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Indeed, the choice to try KSM and four other al Qaeda members in criminal courts underscores a lack of consistency and confusion. This could ultimately undermine the legal basis to hold terrorist detainees and hinder The United States' ability to collect intelligence effectively in the field.
The Bush administration used a patchwork of courts to prosecute terrorists, and this approach can be criticized on many levels. But it relied on a clear law-of-war framework as the baseline for its decisions. Federal criminal trials were reserved for U.S. citizens or people captured in the United States, like Jose Padilla. With the KSM decision, the Obama administration has adopted a three-tiered hierarchy -- criminal trials, military commissions, and indefinite preventive detention -- without articulating clearly the basis for such a system. This undercuts the legitimacy of the entirety of the legal system applied to detainees.
To start, KSM's trial could be seen as little more than a show trial. In the criminal justice system, the government presumes innocence. Common-law principles hold that it is better to let 10 guilty people go free than to have one innocent person suffer. But, as Sen. Lindsey Graham noted in a hearing with Attorney General Eric Holder, KSM and the four others will never be released from U.S. custody, regardless of the verdict. That's a political and national-security reality that diverges from the requirements of the criminal legal system -- turning the process into a grand legal fiction.
The KSM decision also effectively relegates military commissions to a second-tier legal system. The administration, which has revised the military commissions, is committed to relying on this process and now must defend it. This is hard to do when the criminal legal system is viewed as pre-eminent.
Additionally, the Obama administration has failed to clarify its venue-selection process. If the sole criterion is the government's likelihood of securing a guilty verdict -- as Holder has indicated -- that too does damage to the credibility of the process. The administration appears to be "system shopping," choosing a court for the likelihood of success and admissibility of evidence rather than selecting it by the nature of the alleged offense. These contortions make the legal process look like a vast legal fiction used simply to justify detention.
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