harm for Petitioners. For the aging and unwell among them, including some on
prolonged hunger strike, it may not be survivable. Habeas is a flexible, equitable remedy that at
its core is meant to check arbitrary executive action. When fundamental legal principles – and
First, the Due Process Clause of the Constitution applies to limit the executive’s detention
authority over Petitioners, for the same reasons the Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit Court of
2
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Appeals have respectively concluded that the Suspension Clause and the Ex Post Facto Clause of
the Constitution apply to limit such authority in Guantánamo. The Supreme Court has
consistently held that the Due Process Clause places substantive limits on noncriminal detention,
regardless of the facts or procedures that may have justified an initial detention decision years
earlier. That includes a prohibition on perpetual detention disconnected from any legitimate
purpose; and group detention of an additional four or eight years based on executive fiat and
animus is the type of arbitrary executive action due process is designed to check. Continuing
detention is particularly arbitrary for those Petitioners whom the executive branch has already
cleared for transfer – and thus where detention is concededly without a bona fide purpose. Due
process also requires carefully tailored procedures for detention of this sort. Because perpetual
detention carries a severe and increasing risk of erroneous deprivation of liberty, it must be based
Second, the AUMF – the statutory basis upon which a plurality in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld,
542 U.S. 567 (2004), held may authorize limited military detention – can no longer support the
detention of Petitioners. Whatever authorization for detention may have existed in 2004, for the
limited law-of-war purpose of preventing Mr. Hamdi’s return to the battlefield in which he was
allegedly captured three years prior, Hamdi did not authorize perpetual detention, disconnected
from any legitimate purpose, of the kind Petitioners now endure. In addition, as predicted by the
plurality in Hamdi, the traditional law-of-war understanding that may have justified detention in
2004 has “unraveled,” as the “practical circumstances” of the conflict with Al Qaeda have long
ceased to resemble any of the conflicts that informed the development of the law of war. The
battlefield at issue in Hamdi, which was active in the months after 9/11, is today no more than an
amorphous, interminable morass, global in scope, that could justify Petitioners’ lifetime
3
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imprisonment if left unchecked. The Hamdi Court acknowledged that the prospect of perpetual
detention would indeed be a troubling one, but left the legality of it for another day; that day is
today.
As the Court in Boumediene v. Bush, 533 U.S. 723 (2008), recognized, habeas developed
Suspension Clause to prevent cyclical abuses of executive power. The President’s apparent
policy to detain for detention’s sake, driven by religious animus, is unlawful. The obligation of
the habeas court is clear. Because Petitioners’ detentions violate the Constitution and the
AUMF, their habeas petitions should be granted. And, should the President wish to detain
Petitioners, the Constitution offers him one valid process to do so. The “Executive may . . . hand
him over to the criminal authorities, whose detention for the purpose of prosecution will be
lawful, or else must release him.” Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 576 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. Guantánamo’s Beginnings
On September 18, 2001, Congress passed the Authorization for Use of Military Force,
Pub. L. No. 107-40, § 2(a), 115 Stat. 224, 224 (2001) (“AUMF”). The statute authorized the
executive branch – then led by President George W. Bush – to “use all necessary and appropriate
force” against those individuals or groups responsible for the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Roughly one month later, the United States invaded Afghanistan as part of Operation Enduring
Freedom – an operation that was concluded in December 2014.2 As part of its military efforts,
U.S. forces detained hundreds of men and boys on suspicion of being hostile fighters, often by
2
Operation Enduring Freedom Fast Facts, CNN (Oct. 5, 2016), http://cnn.it/2m8lD37.
4
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paying sizable bounties to local residents and authorities.3 Guantánamo was selected as a
detention site because administration officials wrongly concluded that U.S. federal courts were
represented a “legal black hole” – a necessary precondition for a regime of indefinite detention
where suspects were to be coercively interrogated and were in fact subjected to an inhumane
prisoners “enemy combatants,” and confirmed that detainees possessed a statutory right to
challenge the legality of their detention through habeas corpus. At the same time, the Court
decided Hamdi, where a plurality ruled that the AUMF, consistent with “longstanding law-of-
Afghanistan in order to prevent their return to that battlefield (but not indefinitely for purposes of
interrogation), subject to elementary due process protections such as notice, counsel and an
opportunity to be heard. The Court also cautioned that if the “practical circumstances”
3
Guantánamo Inmates Say They Were ‘Sold,’ Assoc. Press (May 31, 2005),
http://nbcnews.to/2CIOvZS.
4
See Memorandum for William J. Haynes, II, General Counsel, Department of Defense,
Guantánamo from Patrick F. Philbin, Deputy Assistant Attorney General and John C. Yoo,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Re: Possible Habeas Jurisdiction
over Aliens Held in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba (Dec. 28, 2001).
5
See Joseph Margulies, Guantánamo and the Abuse of Presidential Power 11, 45 (2006); Neil A.
Lewis, Red Cross Finds Detainee Abuse in Guantánamo, N.Y. Times (Nov. 30, 2004),
http://nyti.ms/2Ee1OxZ; Andrew Kent, Disappearing Legal Black Holes and Converging
Domains: Changing Individual Rights Protection in National Security and Foreign Affairs, 115
Colum. L. Rev. 1029, 1030, 1034, n.23 (2015).
5
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surrounding the law-of-war detention fundamentally changed, the authority to detain may
Congress sought to undo Rasul several times – first in passing the Detainee Treatment
Act, and then (when the Supreme Court’s decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557 (2006),
invalidated the DTA’s attempt at habeas stripping)) in the Military Commission Act of 2006.
The Supreme Court responded in Boumediene, by ruling that Guantánamo detainees have the
constitutional right to access habeas relief that cannot be abrogated by the political branches,
which must include a “meaningful opportunity” to challenge the legal and factual basis of
detention. The Court left it to the “expertise and competence” of the district courts to govern
challenges.6 This resulted in several court-ordered releases.7 The drawdown of the prison
population, however, had been underway for some time. Throughout his tenure, President Bush
governments seeking the return of their detainee-citizens in a manner the administration asserted
was consistent with U.S. national security interests. Hundreds of prisoners were released in this
6
Guantánamo detainees won roughly 60% of the first 34 post-Boumediene challenges at the trial
level. See Mark Denbeaux et al., No Hearing Habeas: D.C. Circuit Restricts Meaningful
Review, May 1, 2012, Seton Hall Public Law Research Paper No. 2145554, available at SSRN:
http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2145554.
7
William Glaberson, Judge Orders 17 Detainees at Guantánamo Freed, N.Y. Times (Oct. 7,
2008), http://nyti.ms/2CyhBqT.
6
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way between 2002 and 2008, sometimes en masse,8 even while the scope of habeas rights at
All told, President Bush released 532 of the 780 prisoners sent to Guantánamo.9 This is
consistent with his assessment that “it should be a goal of the [United States] to shut down
Guantánamo.”10 President Bush would later state that Guantánamo had become a “propaganda
tool for our enemies and a distraction for our allies.”11 That conclusion reflected an emerging
President Obama continued the policy of reviewing and releasing detainees, formalizing
it to a greater extent than his predecessor. After mandating the closure of the prison in one
year,13 he established the Guantánamo Review Task Force, comprised of six national security
and law enforcement agencies, charged with reviewing and determining by unanimous consensus
8
See Carol Rosenberg, In largest Obama Era Transfer, Guantánamo Sends 10 Cleared Captives
to Oman, Miami Herald (Jan. 14, 2016) (explaining that “big transfers” including double digit
transfers were common during President Bush’s tenure), http://hrld.us/1SPYXPe.
9
See The Guantánamo Docket, Interactive Timeline, N.Y. Times, http://nyti.ms/2CA9Sso.
10
Remarks of President George W. Bush, News Conference, Aug. 9, 2007,
http://bit.ly/2COkVl9.
11
George W. Bush, Decision Points (2001).
12
For example, during the 2008 presidential campaign, Senator John McCain favored closing
Guantánamo because he saw it as “symbol” of U.S. torture that serves as a recruiting tool for
terrorists. Senator John McCain, Conversation with Walter Isaacson, The Aspen Institute (Aug.
14, 2008), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rp7YdDXo2Rc; see also Report, Senate Armed
Services Committee, Inquiry into the Treatment of Detainees in U.S. Custody (Nov. 20, 2008),
http://bit.ly/2m6Ub5L. His opponent, then-Senator Barack Obama, agreed. In a speech at the
National Archives in May 2009, President Obama explained “instead of serving as a tool to
counter terrorism, Guantánamo became a symbol that helped al Qaeda recruit terrorists to its
cause.” Remarks by the President on National Security, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
(May 21, 2009), http://bit.ly/2lZqPFA.
13
See Exec. Order No. 13,492, 74 Fed. Reg. 4897 (Jan. 22, 2009).
