http://www.unitedstates.com/news/farticle/640127?20011114142500



Conyers calls for civil liberties hearings
By MARK BENJAMIN ���

WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (UPI) -- House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers,
D-Mich., said Wednesday a decision by President George W. Bush that terrorist suspects
might face a military tribunal adds to questions about civil liberties. ���

In a Nov. 14 letter to Committee Chairman Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., Conyers
called for hearings on civil liberties, including an administration plan to monitor
some defendants' communication with their lawyers, and the status of suspects detained
in the government's investigations of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. ���

Conyers said Bush's Tuesday decision to establish military tribunals run by Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld only adds to his concern. ���

"Indeed, the very purpose of the directive appears to be to skirt the usual constitutional
and criminal justice rules that are the hallmark of our democratic form of government." ���

While Sensenbrenner did not return calls seeking comment, Conyers' request comes
one day after United Press International reported that Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., might soon hold hearings on the new government
policy on monitoring communication between defense attorneys and their clients, and
the status of what lawmakers said could be 1,000 people detained by the government.
Some of those detainees have reportedly been released. ���

Leahy twice sent letters to Attorney General John Ashcroft on the issues on Oct.
31 and Nov. 9. ���

"We also have received no cooperation from the Justice Department in our effort
to obtain information regarding the 1,000 plus immigrants who have been detained in
connection with the terrorism investigation, as reflected in a letter that several
Democratic Members transmitted to the attorney general on Oct. 31, 2001," Conyers
wrote to Sensenbrenner Wednesday. "We would be remiss in our duties, however, if we
did not also oversee the extent to which the Department may be abusing its authority
and wrongfully targeting innocent Americans."

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