The
principle of the thing Why alumni lawyers advocate for detainees – often, on their
own dime
Articles by Katherine Hobson ’94
It’s not easy for attorneys to work with clients when
those clients are being held at the detainee camp at Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba.
The clients
are not always welcoming — or even willing to meet their representatives.
“They can be fairly distrustful.” Matthew Handley ’97
(courtesy matthew
handley ’97)
“Some are terrorists
and others are totally
innocent — the problem is there’s no legal process for
sorting them out.” George Daly ’58
(courtesy George Daly
’58)
“Having to imagine
what it would be like to be held separately from your family, not
knowing why you’re being held — there’s a hopelessness
that felt so devastating.” Ellen Lubell ’81
(courtesy Ellen Lubell
’81)
The puddle-jumper from Fort Lauderdale takes nearly three hours to reach
the naval base on the far side of the island, since it cannot fly over
Cuban airspace. The airport and barracks-style housing for visitors are
on the leeward side of the bay, while the facilities housing the detainees
are on the windward side. Each morning of their visit, attorneys take
a bus to the ferry that travels across the bay. Once on the base, they
meet clients in a separate facility not unlike an interrogation room.
Each attorney is accompanied by a military officer except when speaking
to a client. While there are plenty of items you can’t bring in
— such as paper clips and sharp objects — the exceptions can
make for a rather surreal scene. “I can bring a bag of something
in from the McDonald’s on the base to my client, who’s been
rotting in a cell for five years,” says Matthew Handley ’97,
an associate with Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll in Washington,
D.C., who has made the trip to Guantánamo twice to meet with some
of the four clients his firm is representing.
The clients are not always welcoming — or even willing to meet
their representatives. “They can be fairly distrustful,” Handley
says. (Detainees have claimed that interrogators have posed as lawyers.)
The work can be depressing, the setting intimidating and conspicuously
out of reach of the regular U.S. justice system, and the legal victories
stateside slow in coming — the Supreme Court recently declined to
hear appeals on behalf of two groups of detainees, delaying any direct
review of the system that determines if they’re legitimately confined.
Meanwhile, the justice department has proposed new limits on the lawyers’
contact with their clients, saying the changes are required for national
security and security at the naval base. Why, then, would so many attorneys
— even those not normally engaged in human-rights work — be
doing it, given the time commitment and financial and emotional costs?
The principle of the thing was what grabbed the attention of many lawyers.
Habeas corpus — the right to appear before a court that
will assess if imprisonment is lawful — lies at the root of our
justice system. Lawyers defending the detainees don’t claim that
the prison is filled entirely by innocents, but rather that there’s
no way even to assess the detainees’ status — no one knows
what they’re charged with. Nor is there any way to tell on what
basis the person was captured. According to a report issued by researchers
at Seton Hall Law School, 86 percent of Guantánamo detainees were
arrested by the Northern Alliance, which fought the Taliban in Afghanistan,
or by Pakistan, and turned over to the United States at a time when the
United States was offering bounties and putting up posters with messages
like: “You can receive millions of dollars for helping the Anti-Taliban
Force catch al-Qaida and Taliban murderers. This is enough money to take
care of your family, your village, your tribe for the rest of your life.”
Lawyers also are pursuing claims of mistreatment suffered while at the
detainee camp.
“I think Guantánamo is the challenge for this generation
of lawyers,” says Eric Lewis ’79, a partner in Baach Robinson
& Lewis in Washington, D.C. He’s the lead counsel representing
four British former detainees in Rasul v. Rumsfeld, a suit filed
in 2004 that seeks compensation from former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld
’54 and other military officials for injuries the detainees claim
they suffered while being unlawfully detained at Guantánamo. (Another
torture case against Rumsfeld, Ali vs. Rumsfeld, which was brought
by nine Iraqi and Afghan former detainees, was dismissed in March.) Lewis
believes there has been both torture and lack of due process — adding
up to a “systematic program to act in a way that’s anathema
to the Constitution and desperately counterproductive.”
“It’s a process issue,” agrees Peter Ryan ’87,
an associate with Dechert LLP in Philadelphia. He is working on three
cases on behalf of 14 Afghan detainees. “If someone has committed
a crime or a war crime, give them a fair process and convict them. Then
the process works, and we can have a high degree of confidence —
and the world can — that the process works and is fair. But this
administration has said from the beginning that [detainees] have no rights,
and in response to the Supreme Court decision [Rasul v. Bush,
the 2004 decision that affirmed detainees’ rights to challenge their
detentions through the U.S. courts], they’ve put up a ramshackle
process.”