7
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the suitability of each detainee for release. President Obama also appointed special envoys from
the U.S. Departments of State and Defense to negotiate and facilitate detainee transfers. The
Task Force completed its work in 2010. Of the 242 prisoners remaining at Guantánamo when
President Obama took office, more than half were approved for transfer. Forty-eight others were
designated for continuing detention under the AUMF, but would receive further periodic
reviews.14 During the first two years of the Obama administration, about 70 detainees were
At the same time, the avenues to win court-ordered releases were narrowing. In January
2010, the D.C. Circuit issued its first post-Boumediene Guantánamo decision in Al-Bihani v.
Obama, 590 F.3d 866 (D.C. Cir. 2010), which upheld the petitioner’s detention on thin evidence
of a highly attenuated connection to the Taliban. Other decisions soon followed that filled in the
procedural architecture of Boumediene in ways that granted the government expansive detention
authority at Guantánamo. See, e.g., Al Odah v. United States, 611 F.3d 8 (D.C. Cir. 2010)
(holding that hearsay evidence is always admissible against detainees); Al Adahi v. Obama, 613
F.3d 1102 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (empowering appeals court to displace trial court’s judgments
concerning credibility of witnesses and evidence); Latif v. Obama, 666 F.3d 746 (D.C. Cir. 2011)
14
Final Report of the Guantánamo Review Task Force 7 (Jan. 22, 2010), http://bit.ly/2CzdwTq.
15
Michelle Shephard, Gitmo’s Fallen Czar, Foreign Policy (May 23, 2013),
http://bit.ly/2CAa2Qw.
16
Further complicating prisoner releases, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for
2011 and subsequent iterations have included restrictions on Guantánamo detainee transfers.
Between January 2011, when the NDAA restrictions went into effect, and the end of 2013, there
were only six prisoner transfers, including a stretch of over 14 months without a single release –
the longest such period since the prison opened.
8
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President Obama, however, continued to reaffirm his commitment to closing the prison.17
After pronounced delays, his administration commenced the Periodic Review Boards (PRB) in
2013 – the administrative process for determining whether prisoners previously slated for
continuing detention could be cleared for release. Of the 64 detainees reviewed by the PRB by
the end of the Obama administration, 38 were approved for transfer. Thirty-six of those men
were eventually released between 2014 and the end of the administration. In total, President
Obama transferred 197 prisoners from Guantánamo. Still, 41 remain today, including five men
Muslims hailing from Yemen, Pakistan, Morocco, Algeria, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, and Palestine.
Two have been cleared for release and nine have been designated for continuing law-of-war
detention. None have been charged. All have been held for between ten and sixteen years and
Guantánamo is now in its sixteenth year of operation. Some Petitioners have been
imprisoned there the entirety of that time: through four presidential terms (now having entered a
fifth), eight sessions of Congress, and a constantly shifting conflict with Al Qaeda that years ago
became the longest war in U.S. history.18 Throughout, Petitioners have endured perpetual
uncertainty about their fate, including whether they will ever be released, resulting in severe and
17
See Remarks by the President at the National Defense University, Fort McNair Washington,
D.C. (May 23, 2013), http://bit.ly/2l0AXBh.
18
Bill Bradley, America’s War in Afghanistan Is Now Officially Longer Than Vietnam, Vanity
Fair (Jun. 7, 2010), http://bit.ly/2masf15.
9
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degenerative physical and psychological effects.19 Medical experts liken prolonged indefinite
are, of course, layered on top of the systemic abuse – indeed, an intentional system of cruel
treatment and torture, as the International Committee of the Red Cross once described it – that
Nine detainees have died since the prison opened,22 several possibly by suicide.23
Prisoners are medicated for depression and anxiety brought on by acute despair.24 Hunger
strikes began almost immediately after the prison opened and persist today.25 Some detainees
have starved themselves nearly to the point of death to protest against their open-ended
say nothing of the toll taken by the passage of time. In August 2017, Guantánamo’s eldest
19
See Joint Letter from Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture, the Center for Victims
of Torture, and Physicians for Human Rights to U.S. Senate on Indefinite Detention (Jun. 6,
2016), http://bit.ly/2CPTZCw.
20
Cheyette, Cara, Punishment Before Justice: Indefinite Detention in the U.S., Physicians for
Human Rights, p.11 (June 2011), http://bit.ly/2qzmTkl.
21
See Neil A. Lewis, Red Cross Finds Detainee Abuse in Guantánamo, N.Y. Times (Nov. 30,
2004), http://nyti.ms/2Ee1OxZ; Neil A. Lewis & Eric Schmitt, Inquiry Finds Abuses at
Guantánamo Bay, N.Y. Times (May 1, 2005), http://nyti.ms/2CYyEDr.
22
Guantánamo by the Numbers, Miami Herald (Oct. 25, 2016), http://hrld.us/1wrTi6n.
23
James Risen & Tim Golden, 3 Prisoners Commit Suicide at Guantánamo, N.Y. Times (Jun.
11, 2006), http://nyti.ms/2CKqLUK.
24
Sheri Fink, When Even Nightmares Are Classified: Psychiatric Care at Guantánamo, N.Y.
Times (Nov. 12, 2016), http://nyti.ms/2m3zEhL.
25
Charlie Savage, Military Is Waiting Longer Before Force-Feeding Hunger Strikers, Detainees
Say, N.Y. Times (Oct. 11, 2017), http://nyti.ms/2gcDS7D.
26
Editorial, The Pentagon’s Insubordination on Guantánamo, N.Y. Times (Jan. 2, 2016),
http://nyti.ms/2CPUble.
10
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prisoner turned 70 years of age. He reportedly suffers from diabetes, high blood pressure, and
arthritis.27 Chronic illnesses of this sort are commonplace amongst Guantánamo’s aging prison
population. See Al Hajj v. Trump, 09-cv-745 (RCL) (D.D.C.). The Department of Defense has
obtained medical equipment in anticipation of the inevitable further decline of elderly prisoners
whom the United States will not transfer – even temporarily – for potentially life-saving care.28
The final remaining prisoners now linger in an expansive facility, occupying cell blocks
that are sparsely populated. Some report that this increases the psychological stress of their
indefinite detention. Their experience now is of being stranded. This includes Petitioners Tofiq
Nasser Awad Al Bihani and Abdul Latif Nasser. Both missed their chances at freedom by the
slimmest of margins and thinnest of reasons. Indeed both were so close that during the final
stages of the Obama presidency, prison officials put them through exit protocols in anticipation
of their transfer flights. The transfers would not occur, however, and both were returned to their
President Trump has defiantly reversed course from the individualized determinations
and transfer efforts of his predecessors’ administrations, tailored as they purported to be, to
diktat that evidences both executive hubris and religious animus. As a result, he ensures that the
27
Carol Rosenberg, Happy Birthday? Pakistani Captive at Guantánamo Turns 70, Plans to
Write Old Neighbor President Trump, Miami Herald (Aug. 17, 2017), http://hrld.us/2D0kyBJ.
28
Carol Rosenberg, For Aging Guantánamo Captives, A Cardiac Care Lab, Miami Herald (Sept.
28, 2012), http://hrld.us/2m8JPCk.
29
Missy Ryan & Julie Tate, Trump Era Strands These Five Men at Guantánamo Bay, Wash.
Post (Jan. 22, 2017), http://wapo.st/2D2MDIr.
11
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To be clear, President Trump’s actions and statements mark a radical change of position
by the government. The President has explicitly endorsed indefinite detention rather than a
detention “informed by the laws of war,” which was the position of his predecessors. And the
President has done so without regard to the length of the conflict in Afghanistan or the parties to
such hostilities. Indeed, to avoid a clear violation of applicable international law addressed infra,
the previous administrations claimed that their detention authority extended only “for the
duration of hostilities” in Afghanistan. See, e.g., Abdullah v. Obama, 753 F.3d 193, 198-99
(D.C. Cir. 2014). Now the violation of international law is manifest with President Trump’s
avowed determination to detain Petitioners for reasons wholly unrelated to any actual ostensible
During his campaign, President Trump pledged to keep Guantánamo open and “load it up
with some bad dudes,” and said he would “absolutely authorize” torture techniques like
waterboarding against terrorist suspects, “who deserve it anyway.”30 He has advocated for
federal law31 – and more recently called for a Muslim man who killed several people in New
York to be sent to Guantánamo and denied constitutional process, though he has never suggested
30
See David Welna, Trump Has Vowed to Fill Guantánamo With Bad Dudes—But Who?, NPR
(Nov. 14, 2016), http://n.pr/2CNr01T; see also Remarks of Donald Trump, Sparks, NV (Feb. 23,
2016), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI3ChCda2gg; Jenna Johnson, Trump says ‘torture
works,’ backs waterboarding and ‘much worse,’ Wash. Post (Feb. 17, 2016),
http://wapo.st/2CMa5fr.
31
Patricia Mazzei, Trump: Americans Could be Tried in Guantánamo, Miami Herald (Aug. 11,
2016), http://hrld.us/2b0v2lN.
