Jennifer K. Elsea
Legislative Attorney
The
detainee provisions passed as part of the National Defense Authorization Act
for FY2012, P.L. 112-81, affirm that the Authorization for Use of Military
Force (AUMF), P.L. 107-40, in response to the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, authorizes the detention of persons captured in
connection with hostilities. The act provides for the first time a statutory
definition of covered persons whose detention is authorized pursuant to
the AUMF. During debate of the provision, significant attention focused on
the applicability of this detention authority to U.S. citizens and other
persons within the United States. The Senate adopted an amendment to clarify that
the provision was not intended to affect any existing law or authorities
relating to the detention of U.S. citizens or lawful resident aliens, or
any other persons captured or arrested in the United States. This report
analyzes the existing law and authority to detain U.S. persons, including
American citizens and resident aliens, as well as other persons within the
United States who are suspected of being members, agents, or associates of
Al Qaeda or possibly other terrorist organizations as “enemy combatants.”
The Supreme Court in 2004 affirmed the President’s power to detain “enemy
combatants,” including those who are U.S. citizens, as part of the necessary
force authorized by Congress after the terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001. In Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, a plurality held that a U.S. citizen
allegedly captured during combat in Afghanistan and incarcerated at a Navy brig
in South Carolina is entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard by
a neutral decision maker regarding the government’s reasons for detaining
him. On the same day, the Court in Rumsfeld v. Padilla overturned a
lower court’s grant of habeas corpus to another U.S. citizen in military
custody in South Carolina on jurisdictional grounds, leaving undecided
whether the authority to detain also applies to U.S. citizens arrested in
the United States by civilian authorities. Lower courts that have
addressed the issue of wartime detention within the United States have reached
conflicting conclusions. While the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth
Circuit ultimately confirmed the detention authority in principle in two
separate cases (one of which was subsequently vacated), the government
avoided taking the argument to the Supreme Court by indicting the accused detainees
for federal crimes, making their habeas appeals moot and leaving the law
generally unsettled. Recently, a federal judge enjoined the detention of
persons on the basis of providing support to or associating with
belligerent parties under one prong of the definition enacted as Section
1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2012, P.L. 112-81 (Hedges
v. Obama). The injunction has been stayed pending the government’s
appeal.
This report provides a background to the legal issues presented, followed by a
brief introduction to the law of war pertinent to the detention of
different categories of individuals. An overview of U.S. practice during
wartime to detain persons deemed dangerous to the national security is presented.
The report concludes by discussing Congress’s role in prescribing rules for
wartime detention as well as legislative proposals in the 112th Congress to address the detention of U.S. persons (H.R. 4310,
H.R. 4388, H.R. 3676, H.R. 3785, H.R. 3702, S. 2003, H.R. 4092, H.R. 4192,
S. 2175, S. 3254).
Date of Report: December 4, 2012
Number of Pages: 57
Order Number: R42337
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