Attorney General Eric Holder says the government can fight terrorism while also honoring the Constitution.
The Bush administration had refused to make the documents public, rejecting demands from congressional Democrats.
The release ends a tug-of-war over copies of controversial legal guidance from the post-9/11 period that advocated greatly expanded executive power to combat terrorism.
Among the documents from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) is a 2001 memo declaring that in terrorism cases the military may conduct searches in the United States without a warrant if approved by the president.
"We conclude that the president has ample constitutional and statutory authority to deploy the military against international or foreign terrorists operating within the United States,"wrote John Yoo, then a deputy assistant attorney general.
"We further believe that the use of such military force generally is consistent with constitutional standards, and that it need not follow the exact procedures that govern law enforcement operations."
2 commentaires:
himself, qu'est-ce que vous attendez pour me virer ce con d'anonyme qui se fout de la gueule de Didier ?
@ Glenn D.
Je ne pratique qu'except. la censure sur ce blog.
De mémoire, c'est arrivé deux fois: 1: du spam ; 2: des agressions directes, répétitives et anonymes.
Si vous faites référence au post précédant, les reproches me sont plutôt adressés - mon ami Chaos a répondu fort justement.
Excellente journée (nuit)
A bientôt.
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