12
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that white male mass killers should ever be denied due process.32 Shortly before his
response to the Obama administration’s transfer of detainees cleared for release that “there
should be no further releases from Guantánamo,” profiling even men every relevant agency had
endorsed President Roosevelt’s internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and
answered that his seemingly favorable position on internment camps is defensible because
Roosevelt “did the same thing.”34 He has repeatedly defined his presidency in reflexive
opposition to actions of his predecessors, especially President Obama.35 That position has held
This proclamation to not release detainees must be seen in connection with his regularly
expressed, undifferentiated suspicion of, and antipathy toward, Muslims. To take a small
sample, Trump has called for “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims” entering the
country;36 argued that all Muslims suffer from a “sickness . . . there’s a sickness going on”;37 has
32
Ali Vitali & Jane C. Timm, Trump: Consider Sending NYC Truck Attacker to Guantánamo
Bay, NBC (Nov. 2, 2017), http://nbcnews.to/2A6uac8.
33
Donald J. Trump, Twitter (Jan. 3, 2017),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/816333480409833472.
34
Miriam Hernandez, Trump Cites History to Defend Muslim Immigration Ban, ABC 7 (Dec. 9,
2015).
35
Peter Baker, Can Trump Destroy Obama’s Legacy?, N.Y. Times (Jun. 23, 2017),
http://nyti.ms/2tF0Jef.
36
Press Release, Trump-Pence, Donald J. Trump Statement on Preventing Muslim Immigration
(Dec. 7, 2015), http://bit.ly/2qkaDmL.
37
Dan Friedman, Trump Cites “Sickness” in Defense of Muslim Immigration Ban Proposal, Fox
News (Dec. 13, 2015), http://fxn.ws/2m7BnDh.
13
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might lead us to “commit[] suicide”;38 and considered Islam a religion that categorically “hates
us.”39 He has repeatedly called for registering Muslims in the United States,40 stated that the
U.S. has “no choice” but to engage in profiling of Muslims and shut down mosques,41 and
boasted that he alone could understand how indiscriminately dangerous all Muslims are when he
tweeted in 2016, “it is amazing how often I am right” about Muslims.42 Circulating a false story
about General John Pershing, Trump twice suggested that Muslim terrorist suspects should be
shot by bullets dipped in pig’s blood.43 In December, he retweeted with approbation vile,
38
Interview of Donald Trump, NBC News (July 24, 2016), available at
http://nbcnews.to/2F7s3Hy.
39
Theodore Schleifer, Donald Trump: ‘I think Islam hates us’, CNN (Mar. 10, 2016),
http://cnn.it/1RBk6Z4.
40
See, e.g., Vaughn Hillyard, Donald Trump’s Plan for a Muslim Database Draws Comparison
to Nazi Germany, NBC News (Nov. 20, 2015), http://nbcnews.to/1NGfWNs; Lauren Carroll, In
Context: Donald Trump’s comments on a database of American Muslims, Politifact (Nov. 24,
2015), http://bit.ly/1MPx8QY; Hunter Walker, Donald Trump has big plans for ‘radical Islamic’
terrorists, 2016 and ‘that communist’ Bernie Sanders, Yahoo News (Nov. 19, 2015),
https://yhoo.it/2Czc6IE.
41
Nick Gass, Trump: ‘Absolutely no choice’ but to close mosques, Politico (Nov. 18, 2015),
http://politi.co/1Yh0O0s; Trump says US will ‘have no choice’ but to shut some mosques down,
Fox News (Nov. 18, 2015), http://fxn.ws/2m28zvf.
42
Donald J. Trump, Twitter (Mar. 24, 2016),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/713012045214531584.
43
David Nakamura, Trump recycles discredited Islamic pigs’ blood tale after terrorist attack in
Barcelona, Wash. Post (Aug. 17, 2017), http://wapo.st/2F5N4Cv.
44
Peter Baker & Eileen Sullivan, Trump Shares Inflammatory Anti-Muslim Videos and Britain’s
Leader Condemns Them, N.Y. Times (Nov. 29, 2017), http://nyti.ms/2hZqHEn. In addition,
many senior members of President Trump’s cabinet have similarly expressed blanket hostility to
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indiscriminate policy initiatives of his – which have been struck down by the courts – including
the iterative bans on travel to the United States from certain majority-Muslim countries45 and the
ban on transgendered Americans serving in the armed forces.46 His stance on Guantánamo calls
ARGUMENT
The Due Process Clause of the Constitution applies at Guantánamo and places
substantive limitations on executive detention of the kind at issue here, including a durational
limitation that compels relief regardless of the original bases for the detention. Petitioners, many
of whom have been in detention for nearly 15 years or more without charge (either by military
commission or an Article III court process), have reached the outer limits of that durational limit,
particularly where the executive branch has apparently determined that no one – regardless of
circumstance and independent of any legal rationale – will be transferred from Guantánamo.
Perpetual detention on the basis of no more than executive decree is an arbitrary restraint on
the idea of releasing Guantánamo prisoners. CIA Director Mike Pompeo (who has been rumored
to take over the Department of State, see Abigail Tracy, “It’s All but a Done Deal”: Insiders
Expect CIA Director Mike Pompeo to Take over the State Department, Vanity Fair (Nov. 30,
2017), http://bit.ly/2i5fItl)) as well as White House Chief of Staff John Kelly reportedly sought
to obstruct past prisoner transfers themselves. See Mike Pompeo, Guantánamo Detainees Don’t
Belong in Anyone’s Backyard, Kansas City Star (Sept. 6, 2015), http://bit.ly/2CMV9yq; Charles
Levinson & David Rohde, Special Report: Pentagon Thwarts Obama’s Effort to Close
Guantánamo, Reuters (Dec. 29, 2015), http://reut.rs/1PufaGY.
45
Washington v. Trump, 847 F.3d 1151 (9th Cir. 2017) (TRO against Executive Order 13769
(“EO-1”)); Hawaii v. Trump, 859 F.3d 741 (9th Cir. 2017) (TRO against Executive Order 13780,
revising EO-1); Int’l Refugee Assistance Project v. Trump, 857 F.3d 554 (4th Cir. 2017) (same).
46
Doe v. Trump, No. 17-cv-1597 (CKK) (D.D.C. Oct. 30, 2017) (TRO against transgender
military ban).
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liberty that must be remediated by the judicial branch. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 529 (freedom
from bodily restraint is the “most elemental of liberty interests” and has “always been at the core
of liberty protected by the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental action”) (quoting
Foucha v. Louisiana, 501 U.S. 71, 80 (1992)). Similarly, detention of this length cannot
continue, consistent with due process, based only on a preponderance of the evidence that an
individual was many years earlier a member of or associated with a detainable group. The risk
of ongoing, erroneous detention based on such thin procedural protections likewise compels
relief.
In Boumediene, the Supreme Court held that the Suspension Clause of the Constitution
protects the right of detainees held at Guantánamo to challenge the legality of their detention. In
reaching this conclusion, the Court explained that it was merely reaffirming its long-standing
jurisprudence to determine what constitutional standards apply when the government acts with
respect to non-citizens outside the territorial boundaries of the United States. See United States
v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. 259, 277 (1990) (Kennedy, J., concurring) (“The proposition is,
of course, not that the Constitution ‘does not apply’ overseas but that there are provisions in the
Constitution which do not necessarily apply in all circumstances in every foreign place.”)
Specifically, in Boumediene, the Court applied a functional test in determining that the
Suspension Clause restrains the Executive’s conduct as to Guantánamo detainees, and concluded
that it would not be “impractical and anomalous” to grant detainees habeas review because
“there are few practical barriers to the running of the writ” at Guantánamo. See 553 U.S. at 769-
71; id. at 784-85 (addressing due process). The Court reasoned that “Guantánamo Bay . . . is no
16
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transient possession. In every practical sense Guantánamo is not abroad; it is within the constant
jurisdiction of the United States.” Id. at 768-69; see also Rasul, 542 U.S. at 487 (Kennedy, J.,
concurring) (“Guantánamo Bay is in every practical respect a United States territory” where our
“unchallenged and indefinite control . . . has produced a place that belongs to the United States,
After Boumediene, it inescapably follows that the Due Process Clause also applies – as
much as the Suspension Clause – at Guantánamo to constrain certain executive branch actions.
This is particularly true as concepts animating due process and habeas corpus are intertwined.
