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Preventive Detention Must be Repudiated and Overturned

Suzanne Ito,
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January 5, 2009

the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û's al-Marri case, in which we're challenging the military's indefinite detention of a legal U.S. resident in a South Carolina Navy brig. This case will be heard by the Supreme Court this term, and the government's brief is due on February 20.

It goes without saying that we're hoping for a complete 180-degree turnaround from the current administration's claim that the president can order the military to seize legal residents from their homes in the United States and detain them indefinitely without charge, and seeking an elimination by the Supreme Court of the dangerous precedent created by the lower court’s decision upholding that claim. ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û attorney Jonathan Hafetz, who's representing al-Marri, tells the Times:

If, as President-elect Obama has pledged, the rule of law in America is to be restored…then Mr. al-Marri’s military detention must cease and the lower court’s ruling upholding the president’s power to order the military to seize legal residents and American citizens from their homes and imprison them without charge, must be overturned.

To learn more about Mr. al-Marri, at our annual Supreme Court briefing.

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