George Daly ’58 is a retired lawyer in Charlotte, N.C. He responded
to an article in a trial lawyers’ magazine and is now working on
behalf of one of the detainees. “What appeals to me [about working
with detainees] is that Guantánamo violates the basic norm of a
civilized society, which is that there’s a functioning legal system
that guarantees basic rights,” he says. “Some are terrorists
and others are totally innocent — the problem is there’s no
legal process for sorting them out. The government tried to create a place
that was beyond the law.” One of Daly’s previous clients committed
suicide before finding out that the government was preparing to release
him. His current client has been cleared for return to Libya, his birthplace,
but he doesn’t want to go. (He was living in Afghanistan in 2001
and fled to Pakistan after the war started, which is where he was arrested.)
Now Daly is involved not only in the legal principles of a habeas
corpus case, but in gathering evidence and affidavits to demonstrate
that his client would be harmed if he returned to his home country. “We’ve
been in touch with ambassadors of foreign countries, political secretaries
— all sorts of people around the world who can execute affidavits
about the conditions in Libya,” he says. “I spend time interviewing
witnesses and getting them to make statements relevant to the issues of
the case.” As a civil-rights lawyer, Daley has dealt with issues
like flag-burning, draft-dodging, and abortion rights, and so the legal
procedures involved were familiar to him. But dealing with human-rights
issues — gathering evidence from far-flung people about conditions
in Libya — was a novel experience. “I learn something new
every day,” he says.
Daly is not the only participating attorney who’s new to human-rights
work. Law firms of all stripes have been jumping on board. The remarks
in January of then-Pentagon- official Charles Stimson, criticizing mainstream
lawyers for offering pro bono help and advising that corporate
CEOs should “ask firms to choose between lucrative retainers and
representing terrorists,” actually served as a galvanizing event,
several Princeton lawyers said. (Stimson, the deputy assistant secretary
of defense for detainee affairs, later resigned because of the backlash
to his remarks.)
“That very much backfired,” says Handley, even among big
corporate firms and their business clients, hardly known for being bleeding-heart
liberals. “The reality of it is that many of these businesses are
very sympathetic to claims that the process is being abused — they
often think the government is overstepping its bounds. And the reputation
of the United States abroad is in tatters, which doesn’t help U.S.
businesses.” Since the end of 2004, the firm has taken on four clients
in Guantánamo. Two are Mauritanian; one was picked up in Pakistan,
where he’d been living, and sold to the United States for a bounty.
“He more or less thinks he was in the wrong place at the wrong time,”
says Handley. Another, a friend of the first client, is in his early 20s
and has been cleared by the U.S. government for release — but Mauritania
won’t take him back. Until his destination can be settled, he’s
still living in Camp 6, the newly opened prison at Guantánamo modeled
after the modern U.S. supermax prison.
Handley’s employer is a plaintiffs’ law firm that encourages
work in human-rights causes. Handley was a Peace Corps volunteer in Nepal
after leaving Princeton and had a strong interest in South Asia and its
relationship with the United States. “I was abroad in the late 1990s,
and it was a time where I felt relatively safe in most places I went to
when I was living abroad. Now I feel that I’ve had things taken
away from me — 10 years ago you didn’t have to be an American
apologist and have to explain yourself as set apart from what people consider
that which governs the U.S. It’s angering and it’s depressing,”
he says.
Avi Cover ’95 got involved almost by accident. He was a Teach
for America alumnus and third-year law student at Cornell with a broad
interest in public-interest law when he answered an ad requesting research
help in examining executive power after 9/11. He found himself working
on a detainee-rights case for Joseph Margulies, a Cornell visiting professor
who was the lead counsel on Rasul v. Bush. Cover was hooked,
describing the excitement of the work as “almost like a drug.”