See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 525-26 (discussing interaction of habeas and due process); id. at 555-57
(Scalia, J., dissenting) (same). The Boumediene Court’s functional analysis led to recognition of
the applicability of the Suspension Clause in Guantánamo. Therefore, at least some measure of
the Due Process Clause must also reach Guantánamo because there are no practical barriers that
would apply to one provision but not the other. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 538 (“[A] court that
receives a petition for a writ of habeas corpus from an alleged enemy combatant must itself
ensure that the minimum requirements of due process are achieved.”); Boumediene, 553 U.S. at
784-85 (addressing due process). Cf. Hussain v. Obama, 134 S. Ct. 1621 (2014) (statement of
Justice Breyer respecting denial of certiorari). Just as there are no practical or structural barriers
that make it impractical or anomalous to adjudicate the factual or legal justification for detention
under the Suspension Clause, there are no such barriers to preclude adjudication of the question
of durational limits to detention under the Due Process Clause, or the other substantive and
procedural requirements that would protect against arbitrary detention. See Verdugo-Urquidez,
494 U.S. at 278 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (“All would agree, for instance, that the dictates of the
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The D.C. Circuit’s decision in Kiyemba v. Obama, 555 F.3d 1022 (D.C. Cir. 2009)
(Kiyemba I), does not preclude the application of due process at Guantánamo. That decision
addressed only the narrow question of whether due process authorizes entry and release into the
United States of non-citizens without property or presence in the country – a particular context in
which the executive’s authority to regulate immigration is maximal. Id. at 1026-27. Indeed, this
limited reading of Kiyemba I is the only one consistent with Boumediene or even subsequent
panel decisions of the D.C. Circuit. See Kiyemba v. Obama, 561 F.3d 509, 514 n.4 (D.C. Cir.
2009) (Kiyemba II) (“[W]e assume arguendo these alien detainees have the same constitutional
rights . . . as . . . U.S. citizens” detained by the U.S. military in Iraq); id. at 518 n.4 (Kavanaugh,
J., concurring) (“[A]s explained in the opinion of the Court and in this concurring opinion, the
detainees do not prevail in this case even if they are right about the governing legal framework:
Even assuming that the Guantánamo detainees . . . possess constitutionally based due process
rights” they would not prevail); Kiyemba v. Obama, 605 F.3d 1046, 1048 (D.C. Cir. 2010)
(Kiyemba III) (“[P]etitioners never had a constitutional right to be brought to this country and
released.”); id. at 1051 (Rogers, J., concurring) (“Whatever role due process and the Geneva
Conventions might play with regard to granting the writ, petitioners cite no authority that due
process or the Geneva Conventions confer a right of release in the continental United States.”).
Cf. Aamer v. Obama, 742 F.3d 1023, 1039 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (“As the government does not press
the issue, we shall, for purposes of this case, assume without deciding that the constitutional right
Guantánamo.”).
Unsurprisingly, therefore, the government has conceded, and subsequent decisions of the
D.C. Circuit have assumed, that the Ex Post Facto Clause of the Constitution, U.S. Const. art. I, §
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Bahlul v. United States, 767 F.3d 1, 18 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (en banc) (noting that government
concedes Ex Post Facto Clause applies at Guantánamo); id. at 49 (Rogers, J., concurring)
(“[Boumediene’s] analysis of the extraterritorial reach of the Suspension Clause applies to the Ex
Post Facto Clause because the detainees’ status and location at Guantánamo Bay are the same,
and the government has pointed to no distinguishing ‘practical obstacles’ to its application.”); id.
at 65 n.3 (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting) (“As the Government concedes, the Boumediene analysis
leads inexorably to the conclusion that the ex post facto right applies at Guantánamo.”). As
citizens in U.S. territories requires a ‘functional’ rather than ‘formalistic’ analysis of the
particular constitutional provision and the particular territory at issue. . . . In Boumediene, the
Court determined that Guantánamo was a de facto U.S. territory—akin to Puerto Rico, for
example, and not foreign territory.” Id. (distinguishing Johnson v. Eisentrager, 339 U.S. 763,
777-81 (1950)); see also Torres v. Puerto Rico, 442 U.S. 465, 469 (1979) (Due Process Clause
applies in Puerto Rico); Haitian Ctrs. Council v. McNary, 969 F.2d 1326, 1343 (2d Cir. 1992)
vacated as moot, Sale v. Haitian Ctrs. Council, 509 U.S. 918 (1993).47
Accordingly, whatever the case may be with respect to due process rights to enter the
United States for release addressed in the Kiyemba cases, it is plain that some measure of due
47
The D.C. Circuit’s decisions in Rasul v. Myers, 563 F.3d 527 (D.C. Cir. 2009), and Al
Madhwani v. Obama, 642 F.3d 1071 (D.C. Cir. 2011), are not to the contrary. Those decisions
specifically avoided due process claims brought by current and former detainees.
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Petitioners’ continuing detention violates their fundamental due process rights in at least
three respects. First, detention without charge or trial of this length, which is still without
foreseeable end and potentially permanent, violates the Due Process Clause’s durational limits
on detention; under President Trump’s animus-driven decree to prevent the release of any
detainee regardless of individual circumstance or bona fide security assessments renders such
Second, indefinite detention of this nature can no longer be justified under Supreme
Court precedent when it was based upon a mere preponderance of the evidence (and other
defective procedural protections), and an obsolete detention standard that asks only whether a
petitioner had – 15 years prior – been part of a group that was then targetable under the AUMF.
At this point, these features make the risk of erroneous detention too great and likewise compel
Third, for Petitioners Al Bihani and Nasser, who have been approved for transfer through
legitimate purpose, as the government itself has determined; their detentions are thus particularly
action; it is designed to limit excessive or arbitrary executive action. Accordingly, the Due
Process Clause “contains a substantive component that bars certain arbitrary, wrongful
government actions, regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.”
Foucha, 504 U.S. at 80 (1992). Petitioners have been detained without charge at Guantánamo in
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some cases for more than 15 years – longer than the duration of any prior military conflict in
U.S. history. The individual facts and circumstances of their cases – what they may or may not
have done, or who they may have or not associated with 15 years ago – are essentially irrelevant
to the decision to continue depriving them of liberty; their detention is driven by a new de facto
executive branch policy – contrary to the policies of the past two administrations – to prevent
Specifically, the Supreme Court has instructed that substantive due process places limits
on the duration of executive detention – undertaken for special circumstances outside criminal
process – of the kind at issue here. See Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678, 692 (2001) (“A statute
permitting the indefinite detention of an alien would raise a serious constitutional problem.”); see
also Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 384 (2005) (recognizing that detention only authorized for
“a period consistent with the purpose” of the original detention); United States v. Salerno, 481
U.S. 739, 747 (1987) (upholding pre-trial civil detention statute in part because maximum length
of detention was “limited by the stringent time limitations of the Speedy Trial Act”). Indeed, the
Court in Hamdi recognized that the purpose for which the Court ratified an initial “enemy
48
These due process limitations in effect mirror the normative constitutional considerations set
forth in the Constitution’s Bill of Attainder provisions, U.S. Const. art I, §§ 9, 10, which likewise
serve as an important “constitutional bulwark in favor of personal security and private rights.”
The Federalist No. 44, at 218 (James Madison) (Terrence Ball ed., 2003). Even though Trump’s
actions are not codified in traditional legislative form, his decision to single out “specially
designated groups or persons” – not because of conduct but because of their unpopular status –
undermines the separation of powers principles embedded in that constitutional constraint and
further counsels for judicial scrutiny. Nixon v. Adm’r of General Servs., 433 U.S. 425, 447
(1977). This is particularly so where Trump’s actions are partly attributable to intemperate and
mal-formed appeals to populist and xenophobic animus toward Muslims. See id. at 480 (Bill of
Attainder Clause animated by the “fear that the legislature, in seeking to pander to an inflamed
popular constituency, will find it expedient to assume the mangle of judge – or worse still, lynch
mob.”). Accordingly, Petitioners also contend that the President’s non-judicial determination to
indefinitely detain them is in violation of the Bill of Attainder Clause.
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combatant” detention – incapacitation from battle – had to be time bound. Hamdi, 542 U.S. at
521 (holding that “indefinite or perpetual detention” is impermissible); id. at 536 (“[A] state of
war is not a blank check for the President.”); see also Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 797-98 (courts
may be required to define the outer boundaries of war powers if terrorism continues to pose a
The court must reconcile any detention authority with the substantive limitations on due
process and recognize such authority is limited. See Hussain v. Obama, 134 S. Ct. 1621 (2014)
(statement of Justice Breyer respecting denial of certiorari) (Supreme Court has not “considered
whether, assuming detention on these bases is permissible, either the AUMF or the Constitution
limits the duration of detention”). Cf. Ali v. Obama, 736 F.3d 542, 553 (D.C. Cir. 2013)
(Edwards, J., concurring) (“It seems bizarre, to say the least, that [a detainee] who has never
been charged with or found guilty of a criminal act and who has never ‘planned, authorized,
committed or aided [any] terrorist attacks’ is now marked with a life sentence.”). Because
In habeas proceedings conducted years ago, the government justified (and, over
Petitioners’ objection, the court accepted) Petitioners’ ongoing detention by satisfying a mere
preponderance of the evidence standard that Petitioners were “part of or substantially supported”
Al Qaeda or the Taliban at the time of their capture. See, e.g., Gherebi v. Obama, 609 F. Supp.
