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Reply #3: Ah, but he does. Found the story [View All]

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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-03-06 12:14 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Ah, but he does. Found the story
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1152AP_Gonzales_Judges.html

Friday, September 29, 2006

Gonzales cautions judges on interfering

By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON -- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who is defending President Bush's anti-terrorism tactics in multiple court battles, said Friday that federal judges should not substitute their personal views for the president's judgments in wartime.

He said the Constitution makes the president commander in chief and the Supreme Court has long recognized the president's pre-eminent role in foreign affairs. "The Constitution, by contrast, provides the courts with relatively few tools to superintend military and foreign policy decisions, especially during wartime," the attorney general told a conference on the judiciary at Georgetown University Law Center.

"Judges must resist the temptation to supplement those tools based on their own personal views about the wisdom of the policies under review," Gonzales said.

(snip)

Gonzales has sent Justice Department lawyers into federal courts from coast to coast defending Bush's detention of terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, his plans to try some of them before military tribunals and his use of the National Security Agency to wiretap Americans without court warrants when they communicate with suspected terrorists abroad.

(snip)

A handful of federal district judges either ordered an end to the warrantless wiretapping or agreed to hear court challenges to it. Opponents of the plan argue the NSA program violates the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act's requirement that the government get a warrant from a court that meets in secret before wiretapping Americans to gain intelligence information.

(snip)
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