He worked for Margulies through the summer after law school and then looked
around for a full-time job in the same area, eventually ending up working
for the city of New York in its World Trade Center Unit, defending against
claims by rescue workers alleging negligence by the city. “It was
traumatizing work,” he says, given that he had to work with and
sometimes against people already traumatized by 9/11. But he says that’s
where he really learned to be a lawyer, and when he heard of an opening
at Human Rights First, he jumped at the chance to return to human-rights
work. That’s where he is now, working on legislative, public advocacy,
and litigation matters as a senior counsel in the group’s law and
security program. Human Rights First files amicus briefs in the
major detainee-rights cases, and also was involved in the recently dismissed
suit against Rumsfeld. It’s intellectually fascinating work, but
Cover admits it can also be Sisyphean and, on occasion, frustrating.
Ellen Lubell ’81 and her law partner at Tennant Lubell, in Newton,
Mass., had been interested in human-rights work for many years, though
their firm deals with intellectual-property issues. But the suicides of
three detainees in June 2006 prompted them to get involved. “We
were so distressed, and sitting still felt impossible,” she says.
They contacted lawyers representing some of the detainees to offer their
help, and ended up taking on one client, a 31-year-old Algerian man with
a sixth-grade education who had learned to say “thank you”
in English. He was picked up in Pakistan and turned over to the Americans.
“Having to imagine what it would be like to be held separately from
your family, not knowing why you’re being held — there’s
a hopelessness that felt so devastating,” says Lubell.
Whatever the motivation of the attorneys, there are costs. Time and
money are the most obvious; lawyers involved in the defense of Guantánamo
detainees pay their own way. Larger corporate firms have pro bono
budgets; Dechert, Peter Ryan’s firm, allows associates up to 200
hours of pro bono work per year before requiring them to get
permission for more. His detainee case, he says, clearly is consuming
more than 200 hours, and he’s had no problem getting approval to
continue. Over at Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll, which collects
fees on a contingency basis, Handley just works on the cases in addition
to his regular caseload.
Smaller firms have an especially tough financial struggle. Daly estimates
that he and another local attorney have paid a total of $12,000 between
them for trips to Guantánamo and translators, which run $1,500
a day. Lubell and her partner raised $18,000 in donations from the community
to help defray the costs of travel, translators, and requests made under
the Freedom of Information Act, and she admits the time commitment is
overwhelming. “It’s our biggest pro bono project
— it’s huge,” she says, estimating it’s been in
the “hundreds and hundreds of hours.” And, she hastens to
add, it’s worth it: “If I could put my practice on hold, I’d
take another client.”
Katherine Hobson ’94 covers health and medicine for U.S.
News & World Report.
Princeton
professors and visitors also have been involved with detainee rights.
Here are some who are working on the issue.
(Jon Roemer/courtesy
Woodrow Wilson school)
Kim Lane Scheppele
Much of the debate over the Patriot Act has focused on what it means
for Americans. But Professor Kim Lane Scheppele thinks it goes beyond
that. Scheppele says the legislation was tracked by a U.N. Security Council
resolution requiring member countries to change their own laws to fight
terrorism, stop money from flowing to terrorists, share information about
terrorism suspects with other countries, and prevent the immigration and
asylum system from being used by terrorists. “And every state gets
to adapt it to their own particular circumstances, which is a great way
for an executive to grab power,” she says.
The result? “All these creeps around the world look at this and
say ‘we can get away with doing this to our domestic opposition,’
” says Scheppele, the Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Public
Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School and the University Center for Human
Values. She witnessed the birth of new constitutional democracies in Eastern
Europe, and says that what is taking place now in countries like Russia
and Indonesia is like the camera running in reverse. In some cases, it’s
not too late to reverse the trend, through a combination of external pressures
and sanctions and internal leadership, but it won’t be easy, she
says.
Scheppele, who serves as director of Princeton’s Program in Law
and Public Affairs, also has written about torture; one paper questions
all the tenets of the so-called ticking-bomb scenario, which posits that
there’s a nuclear bomb set to detonate in Manhattan within hours,
and you have captured the sole terrorist believed to know where it is.
Do you torture him to get that information? By saying you’d use
torture in that nuclear scenario, she says, it becomes only a matter of
degree and of figuring out under which other circumstances it would be
OK. But that scenario is artificial and unlikely ever to happen (except
on the television show 24), she says: It’s nearly impossible that
interrogators would know the exact timing and nature of a threat, unlikely
they could be sure that the captured person had that information, and
impossible to know whether torture actually would force a confession.