22
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2d 43, 71 (D.D.C. 2009).49 Against a backdrop of an express executive branch policy to close
the prison, the government proffered (and the Court accepted) such a low burden of proof, with
its attendant risk of error, and a substantive detention standard requiring no more than
membership or indirect support, on the theory that these were temporary wartime detentions that
That construct has long since dissipated. Petitioners’ detention can no longer be based
upon “no higher degree of proof than applies in a negligence case.” Woodby v. INS, 385 U.S.
276, 285 (1966). There is no precedent in the law that would tolerate such prolonged, indefinite
detention based on a preponderance standard and its correspondingly heightened risk of error. In
evaluating the constitutionality of prolonged detention schemes, the Supreme Court has
consistently required no less than clear and convincing evidence. See, e.g., Woodby, 385 U.S. at
286 (1966) (deportation); Kansas v. Hendricks, 521 U.S. 346, 352 (1997) (civil commitment of
sex offenders); Foucha, 504 U.S. at 81 (civil commitment of criminal defendant found not guilty
by reason of insanity); Salerno, 481 U.S. at 747 (pre-trial detention based on dangerousness);
Nowak v. United States, 356 U.S. 660, 663 (1958) (denaturalization); see also United States v.
Jordan, 256 F.3d. 922, 923 (9th Cir. 2011) (sentence enhancements that would have an
“extremely disproportionate” effect on the sentence relative to the offense must be proved by
Indeed, the government’s asserted security interests have only grown weaker since the
initial apprehension and detention of Petitioners. At the same time, 16 years into their detention
49
The government may detain “persons who were part of, or substantially supported, Taliban or
al-Qa[e]da forces or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or
its coalition partners, including any person who has committed a belligerent act, or has directly
supported hostilities, in aid of such enemy forces.” Gherebi, 609 F. Supp. 2d at 53.
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for some – a sentence that resembles the upper range of sentences for felony convictions that are
based upon a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, it is Petitioners who now face an
intolerable burden. See Rasul, 542 U.S. at 488 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (“[A]s the period of
detention stretches from months to years, the case for continued detention to meet military
exigencies becomes weaker.”). Due process cannot tolerate imprisonment without end on such
thinly-based proof.
Likewise, the procedural protections that had been in place when courts validated the
legality of these detentions years ago further undermine the legality of continuing – and
potentially lifetime detention. See, e.g., Latif v. Obama, 666 F.3d 746, 755 (D.C. Cir. 2011)
1102, 1105-06 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (accepting the “conditional probability” that otherwise unreliable
evidence might be reliable if assessed in light of other, often unreliable evidence); Al-Bihani, 590
F.3d. at 879 (“hearsay is always admissible” in these cases); id. at 873, n.2 (visiting Al Qaeda
explained, the procedural rules accepted by the court years ago have “call[ed] the game in the
government’s favor” and denied detainees the “‘meaningful opportunity’ to contest the
lawfulness of [their] detention guaranteed by Boumediene.” Latif, 666 F.3d at 770, 779 (Tatel,
J., dissenting).
detention standard focused solely on past conduct or association, rather than one grounded in
present conditions: continuing detention must be connected to its ostensible purpose. See
Salerno, 481 U.S. at 750-51 (detention under carefully limited circumstances, including proof by
clear and convincing evidence that a person presents an “identified and articulable threat” and
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“no conditions of release can reasonably assure” public safety, satisfies due process); Hendricks,
521 U.S. at 358 (requiring proof of past violent conduct coupled with an additional present
condition to justify indefinite commitment); Foucha, 504 U.S. at 77 (“Even if the initial
commitment was permissible, ‘it could not constitutionally continue after that basis no longer
existed.’”). Yet Petitioners may well remain detained for their lifetime based on allegations – for
many, still disputed – that 15 years ago their actions demonstrated membership or support for Al
Qaeda or the Taliban.50 For some detainees, potential lifetime detention follows from
See, e.g., Razak Ali v. Obama, 741 F. Supp. 2d 19, 26 (D.D.C. 2011) (petitioner’s presence at
guesthouse for two weeks is “enough, alone, to find he was more likely than not” a member of
of the kind and quality used in these cases. Due process compels robust judicial intervention and
50
For any subsequent habeas petitions adjudicating the factual or legal basis for detention, in the
event the court does not find that Petitioners’ continuing detention violates due process, the court
should revisit and require refinement of the legal basis and procedures for Petitioners’ detentions
– including whether there is clear and convincing evidence that a Petitioner is, under current
circumstances, likely to “return to the battlefield,” and thus that his detention continues to serve
its only lawful purpose. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 517; id. at 522, n.1 (“the permissible bounds of
the category [of individuals who may be lawfully detained] will be defined by the lower courts as
subsequent cases are presented to them”). Only then, consistent with the protections against
limitless non-criminal detention, could due process be satisfied. See Boumediene, 553 U.S. at
781 (quoting Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 (1976) (due process requires consideration
of “the risk of an erroneous deprivation of [a liberty interest] and the probable value, if any, of
additional or substitute procedural safeguards”)).
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Two Petitioners – Tofiq Nasser Awad Al Bihani and Abdul Latif Nasser – have been
cleared for transfer from Guantánamo. That is, all of the U.S. military, intelligence and law
enforcement agencies with a stake in the detentions at Guantánamo have concluded there is no
reason to continue to hold these petitioners. Despite their clearances, they will continue to be
held – likely up to three or even seven more years – for no purpose other than to fulfill President
The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that due process requires that noncriminal
detention must be reasonably tied to its ostensible purpose. See, e.g., Clark v. Martinez, 543
U.S. 371, 384 (2005) (detention only authorized for “a period consistent with the purpose of
effectuating removal”); Zadvydas, 533 U.S. at 699 (same); Kansas v. Hendricks, 521 U.S. 346,
363-64 (1997) (upholding statute requiring civil confinement for sex offenders in part because it
provided for immediate release once an individual no longer posed a threat to others); Foucha v.
Louisiana, 504 U.S. 71, 86 (1992) (ordering petitioner’s release from commitment to mental
institution because there was no longer any evidence of mental illness); O’Connor v. Donaldson,
422 U.S. 563, 575 (1975) (even if civil commitment was founded upon a constitutionally
adequate basis, it “[cannot] constitutionally continue after that basis no longer existed”); Jackson
v. Indiana, 406 U.S. 715, 738 (1972) (“due process requires that the nature and duration of
commitment bear some reasonable relation to the purpose for which the individual is
committed.”).
Yet Petitioners Al Bihani and Nasser remain in detention not because of anything they
allegedly did, or anyone they allegedly associated with, but because of the government’s failure
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to implement its discretionary decision to release them, and now, President Trump’s punitive
For example, the government approved Petitioner Nasser for transfer to his home country
of Morocco in July 2016. On December 28, 2016, the Department of State and the Department
of Defense received an affirmative response from Morocco to State’s diplomatic note regarding
the security assurances required for Nasser’s transfer. However, as the government admitted in
response to Nasser’s emergency motion in January 2017, days before the end of the Obama
administration, requesting the court to waive the 30-day congressional notice requirement, “the
Secretary of Defense did not make a final decision regarding the transfer . . . as he elected to
leave that decision to his successor.”51 The court declined to order release. Now, almost ten
months later, no review has taken place, nor has the Department of Defense instituted any
procedural mechanism for such review to take place. Bureaucratic inaction now means that
Nasser is sentenced to lifetime detention under the Trump administration absent a court order.
The current executive’s open hostility to transferring any detainees, no less those already
administratively cleared for transfer, cries out for principled and courageous judicial
intervention.52
51
See Resp’t’s Resp. to Pet’r’s Emer. Mot. for Order Effecting Release at 6-7, Nasser v. Obama,
05-CV-0764 (CKK), (D.D.C. Aug. 18, 2017) (dkt no. 259).
52
Another detainee, not a party to the instant motion, was similarly stranded at Guantánamo
despite his clearance for repatriation to Algeria. That detainee, Sufyian Barhoumi (ISN 694),
similarly filed an emergency motion in January 2017 seeking waiver of the 30-day congressional
notice requirement. The government opposed, conceding that while Barhoumi’s detention was
“no longer necessary,” he had not yet been transferred because the Secretary of Defense refused
to sign certification paperwork required by Congressional transfer restrictions “at this time” due
to factors including those “not related to Petitioner himself.” Barhoumi remains detained at
Guantánamo, and to our knowledge there have been no efforts made by the Trump
administration to accomplish his transfer home to Algeria despite the fact that there have been no
concerns raised by Algeria’s monitoring of the 15-odd Guantánamo detainees who have been
repatriated there in the past.
