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Due Process Protections Afforded Defendants: A Comparison between the Proposed U.S. Military Commissions and U.S. General Courts-Martial
| Due process protections |
Military Commissions Under the President’s Military
Order of November 13 |
General Courts-Martial under the Uniform
Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) and Rules for Courts-Martial
(RCM) |
| Persons Subject to Military Jurisdiction |
Section 2 |
Any non-citizen who at “relevant times” is or was a member of Al
Qaeda; engaged in or aided acts of international terrorism; or who
knowingly harbored such a person. The relevant times are not
specified, and international terrorism is not defined. |
Arts. 2 & 18 |
Members of armed forced and certain related personnel; prisoners
of war in custody of armed forces; persons who by laws of war are
subject to trial by military tribunal. These latter terms are not
expressly defined. |
| Applicable Offenses |
Sections 1 & 4 |
The Order refers both to “violations of laws of war and other
applicable crimes” as well as to “any and all offenses triable by
military commission”. None of these terms are defined. |
Art. 18 |
Any offense made punishable by the UCMJ, which enumerates
offenses. |
| Arrest/ Indictment |
Section 2 & 3 |
The Order grants executive extraordinarily broad discretion. If
president determines in writing that he “has reason to believe” an
individual falls within the commission’s jurisdiction, the Secretary
of Defense shall detain that individual. No provision made for
separate charging or indictment procedure. Detention without trial
could be indefinite. |
Arts. 9, 32 & 34 |
No arrest without probable cause. A court-martial cannot be
convened until a thorough and impartial investigation and hearing,
serving functions similar to that conducted by a grand jury. The
accused and counsel may be present and cross-examine adverse
witnesses. |
| Right to counsel |
Section 4(c)(5) |
Yes. However, the Order does not state whether a defendant can
select his/her own defense attorney or whether one will be appointed
by the Secretary of Defense. It is not clear whether legal aid
is available. |
Art. 27 & 38, UCMJ |
Yes. Military counsel, provided gratis, will automatically be
provided, or the accused can request a specific military counsel by
name. The accused may choose to be represented by civilian
counsel, but at his expense. |
| Obligation of the Prosecution to Disclose Evidence |
Section 4 |
The Order is silent about disclosure obligations on the
prosecution. The Secretary of Defense will decide if the accused
will be informed of the nature of the charges filed against him or
her. The Secretary of Defense will also decide whether and to
what extent exculpatory evidence should be disclosed. |
Rule 701, RCM |
In addition to evidence from the pre-trial investigation, the
accused has broad discovery rights, including mandatory disclosure
by prosecution of all documents accompanying charges, names of
witnesses and their statements, all statements made by the accused,
and all evidence seized from the accused. Rule 505 of the
Military rules of Evidence contains provisions regarding the
disclosure of classified information. |
| Presumption of innocence |
|
The Order is silent about fundamental legal presumption.
|
Art. 51, UCMJ |
The accused is presumed innocent until guilt is established by
legal and competent evidence. |
| Standard of proof |
Section 4 |
The Secretary of Defense will decide on the applicable standard
of proof. The Secretary could decide that the commission
convicts ‘on the balance of probabilities’ rather than ‘beyond
reasonable doubt’. |
Art. 51, UCMJ |
Guilt must be established beyond reasonable doubt. |
| Verdict/ Sentencing |
Section 4(c)(6) & (7) |
The order specifies that unanimity is not required. A
conviction can be by two-thirds majority of the commission members
at the time the verdict/sentence is handed down, provided that a
majority of members are present at this time. If the necessary votes
for a conviction are not obtained, the defendant is acquitted. |
Art. 52, UCMJ |
In offenses in which the death penalty is mandatory, a verdict
must be unanimous among all panel members present when the vote is
taken. For offenses for which punishment is life or more than 10
years, the vote must be by 3/4 of panel members present. For all
other offenses, 2/3 of panel vote is required. Voting is by secret
ballot. |
| Imposition of the death penalty |
|
Yes. The same two-third sentencing requirements apply even
for the death penalty. |
Art. 52, UCMJ |
No person may be sentenced to death unless the offense is
expressly made punishable by death in the UCMJ. |
Public trial |
|
Secret proceedings are permitted. This is one of the
rationales for the Military Commission. |
Rule 806, RCM |
Trials are public. “Opening courts-martial to public scrutiny
reduces the chance of arbitrary or capricious decisions and enhances
public confidence in the court-martial process” (Rule 806, RCM).
Rule 505 of the Military Rules of Evidence provides procedures to
protect classified information, including closure of trial
proceedings when classified information is introduced. |
| Right of appeal |
Section 7(b)(2) |
The Order expressly precludes independent or judicial
review. The President and/or Secretary of Defense can review a
matter for final decision. |
Arts. 66 & 67 |
Two levels of appellate review are provided, the second to the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forced, which is composed of
civilian judges. The accused may then seek review by the U.S.
Supreme Court through a petition for a writ of certiorari.
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