That makes it a false test, she says; in the real world, giving a blanket
disapproval of torture isn’t likely to risk a great threat.
(Jon Roemer/courtesy
Woodrow Wilson school)
Frederick Hitz ’61
As a former inspector general of the CIA, Frederick Hitz ’61 is
a realist; he believes that the intelligence community needs a wide range
of tools at its disposal to prevent and combat terrorism. But he has taught
and written about a practice he feels crosses the line into unacceptable
behavior: extraordinary rendition, the practice of taking into custody
people suspected of terrorism and either interrogating them in secret
prisons or turning them over to allies known to mistreat prisoners.
Its proponents say that in the wake of 9/11, it is justified to use
such an extraordinary measure to combat the war on terror, he says. But
Hitz — who has been a lecturer and “diplomat-in-residence”
at Princeton recently, though he is not on the faculty now — has
called for the end of the practice, saying it doesn’t work, is immoral,
and threatens to prevent the international cooperation that’s needed
to foil future cross-border terrorist plots. “A plot in Hamburg
gets to the streets of the U.S. pretty quickly,” says Hitz. “Neither
the CIA nor the FBI will be welcome [in foreign countries] if we’re
breaking the law of the area where we are.”
Hitz foresees changes in, or a substitution for, the Geneva Conventions
to deal with stateless criminals. “These guys aren’t going
to be subject to sanction under international law in the traditional way,”
he says. “You’ve got to be able to hold them.” He also
sees the long-standing ban on CIA involvement in domestic law enforcement
falling away as “intelligence-based policing” — acting
on information gleaned through foreign intelligence to catch bad guys
at home — becomes more prevalent. That will require oversight and
accountability, he says. And in this new era, people will have to get
used to living with the potential of a terrorist strike. “The hard-nosed
reality is that we are going to be subject to attack, we’re doing
the best we can to prevent those attacks, and we need to get on with life.”
(Vickers and Beechler
photography/courtesy Martin Flaherty)
Martin Flaherty ’81
The juniors in Martin Flaherty ’81’s spring-semester Woodrow
Wilson School policy task force on U.S. detention practices in the global
war on terror were grappling with some of the toughest problems around:
indefinite detention, harsh interrogation techniques, extraordinary rendition,
and the use of military commissions. “We’re looking at each
issue through the lens of three things: international and domestic law,
foreign relations, and security,” says Flaherty, a former fellow
in Princeton’s Program in Law and Public Affairs and co-director
of the Crowley Program in International Human Rights at Fordham Law School
in New York. He was hoping to present the group’s findings to Congress
at the conclusion of the class.
In his own work, Flaherty has focused on the expansion of executive
power and on international law, with the benefit of his background as
a historian. “The U.S. has dealt with nonstate actors since the
Barbary pirates,” he says, though clearly technological developments
and weapons of mass destruction make those nonstate actors a more serious
threat than in the past. He did some human-rights work in Northern Ireland
during the mid-1990s, on a mission with the Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights (now Human Rights First), and he sees some parallels to the current
situation in the United States: a well-established democracy (England)
using tactics not generally accepted in civil society, with self-defense
as the justification. “Both violated fundamental human rights and
were counterproductive,” he says. “Interning people indefinitely
without trial was one of the best recruiting tools for the IRA.”
(Photo by Beverly Schaefer)
Deborah Pearlstein
Deborah Pearlstein straddles the worlds of theory and practical human-rights
work. The associate research scholar at the Wilson School’s Law
and Public Affairs Program is continuing a series of workshops she began
as director of the law and security program at the nonprofit group Human
Rights First by holding off-the-record discussions between policy-makers
and the people who actually implement that policy — in this case,
private business contractors (including security personnel) whose role
in the Iraq war is large and controversial. She also was involved in a
recently dismissed case against Donald Rumsfeld ’54 on behalf of
former detainees who claim they were tortured.
On the academic side, Pearlstein is interested in the implications of
expanded executive power — the likes of which Bush administration
lawyers have argued is necessary to deal with unprecedented security threats.
Pearlstein argues that even assuming the threats are without precedent,
it’s not clear that a more powerful executive is the best practical
strategy in terms of national security. Isn’t it likely, she asks,
that having competing views challenging the executive’s consensus
would be more effective? This is her first full-time position at a university,
and “it’s really important that what I’m doing in the
academy is tied to the outside world,” she says.