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Petitioner Al Bihani remains detained nearly eight years after the government determined
that he could be transferred under appropriate conditions. In early 2002, Al Bihani was
apprehended in Iran, outside of any active combat zone, on suspicion that he was affiliated with
the terrorist organization Al-Qaeda. See Al-Bihani v. Obama, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 107590
*26 (D.D.C., Sept. 22, 2010). For several weeks he was held at the CIA Detention Site
COBALT, a CIA “black site,” where he was subjected to torture that was not approved by the
Department of Justice and not authorized by CIA Headquarters.53 On or about February 2003,
Al Bihani was transferred to Guantánamo, where he has remained imprisoned for nearly 15
years. Al-Bihani, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 107590 at *26. In 2010, the Obama administration’s
Guantánamo Review Task Force designated Al Bihani, along with 29 other Yemeni detainees,
for “conditional detention,” meaning that these detainees could be released under appropriate
conditions.54 Subsequently, the State Department began making diplomatic arrangements for the
transfer of these detainees and over the course of years, submitted requests for information to Al
Bihani’s counsel in connection with identifying a third country to which to transfer Petitioner.
Counsel provided robust and timely responses to all such requests. By the end of the Obama
administration, the U.S. government transferred all of the other 29 Yemeni detainees who were
designated for conditional detention to third countries. In April 2016, the Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia agreed to receive and resettle Al Bihani, along with nine other detainees who had been
53
See Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Committee Study of the Central Intelligence
Agency’s Detention and Interrogation Program at 101-02 (Dec. 3, 2014).
54
See Guantánamo Review Dispositions (Jan. 22, 2010),
https://www.hsdl.org/?view&did=792419.
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cleared for transfer; however, in the days leading up to the transfer, it became apparent that Al
To date, the government has not indicated any reason why Al Bihani was not transferred,
or why he should not be transferred consistent with the process and standards in place by the
executive branch and the treatment of every other similarly situated detainee. Since President
Trump took office, Al Bihani’s counsel has made several attempts to speak to the administration,
including the Department of State, but has not received any concrete guidance or information
with regard to Al Bihani’s transfer. In sum, there have been no indications that the Trump
administration has made any meaningful effort to transfer Al Bihani despite his cleared status.
The only positive-law authority under which the executive branch claims it can continue
to detain Petitioners is the Authorization for Use of Military Force (“AUMF”), Pub. L. 107-40,
AUMF § 2(a). The Supreme Court has permitted limited detention as a “necessary and
Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 520. Yet, the AUMF no longer authorizes Petitioners’ detentions for several
reasons.
55
See Charlie Savage, Nine Guantánamo Prisoners From Yemen Are Sent to Saudi Arabia, N.Y.
Times (Apr. 16, 2016), http://nyti.ms/2m27R15.
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First, the terms of the statute do not permit indefinite, unreviewable detention of the sort
Petitioners now endure. Second, the laws of war do not permit perpetual detention unmoored to
the only legitimate purpose of wartime detention – to prevent return to the battlefield. Last, any
AUMF authority, based on the laws of war, that may once have existed to justify the detention of
individuals captured 15 years ago has since “unraveled,” Hamdi, 542 U.S. 520, and cannot
support the continued detention of Petitioners. Indeed, the Court should construe the AUMF
narrowly to limit the duration of Petitioners’ detention in order to avoid the serious constitutional
concerns that would be raised by a statute that authorizes such non-criminal detention potentially
for the remainder of their lives. See Ashwander v. Tennessee, 297 U.S. 288 (1936).
While the AUMF permits the use of “necessary and appropriate force” against a narrow
set of groups or individuals connected to the September 11 attacks in order to prevent “future
acts of international terrorism against the United States,” the statute “does not authorize
unlimited, unreviewable detention.” Basardh v. Obama, 612 F. Supp. 2d 30, 34 (D.D.C. 2009).
Cf. Al Ginco v. Obama, 626 F. Supp. 2d 123 (D.D.C. 2009) (Leon, J.) (granting the writ where
the purpose of AUMF detention is not served). This is especially so as to Petitioners the
Indeed, in Hamdi, the Supreme Court stated unequivocally that the AUMF does not
authorize indefinite or perpetual detention, and “indefinite detention for the purpose of
interrogation is not authorized.” 542 U.S. at 521. Even in circumstances where detention may
justification may “unravel” if the practical circumstances of the conflict are entirely unlike those
that informed the development of the laws of war – in other words, if they allow for perpetual
30
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war and thus perpetual detention. Id. at 521. See infra, Section II.C. The AUMF’s delegation of
“necessary and appropriate” force does not justify Petitioners’ indefinite, potentially permanent,
detention.
B. The Laws of War, Which Inform the AUMF, Do Not Authorize Detention
that Is No Longer Tied to Its Ostensible Purpose
Because the AUMF does not directly authorize detention, that authority must be found
elsewhere. As Hamdi held, the power to detain may be inferred from the right to use force under
“longstanding law-of-war principles.” 542 U.S. at 518, 521. Under the laws of war, detention
may not be punitive, and is permitted only “to prevent captured individuals from returning to the
field of battle and taking up arms once again.” Id. at 518; id. at 519 (although the AUMF “does
not use specific language of detention,” detention “to prevent a combatant’s return to the
battlefield is a fundamental incident of waging war” and thus permitted). Given that Yasser
Hamdi was allegedly captured with a weapon on the battlefield in Afghanistan in 2001, the Court
concluded that detention was authorized in those “narrow circumstances” – where necessary to
prevent return to an active Afghan battlefield that it determined continued to exist in 2004 – but
could last “no longer than active hostilities” (which did not mean perpetually, see supra, Section
II.A). Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 520 (citing Third Geneva Convention art. 118, which provides that
“Prisoners of war shall be released and repatriated without delay after cessation of active
hostilities”).56
56
For its part, the government has long acknowledged that its AUMF detention authority is
informed and limited by these law-of-war principles. See Resp’ts’ Mem. Regarding the Gvt’s
Detention Authority Relative to Detainees Held at Guantánamo Bay at 1, In Re Guantánamo Bay
Detainee Litigation, No. 08-mc-442 (TFH) (D.D.C. Mar. 13, 2009) (dkt. no. 1689) (“Principles
derived from law-of-war rules governing international armed conflicts, therefore, must inform
the interpretation of the detention authority Congress has authorized for the current armed
conflict.”) (citing Geneva Conventions).
31
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Even if the court were to assume Petitioners were all captured in similar circumstances –
and they were not – the limited purpose for which the laws of war may have authorized their
detention at Guantánamo to prevent return to the battlefield, has long since faded more than 15
years after their capture. The conflict against the core Al Qaeda organization in connection with
which they were captured has ended and been taken over by disparate battles involving new
groups. See infra, Section II.C. The battlefields in which they were captured, if any, are no
more, thus dissolving the only legitimate purpose of their detention. The baseless and arbitrary
nature of these detentions is particularly clear in the case of Petitioners the government has
approved for transfer and effectively conceded there is no reason to continue to detain.
In addition, even assuming Petitioners were once part of a targetable group, their past
membership alone is no longer enough, if it ever was, to presume a threat of return to the
battlefield. In Hamdi, detention was arguably justified in 2004 when there were active hostilities
in Afghanistan, upon a sole finding that Hamdi was a member of forces engaged in those
hostilities, because such a factual finding reasonably supported a presumption that his
membership made a return to the battlefield more likely. But the relevant inquiry today – 14
years after Hamdi was decided – of whether Petitioners’ detention continues to serve a lawful
purpose, cannot be limited to membership in a targetable group. Given the radically different
facts on the ground, it simply no longer can follow that such membership alone presumes any
57
Any perspective on the laws of war confirms this understanding. In situations of international
armed conflict, fought between nation-states and governed by the Third and Fourth Geneva
Conventions, detention is not authorized where it no longer serves an “imperative security
purpose” (in the case of civilians) or where a detainee is “no longer likely to take part in
hostilities against the Detaining Power” (in the case of combatants). Jean-Marie Henckaerts &
Louise Doswald-Beck, 1 Customary International Humanitarian Law, Rule 99, at 344-45 (Int’l
Comm. of the Red Cross, Cambridge Univ. Press reprtg. 2009). This limit on detention is even
32
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Petitioners cannot continue to be detained when the original purpose of their detention
has evaporated and they remain in Guantánamo for reasons wholly apart from legitimate needs
* * *
In sum, Petitioners’ detention is – and will remain – arbitrary and perpetual by any
reasonable measure, which the Court should conclude violates the AUMF. As Justice Souter
explained in his opinion concurring in the Hamdi judgment, when a court is asked to infer
detention authority from a wartime resolution such as the AUMF, it must assume that Congress
intended to place no greater restraint on liberty than was unmistakably indicated by the language
it used; the qualified “necessary and appropriate” force language of the AUMF necessarily
suggests that AUMF detention authority is equally limited. 542 U.S. at 544 (quoting Ex Parte
Endo, 323 U.S. 283, 300 (1944)). The Court should, consistent with the canon of constitutional
avoidance, see Ashwander v. Tennessee, 297 U.S. 288 (1936), similarly construe the AUMF
narrowly in order to avoid the obvious, serious constitutional problems that a statute permitting
Petitioners’ indefinite, arbitrary detention would raise. See Zadvydas, 533 U.S. at 689-90
stricter in the context of non-international armed conflicts, including the conflict with Al Qaeda,
see Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557, 629-30 (2006). In non-international armed conflicts,
“the need for a valid reason for the deprivation of liberty concerns both the initial reason for such
deprivation and the continuation of such deprivation.” Henckaerts, supra, Rule 99, at 348; id.,
Rule 128(C), at 451 (“Persons deprived of their liberty in relation to a non-international armed
conflict must be released as soon as the reasons for the deprivation of their liberty cease to
exist.”).
