In the press release below, the Center for Constitutional
Rights (contact: press@ccrjustice.org) announces that the Court of Appeals for
the Armed Forces has dealt yet another blow to press and public access to basic
documents in Bradley Manning’s case. The rejection comes mere days after a
military spokesperson warned that the media center at Ft. Meade, which streams
live video to reporters of Manning’s proceedings, is a “privilege, not a
right.”
By the Center for Constitutional Rights. April 17, 2013.
CCR lawyer Shayana Kadidal. Photo credit: The Ithacan (click for source) |
New York – Today, the Court of Appeals for the Armed
Forces (CAAF) rejected claims in a lawsuit by the Center for Constitutional
Rights challenging government secrecy around the court martial of Pfc. Bradley
Manning. The suit, bought on behalf of a group of journalists, asked the court
to ensure members of the press and public have access to court documents and
transcripts in the case and challenged the fact that important legal matters in
the pre-trial proceedings have been argued and decided in secret. The court
rejected the claims on the grounds that military appellate courts lack
jurisdiction to address the scope of public access until a trial is over and
the sentence has been issued. The decision was 3-to-2, issued over two vigorous
dissents.
“Today’s decision flies in the face of decades of First
Amendment rulings in the federal courts that hold that openness affects outcome
– that the accuracy of court proceedings depends on their being open,” said
Center for Constitutional Rights Senior Attorney Shayana Kadidal, who argued
the case. “Bradley Manning’s trial will now take place under conditions where
journalists and the public will be unable as a practical matter to follow what
is going on in the courtroom. That ensures that any verdict will be
fundamentally unfair, and will generate needless appeals afterwards if he is
convicted.”
The majority’s decision ensures that no appellate
military court will be able to review a decision of a trial judge denying
public access to proceedings until after the proceedings are over. As a result,
a military trial judge could exclude the public from being present in the
courtroom – in violation of existing military law – and there would be no place
for members of the public to appeal that decision within the military court
system.
The dissenting judges wrote that this decision “leaves
collateral appeal to [civilian] courts as the sole mechanism to vindicate the
right to a public trial … beyond the initial good judgment of the military
judge. This is unworkable and cannot reflect congressional design or
presidential intent.”
Today’s ruling is likely to also apply to proceedings in
the upcoming court-martial trials of accused Ft. Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan
and of Staff Sgt. Robert Bates, who is accused of massacring civilians in
Afghanistan.
Plaintiffs in the case, in addition to the Center for Constitutional
Rights, are journalists Glenn Greenwald, Amy Goodman,Democracy Now!, Jeremy
Scahill, The Nation magazine, Julian Assange, Kevin Gosztola, and Chase Madar.
Attorneys are considering options for appeal to the
civilian federal courts. Bradley Manning’s trial is scheduled to start June 3,
2013.
For more information, visit CCR’s case page.
The Center for Constitutional Rights is dedicated to
advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed by the United States
Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Founded in 1966 by
attorneys who represented civil rights movements in the South, CCR is a
non-profit legal and educational organization committed to the creative use of
law as a positive force for social change.
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