Fox
News' senior judicial analyst made some surprising remarks Saturday that may go
against the grain at his conservative network.
In
a interview with Ralph Nader on C-SPAN's Book TV to promote his book Lies
the Government Told You, Judge Andrew Napolitano said that President
George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney should have been indicted for
"torturing, for spying, for arresting without warrant."
The
judge believes that it is a fallacy to say that the US treats suspects as innocent
until proven guilty. "The government acts as if a defendant is guilty
merely on the basis of an accusation," said Napolitano.
Nader
was curious about how this applied to the Bush administration. "What about
the more serious violations of habeas corpus," wondered Nader. "You
know after 9/11 Bush rounded up thousands of them, Americans, many of them
Muslim Americans or Arabic Americans and they were thrown in jail without
charges. They didn't have lawyers. Some of them were pretty mistreated in New York
City. You know they were all released eventually."
"Well
that is so obviously a violation of the natural law, the natural right to be
brought before a neutral arbiter within moments of the government taking your
freedom away from you," answered Napolitano.
"So
what President Bush did with the suspension of habeas corpus, with the whole
concept of Guantanamo Bay, with the whole idea that he could avoid and evade
federal laws, treaties, federal judges and the Constitution was blatantly
unconstitutional and is some cases criminal," he continued.
"What
should be the sanctions [for Bush and Cheney]?" asked Nader.
"They
should have been indicted. They absolutely should have been indicted for
torturing, for spying, for arresting without warrant," said Napolitano.
"I'd
like to say they should be indicted for lying but believe it or not, unless
you're under oath, lying is not a crime. At least not an indictable crime. It's
a moral crime," he said.
This
isn't the first time that Napolitano's comments have veered away from the
standard talking points at Fox News. He has predicted that Arizona's
controversial immigration law will be
blocked by the court. Napolitano also said Arizona's governor would
"bankrupt the
Republican Party" fighting for the law.
No comments:
Post a Comment