58
Although
foreclosed by D.C. Circuit precedent, see Khairkhwa v. Obama, 703 F.3d 547, 550
(D.C. Cir. 2012), Petitioners also preserve the argument that their detention is not authorized by
the AUMF because the government has never contended and/or established that they were
engaged in armed conflict against the United States in Afghanistan prior to their
capture. See Hussain v. Obama, 134 S. Ct. 1621 (2014) (statement of Justice Breyer respecting
denial of certiorari) (“The Court has not directly addressed whether the AUMF authorizes, and
the Constitution permits, detention on the basis that an individual was part of al Qaeda, or part of
the Taliban, but was not ‘engaged in an armed conflict against the United States’ in Afghanistan
prior to his capture.’”).
33
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(construing statute authorizing detention of admitted aliens to contain reasonable time limitation
Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 380-81 (2005) (construing statute to limit detention of aliens not
formally admitted to the United States to avoid constitutional issues); see also INS v. St. Cyr, 533
U.S. 289, 299-300 (2001) (applying habeas statute and stating that “if an otherwise acceptable
construction of a statute would raise serious constitutional problems, and where an alternative
interpretation of the statute is ‘fairly possible,’ we are obligated to construe the statute to avoid
such problems”) (citation omitted). In doing so, the Court would be well within its jurisdiction
and fairly construing the plain language of the statute to avoid otherwise serious constitutional
concerns. See Skilling v. United States, 561 U.S. 411 n.44 (2010).59
C. Any Authority to Detain Petitioners Under the AUMF and the Laws of War
Has Unraveled
Alternatively, the Court should grant relief because whatever traditional law-of-war
detention authority may have existed at the time of Petitioners’ capture and initial detention has
by now unraveled, 15 years after the fact. In Hamdi, the Court’s finding of detention authority
under the AUMF turned on the detention situation presented to it in 2004 – e.g., the detention of
an individual captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan in 2001 – and traditional law of war
principles permitting detention for the duration of the same active hostilities to prevent return to
59
Nor does the D.C. Circuit’s substantial body of precedent holding that the AUMF authorizes
the detention of individuals who are “part of” the Taliban, Al Qaeda or associated forces, and
whom the government has determined it is necessary and appropriate to detain as part of ongoing
armed conflict, preclude such relief. Although D.C. Circuit case law unquestionably affords the
government broad authority to hold Guantánamo detainees, no decision of that court has
addressed the question presented here – whether the AUMF permits indefinite detention, likely
for life absent a court order granting the writ, particularly in circumstances where there is no
longer a legitimate purpose for detention. See also Hussain v. Obama, 134 S. Ct. 1621 (2014)
(statement of Justice Breyer respecting denial of certiorari) (Supreme Court has not “considered
whether, assuming detention on these bases is permissible, either the AUMF or the Constitution
limits the duration of detention”).
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the battlefield. The Court acknowledged, however, the challenge of granting the executive
branch authority to detain in an unconventional conflict that it recognized could last longer than
any conventional armed conflict. To anticipate this potential unacceptable result, it cautioned
that “if the practical circumstances of a given conflict are entirely unlike those of the conflicts
that informed the development of the law of war,” detention authority under the AUMF might
To the extent an armed conflict with the Taliban, Al Qaeda or associated forces continues
today, which Petitioners do not concede, the practical circumstances of that conflict have plainly
become entirely unlike those of the conflicts that have informed the development of the laws of
war, and the AUMF can no longer justify Petitioners’ detention. To begin, Petitioners are now in
the position of the perpetual detainee that so concerned the Hamdi court. To the extent the
government claims there is an ongoing fight against terrorism, that fight is now the longest
military conflict in U.S. history, bar none. See Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 771 (noting with
concern, that by 2008, that post-September 11 conflict was already among the longest wars in
American history). Already a decade ago, senior government officials characterized the conflict
discussed, will continue for the foreseeable future not for any legitimate purpose grounded in the
laws of war, but largely for executive branch posturing and muscle-flexing.
Second, Petitioners are no longer being held in connection with any ongoing armed
conflict involving an organized armed group responsible for 9/11, as the AUMF, as informed by
the laws of war, requires, and as the Hamdi Court found in authorizing detention under the
AUMF. The core Al Qaeda organization they are accused of being part of has been decimated in
60
Harold H. Koh, Legal Adviser (2009-2013), U.S. Dep’t of State, How to End the Forever
War?, Speech Before the Oxford Union, May 7, 2013.
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the 15 years since Petitioners’ capture. Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda’s core leadership are
dead, imprisoned or detained.61 What are left are remnants against which U.S. hostilities in
Afghanistan and elsewhere are not directed today.62 Instead, Petitioners are ostensibly being
held in connection with an ever-expanding “war” against terrorism involving new actors bearing
no actual connection to Al Qaeda or 9/11, which appears to have neither geographic, durational
nor organizational constraints.63 The laws of war, permissive as they can be, did not contemplate
61
See, e.g., Text of President Obama’s May 23 Speech on National Security, Wash. Post (May
23, 2013) (Today, Osama bin Laden is dead, and so are many of his top lieutenants. . . . Today,
the core of Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan is on the path to defeat. . . . They have not
carried out a successful attack on our homeland since 9/11.”), http://wapo.st/2D4TSQp; Leon E.
Panetta, Sec’y of Def., The Fight Against Al Qaeda: Today and Tomorrow, Speech at The Center
for a New American Security, Nov. 20, 2012 (“Over the last few years, al-Qaeda’s leadership,
their ranks have been decimated. . . . As a result of prolonged military and intelligence
operations, Al-Qaeda has been significantly weakened in Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Its most
effective leaders are gone. Its command, and control have been degraded, and its safe haven is
shrinking.”), http://bit.ly/2Egbp7l; see also Mark Mazzetti & Matthew Rosenberg, U.S.
Considers Faster Pullout in Afghanistan, N.Y. Times (July 8, 2013), http://nyti.ms/2CO0IMm;
Inaugural Address by President Barack Obama, Jan. 21, 2013 (“A decade of war is now
ending.”).
62
See Mot. to Grant Pet’n for Writ of Habeas Corpus, Al Warafi v. Obama, No. 09-CV-2368
(RCL) (D.D.C. filed Feb. 26, 2015) (dkt. no. 80) (collecting statements by President Obama).
Although the government contends that it retains detention authority under the AUMF because
fighting continues in Afghanistan, it concedes that the U.S. combat mission has ended, and U.S.
involvement has transitioned to training, advising and assisting Afghan national forces and
counterterrorism operations. See Resp’ts’ Opp’n to Pet’r’s Mot. to Grant Pet’n for Writ of
Habeas Corpus, Al Warafi v. Obama, No. 09-CV-2368 (RCL) (D.D.C. filed Apr. 24, 2015) (dkt.
no. 84-1).
63
Steve Coll, Name Calling, The New Yorker (Mar. 4, 2013) (“Experts refer to these groups by
their acronyms, such as AQI (Al Qaeda in Iraq), AQAP (Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,
mainly in Yemen), and AQIM (Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, the North African group that
has recently been attacked by French forces in Mali). Each group has a distinctive local history
and a mostly local membership. None have strong ties to ‘core Al Qaeda’”),
http://bit.ly/2ABqTk9. For example, the government has invoked the AUMF to attack groups
like Al Shabaab in Somalia, which did not exist until many years after the September 11 attacks
and are largely regionally-focused. See Charlie Savage, Obama Expands War With Al Qaeda to
Include Shabab in Somalia, N.Y. Times (Nov. 27, 2016) (“The executive branch’s stretching of
the 2001 war authorization against the original Al Qaeda to cover other Islamist groups in
countries far from Afghanistan — even ones, like the Shabab, that did not exist at the time — has
36
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such sweeping detention authority. The practical circumstances of today’s conflict bear no
resemblance to those that informed the development of the laws of war; as such, the Hamdi
court’s understanding that detention may be authorized for the “duration of the relevant conflict”
under the laws of war and the AUMF has eroded. The Court is obligated to look behind the
constantly elastic “forever war” rhetoric of the executive branch,64 consistent with its habeas
role. It should conclude that the AUMF does not permit such lifetime detention of a kind
III. THE COURT SHOULD EXERCISE ITS BROAD, EQUITABLE COMMON LAW
HABEAS AUTHORITY TO GRANT RELIEF WITHOUT FURTHER DELAY.
