Restore Habeas Corpus
YOUTUBE: SEN. DOBB
hank you Senator Dodd, this had better get passed.
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Restore Habeas Corpus
Become A Citizen Co-Sponsor:
This week, we have a critical opportunity to restore habeas
corpus.
The Habeas Corpus Restoration Act gives us a chance to reverse
one of the Bush Administration's many assaults on our civil
liberties.
We all want to make America safe from terrorism, but becoming a
nation that sanctions the unlawful detention of its own
residents -- detaining and jailing them without the chance to
appear before a judge -- does not make us safe. Instead, it
violates a value that we have held dear for centuries --
safeguarding our individual freedom before arbitrary state
action.
Please sign-on below as a citizen co-sponsor to the bipartisan
Leahy-Specter-Dodd Habeas Corpus Restoration Act.
Sign On To Co-Sponsor The Bill:
http://restore-habeas.org/
Please call your Senators and we'll track the citizen-generated
whip count through this tool.
http://restore-habeas.org/
his week, we have a critical opportunity to restore habeas
corpus.
The Habeas Corpus Restoration Act gives us a chance to reverse
one of the Bush Administration’s many assaults on our civil
liberties.
We all want to make America safe from terrorism, but becoming a
nation that sanctions the unlawful detention of its own
residents — detaining and jailing them without the chance to
appear before a judge — does not make us safe. Instead, it
violates a value that we have held dear for centuries —
safeguarding our individual freedom before arbitrary state
action.
You can sign on to co-sponsor the bill here.
Chris Dodd guest blogged over at Taylor Marsh on the importance
of restoring habeas. And Christy at FDL has a list of congress
critters we’re targeting for phone calls. C’mon…the Constitution
needs your help today.
http://www.firedoglake.com/2007/09/18/the-constitution-needs-your-help/
Criminal Bar Association Says Habeas Corpus Rights Need
Addressing
Lawfuel (press release), New Zealand - 19 hours ago
LAWFUEL - The Legal Newswire - The right to apply for habeas
corpus was in many respects anachronistic, given that remand
inmates had the right to appear ...
MORE:
LAWFUEL - The Legal Newswire - The right to apply for habeas
corpus was in many respects anachronistic, given that remand
inmates had the right to appear before a court every seven days
and were assisted by legal aid, said Criminal Bar Association of
New Zealand President, Graeme Newell.
Mr Newell, who was asked to comment on a Law Commission study
paper Further Reform of Habeas Corpus Procedure, said that in
those circumstances, prisoners using habeas corpus applications
as a means of complaining about the system were probably abusing
the process.
In his 19 years of practising criminal law, he had not needed to
apply once for a writ of habeas corpus.
However, said Mr Newell, in the international framework in which
prisoners were remanded on other than criminal matters - such as
the refugee context - there was obviously a need for the writ of
habeas corpus.
The Law Commission was asked by the Government to examine
practical difficulties arising in relation to habeas corpus
applications, and has issued a discussion document seeking
responses by September 17.
Law Commission President Sir Geoffrey Palmer said that, while
the writ of habeas corpus was a fundamental bulwark of
constitutional liberties, problems had recently arisen with it
in the courts and the commission believed that they needed to be
addressed. The Habeas Corpus Act 2001 was passed as a result of
a Law Commission report. Its purpose was to simplify habeas
corpus procedures.
Although it had done that, a number of practical problems had
emerged that had led to unnecessary court appearances and delays
in the process. The draft study paper, Further Reform of Habeas
Corpus Procedure, noted that the right of persons arrested or
detained to apply for habeas corpus was enshrined in section 23
(1) (c) of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990.
Section 9 of the Habeas Corpus Act 2001 required habeas corpus
applications to be given precedence over all other court
business, with judges and court staff being required to dispose
of them as a matter of priority and urgency. Appeals were also
required to be given precedence over other court business. The
document noted that this priority was a long-standing one.
“The dictates of priority and urgency are clearly appropriate,
because habeas corpus applications involve questions of
individual liberty. But it is questionable whether such
applications should be given priority over all other court
business. While liberty is an important value, it is not
difficult to envisage other cases that are deserving of at least
equal priority. Cases where the court needs to intervene to
ensure that children receive lifesaving medical treatment and
interim injunction applications to prevent publication of
material injurious to national security may be examples.”
The paper recommended that the requirement that habeas corpus
applications be given precedence over all other court business
be repealed but proposed that judges and court staff should
still be required to treat applications with priority and
urgency. “This would mean that it would be left to the court to
determine the relative priorities if a habeas corpus application
needed to be dealt with alongside other urgent court business.”
The commission noted that the act at present provided that an
inter partes hearing must be allocated no later than three
working days after the filing of a habeas corpus application. It
acknowledged that the three day time limit was consistent with
the need for urgency, but said that the strictness of the
requirement had caused difficulties in practice.
For example, in Togia v General Manager, Rimutaka Prison, an
application was filed late on a Monday and was set down for
hearing on Wednesday morning, as there was no available court
time on Thursday.
The case involved complex legal issues that Justice Harrison
decided could not be dealt with fully in view of the time
constraints. Accordingly, the court had made an order
“releasing” the applicant from detention in prison under an
interim recall order to detention in a residential care facility
under the Intellectual Disability (Compulsory Care and
Rehabilitation) Act 2003. The parties settled the habeas corpus
proceeding before the final hearing.
However, the paper said that, had the matter proceeded to a
final hearing, Mr Togia would have spent a month detained in a
secure care facility awaiting resolution of the legal issues
surrounding his detention. “Arguably, the matter could have been
dealt with more expeditiously by allowing the parties more time
to prepare fully prior to the initial hearing.”
The commission accordingly recommended that the three day time
frame remain the ordinary rule but that High Court judges be
given the ability to relax the requirement if the circumstances
required. The paper went on to say that section 16 conferred a
right of appeal against the refusal of a writ of habeas corpus,
but no right of appeal against the grant of a writ.
This was potentially problematic when the decision created a
legal precedent that affected other detained persons, as could
be seen from a series of habeas corpus decisions in the mental
health context relating to section 9 (2)(d) of the Mental Health
(Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992.
The document suggested that a right of appeal on points of law
where a writ of habeas corpus was granted should be enacted.
However, the legislature should make it clear that a successful
appeal did not result in the return to custody of the person who
had been granted the writ.
The commission noted that section 13 of the Habeas Corpus Act
provided for ancillary powers where the detainee was a child or
young person, including the power to transfer applications to
the Family Court. It proposed that section 13 be amended to make
it clear that, where the court decided that the most appropriate
response was to transfer an application to the Family Court, it
need not “determine” the application in accordance with section
14 first.
Another problem identified by the commission was the use of the
habeas corpus procedure in circumstances in which the issues
were not susceptible to summary determination by habeas corpus.
“Many applications of this kind are brought by prisoners in
prison. Some cases have involved wide-ranging complaints about
matters that have nothing to do with unlawful detention. Some
appear to have been brought in circumstances where the applicant
had known the procedure was wrong, for the purposes of securing
an early hearing.”
The document accordingly recommended the introduction of a power
to dismiss applications without the need for the defendant to
establish the lawfulness of the detention where the application
was statute-barred under section 15(1), or involved the wrong
procedure.
It also suggested that greater use of telephone hearings could
overcome some of the current practical problems
http://lawfuel.com/show-release.asp?ID=15129