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Dear ACLU
Supporter,
There is no justice at Guantánamo Bay.
What I
witnessed today in a Guantánamo courtroom made that clearer than ever.
At their
arraignment before a military commission on terrorism-related charges,
detainees accused of participating in the 9/11 attacks refused legal
representation by military and civilian defense attorneys.
Every
day, the Bush Administration’s un-American system of injustice
continues to make a mockery of due process and the rule of law.
It’s time
to bring it to an end.
Sign
our ACLU Stand Up for Justice petition calling on America's leaders to
shut down Guantánamo Bay and end the military commission system of
injustice.
At
Guantánamo, convictions can be based on evidence derived from torture.
Hearsay and secret evidence are permitted. And the proceedings are
subject to unlawful political influence.
Indeed,
after years without a single trial completed, prosecutions are now
being rushed through to sway public opinion before the November
elections.
This
isn’t justice. And it hardly comes as any surprise that after being
held in solitary confinement for five years and subjected to torture,
these detainees would reject the legal system and offers to represent
them. Without constitutional guarantees in place, any verdict rendered
by these proceedings will be regarded as illegitimate by the American
people and in the eyes of the world.
Help
close Guantánamo. Sign the petition, and stand up for the rule of law.
The need
to get these prosecutions right cannot be overstated, both because of
the need to achieve lasting and meaningful justice for what was done to
us on September 11, 2001 and because how we achieve that justice will
speak volumes about who we are as a nation.
Unfortunately,
the Guantánamo military commissions are so fundamentally flawed that
they fail miserably by both measures.
The ACLU
is committed to opposing the injustice of these proceedings with every
means at our disposal. ACLU representatives have attended every
military commission proceeding since the system's inception in 2004 --
and we have protested the use of torture and hearsay and coerced
evidence.
We have
and will continue to offer legal representation to detainees at
Guantánamo. Just as important, we will keep challenging the very
existence and procedures of the Guantánamo military commissions
themselves. And we need you to stand with us.
Sign
the petition, and stand up for the rule of law.
Let's
work together to apply the principles, the passion and the strength of
the ACLU to prove to the world -- and to ourselves -- that, even when
dealing with those accused of committing egregious acts of terror,
America remains a nation of laws.
Thanks
for standing with us as we take direct, powerful, and persuasive action
to end the Bush system of injustice.
Keep
working for freedom and justice,
![Anthony D. Romero]()
Anthony
D. Romero
Executive Director
ACLU
© ACLU,
125 Broad Street, 18th Floor New York, NY 10004
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