As the Supreme Court has explained, habeas corpus at its base seeks to ensure than any
deprivation of liberty is in accordance with law. See Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 745. And, because
“[t]he practice of arbitrary imprisonment[ ] [has] been, in all ages, [among] the favorite and most
formidable instruments of tyranny”; Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 744 (quoting The Federalist No.
84, at 512 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961)), the Boumediene Court repeatedly
emphasized the critical role of habeas as a check on arbitrary executive power. See Boumediene,
553 U.S. at 744-45, 783, 794, 797; see also INS v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 301 (the writ’s
prompted recurring objections from some legal and foreign policy experts.”),
http://nyti.ms/2D1jNIo.
64
As one commentator observed, “[A]s long as there are bands of violent Islamic radicals
anywhere in the world who find it attractive to call themselves Al Qaeda, a formal state of war
may exist between Al Qaeda and America. The Hundred Years War could seem a brief skirmish
in comparison.” See Coll, supra at n.63; see also Koh, supra at n.60 (“[I]f we are too loose in
who we consider to be ‘part of’ or ‘associated with’ Al Qaeda going forward, then we will
always have new enemies, and the Forever War will continue forever.”). The government also
notably invokes the AUMF as justification for attacking not only Al Qaeda franchise groups, but
also the Islamic State in Syria, even though that group did not exist until recently and is currently
fighting against Al Qaeda, as well as justification for attacking Syrian national forces fighting
both Al Qaeda and the Islamic State. See Marty Lederman, The Legal Theory Behind the
President’s New Military Initiative Against ISIL, JustSecurity.org (Sept. 14, 2014) (posting
statement from senior administration official).
37
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protections have been “strongest” when “reviewing the legality of Executive action.”). The
constitutional guarantee of habeas reflected in the Suspension Clause was designed to “protect
against cyclical abuses of power,” and ensure that the judiciary can deploy the common law writ
to “maintain the ‘delicate balance of governance’ that is itself the surest safeguard of liberty.”
accordance with law. It is not based on individualized considerations of any Petitioner’s status
or conduct. Like other policies initiated by this President, it is a reflection of executive will and
as well as reflexive opposition to prior executive action. The executive branch cannot, however,
“switch the constitution on or off at will.” Boumediene, 533 U.S. at 765. In such circumstances,
the judiciary’s obligation via the writ compels action. As explained by Professor Paul Halliday –
the pre-eminent historian of habeas corpus – the point of habeas corpus at common law was to
ensure that “justice should be done . . . even when the law had not previously provided the means
to do so” and “the word for this vast authority to do justice, even in the absence of previously
existing rules or remedy” is “equity.” Paul D. Halliday, Habeas Corpus from England to Empire
87 (2010); see id. at 30-31 (explaining that courts used habeas corpus to hold jailers to account
A central function of the Suspension Clause is to protect the “rights of the detained by
affirming the duty and authority of the judiciary to hold the jailer to account.” Boumediene, 553
U.S. at 745. And, that authority – indeed obligation – to hold the executive branch accountable
to law is independent of whether prior procedures afforded these detainees were adequate. See
Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 785 (“Even when the procedures authorizing detention are structurally
38
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sound, the Suspension Clause remains applicable and the writ relevant.”); see also Halliday,
Habeas Corpus at 104 (explaining the writ’s accountability mechanism included authority to
order release, not just for violation of substantive rights, but where detention “could not be
Dimension III: Habeas Corpus as an Instrument of Checks and Balances, 8 NE. U. L.J. 251, 305
(2016) (“The inherent authority to grant writs of habeas corpus in the absence of a valid
suspension is one of the attributes of the ‘judicial power’ that Article III grants.”)
The court has broad equitable power to authorize the relief requested by Petitioners.
“[C]ommon law habeas was, above all, an adaptable remedy. Its precise application and scope
changed depending upon the circumstances,” Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 779, which is why habeas
courts often did not follow black letter rules in order to afford the greater protections and
collateral review required for detentions outside of criminal process, id. at 780. Indeed, habeas
authorizes courts broadly to correct miscarriages of justice, McClesky v. Zant, 499 US. 467, 502
(1991); Harris v. Nelson, 394 U.S. 286, 291 (1969), and to impose flexible, pragmatic remedies,
Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 633 (1993). That broad authority “to formulate
appropriate orders for relief,” assuredly includes “if necessary, an order directing the prisoner’s
Perpetual detention of individuals outside the criminal process, approaching two decades
in some instances, and where driven by little more than executive fiat is precisely the place at
which the judiciary’s equitable habeas powers should be most adaptable and responsive.
did not just happen; they were made. Judges, not rules, made them. . . . By
negotiating settlements, by constraining – sometimes undermining – the statutes
or customs on which other magistrates acted, and by chastising those who
39
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wrongfully detained others, the justices defined what counted as jurisdiction and
what counted as liberties.
Halliday, Habeas Corpus at 101. Now, as then, the court is authorized to call the executive to
CONCLUSION
Executive fiat, untethered to a legitimate purpose authorized under the laws of war, does
not permit the perpetual detention of individuals who have already been confined for as many as
16 years without charge. The Constitution and congressional enactments impose meaningful
limits on the arbitrary and assertedly unreviewable power of this President. It is the duty of the
judicial branch to identify and enforce those limits. Petitioners’ writs of habeas corpus should be
granted.
Respectfully submitted,
REPRIEVE
Clive Stafford-Smith
Shelby Sullivan-Bennis
PO Box 3627
New York, NY 10163
(929) 376-8446
[email protected]
[email protected]
REPRIEVE
Clive Stafford-Smith
Shelby Sullivan-Bennis
PO Box 3627
New York, NY 10163
(929) 376-8446
[email protected]
[email protected]
41
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Charles H. Carpenter
CARPENTER LAW FIRM plc
210 North Higgins Avenue, Ste. 336
Missoula, Montana 59802
(406)543-0511
[email protected]
42
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43
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Darin Thompson
Assistant Federal Public Defender
Office of the Federal Public Defender
Skylight Office Tower, Ste 750
1660 W. 2nd St., NW
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
(216) 522-4856
Fax (216) 522-4321
REPRIEVE
Clive Stafford-Smith
Shelby Sullivan-Bennis
PO Box 3627
New York, NY 10163
(929) 376-8446
[email protected]
[email protected]
- and -
Mark Denbeaux
Charles Church
Denbeaux & Denbeaux
366 Kinderkamack Rd.
Westwood, NJ 07675
Amanda L. Jacobsen
University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Law,
Studiestraede 6
Copenhagen, Denmark 1455 K
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on January 11, 2018, I caused the Motion for Order Granting Writ of
Habeas Corpus to be filed with the Court and served on counsel for Respondents via the Court’s
CM/ECF system.
46
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––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– x
:
TOFIQ NASSER AWAD AL BIHANI (ISN 893), : Case Nos.
:
ABDU LATIF NASSER (ISN 244), : 04-cv-1194 (TFH) (ISN 569)
:
SHARQAWI AL HAJJ (ISN 1457), : 05-cv-23 (UNA) (ISN 841)
:
SANAD AL KAZIMI (ISN 1453), : 05-cv-764 (CKK) (ISN 244)
:
SUHAIL SHARABI (ISN 569), : 05-cv-1607 (RCL) (ISNs 1460, 1461)
:
SAID NASHIR (ISN 841), : 05-cv-2386 (RBW) (ISNs 893, 1453)
:
ABDUL RABBANI (ISN 1460), : 08-cv-1360 (EGS) (ISN 10016)
:
AHMED RABBANI (ISN 1461), : 08-cv-1440 (CKK) (ISN 10025)
:
ABDUL RAZAK (ISN 685), : 09-cv-745 (RCL) (ISN 1457)
:
ABDUL MALIK (ISN 10025), : 10-cv-1020 (RJL) (ISN 685)
: r
ABU ZUBAYDAH (ISN 10016), :
: P
Petitioners, : e
: t
v. : i
: t
DONALD J. TRUMP, et al., : i
: o
Respondents. : n
: e
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– x r
Z
a
[Proposed] ORDER
Case 1:05-cv-02386-RBW Document 2062-1 Filed 01/11/18 Page 2 of 2
Petitioners’ motion for an order granting the writ of habeas corpus is GRANTED as
follows:
Construing the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution to apply and limit the
28 U.S.C. § 2243, and the Court’s equitable, common-law habeas authority recognized in
Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723 (2008), and/or because the Authorization for Use of Military
Force, Pub. L. No. 107-40, § 2(a), 115 Stat. 224, 224 (2001), as interpreted by Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507 (2004), and the laws of war, can no longer authorize Petitioners’
detention, the Court concludes based on facts and circumstances common to Petitioners that their