Published on Portside (https://portside.org)
Gutting Habeas Corpus
May 8, 2016
Liliana Segura
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
The Intercept
On the eve of the New York state primary last month, as
Hillary Clinton came closer to the Democratic nomination, Vice President
Joe Biden went on TV and defended [1] her
husband’s 1994 crime bill. Asked in an interview if he felt shame for his
role passing a law that has been the subject of so much recent
criticism, Biden answered, “Not at all,” and boasted of its successes
— among them putting “100,000 cops on the street.” His remarks sparked a
new round of debate over the legacy of the crime bill, which has haunted
Clinton ever since she hit the campaign trail with a vow to “end the era of
mass incarceration.”
A few days later, on April 24, a lesser-known crime law quietly
turned 20. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 — or AEDPA
— was signed by Bill Clinton in the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing. While it
has been mostly absent from the recent debates over the crime policies of the
’90s, its impact has been no less profound, particularly when it comes to a
bedrock constitutional principle: habeas corpus, or the right of people in
prison to challenge their detention. For 20 years, AEDPA
has shut the courthouse door on prisoners trying to prove they
were wrongfully convicted. Americans are mostly unaware of this
legacy, even as we know more than ever about wrongful
convictions. Barry Scheck, co-founder and head of the Innocence Project, calls
AEDPA “a disaster” and “a major roadblock since its passage.” Many
would like to see it repealed.
If the Clintons have not been forced to defend AEDPA, it’s partly
because neither the law nor its shared history with the crime bill is well
understood. AEDPA’s dizzying provisions — from harsh immigration policies [2] to
toughened federal sentencing — were certainly a hasty response to
terrorism. But the law was also the product of an administration that long
before the Oklahoma attack had abandoned its party’s core principles on
criminal justice, deciding instead to wield crime policy as political weapon.
After the Republicans seized control of Congress in the historic 1994
midterm elections, the Clinton White House sought to double down on
its law-and-order image in advance of the 1996 presidential race. In the
short term, it was a winning political strategy for Clinton. In the long term,
it would help pave the way to one of the worst laws of his presidency.
The story that sets the stage for AEDPA can be partly told
through White House memos from the time, a trove of which were released in
2014. Buried among hundreds of thousands of digital records housed in
the Clinton Digital Library [3] are
previously confidential documents that shine light on Clinton’s
criminal justice strategies in the mid-90s, yet have been largely
overlooked.
One memo [4] reveals a White
House weighing its options in the weeks after the “Republican
Revolution.” Dated November 22, 1994, it was written by top
Department of Justice lawyer Ron Klain, who sent it to his boss as
well as members of President Clinton’s inner circle, including Bruce
Reed (the operative behind the famed pledge to “end welfare as we know it”) and
senior White House adviser Rahm Emanuel. The memo was titled “Crime
Bill ‘Redux.’”
Ronald
A. Klain, chief of staff to Attorney General Janet Reno, October 1994.
Photo: The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty
Klain was assessing the threat posed by the
new Republican majority to the 1994 crime bill. Passed just two
months earlier, it had been a crucial Democratic victory — an end to
the era when “the Republicans are seen as the party that’s tougher on crime,”
as declared by Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell. The GOP had
relentlessly assailed the legislation as a “fake crime bill” for prevention
programs like “midnight basketball.” Now the GOP was getting ready to
deploy a bill of its own.
“By now, we are all aware of the Republican proposal to revisit
last year’s hard won crime bill,” Klain wrote in his memo. Called the
Taking Back Our Streets Act, the GOP bill was designed to dismantle
the crime bill’s signature features — in particular, a community policing
project known as the COPS program — while going even further than the president
had in his sweeping legislation. “The Republicans’ goal here is purely
political and tactical,” Klain wrote. “To take away the clearest, best ‘Clinton
achievement’ on crime, and to deprive the president of the opportunity to award
communities all over the country their share of the 100,000 new police
officers.”
The GOP also aimed to kill off the crime bill’s
prevention programs, but Klain was more concerned about COPS — no doubt in
part because the 100,000 police figure had been his idea. A young lawyer
described by the New Republic [5] as
having “chillingly good political skills,” Klain had been working to pass crime
legislation since he was in his 20s, as the “youngest ever chief counsel to the
Senate Judiciary Committee.” Under Sen. Joe Biden, Klain had drafted
unsuccessful precursors to the 1994 crime bill. Now Klain was being credited as
the man who successfully steered its passage.
Klain saw “only two possible outcomes” to the Republican
maneuvering. “The president will have to sign the bill that Congress sends him,
or veto it.” While the former would “outrage our core constituency,” he wrote,
the latter posed a potentially bigger threat: “We cannot needlessly give the
GOP the opportunity to say that the president is vetoing a ‘tough on crime’
bill for ‘soft on crime’ reasons.”
Fear of looking “soft on crime” on the heels of the most extreme
law-and-order legislation in U.S. history might have seemed irrational. The
1994 crime bill broadened “three strikes,” poured money into prison building,
and vastly expanded the death penalty. But the new power struggle with Congress
meant the White House wasn’t taking any chances.
Klain had a solution. Clinton should “welcome Republican
efforts to build on last year’s crime bill,” he wrote, by folding them
into new Democratic legislation that protected the administration’s top
priorities. If it passed, it would be an additional “win” for the White House.
Klain attached to his memo “a very, very rough outline of a possible new crime
bill,” along with a chart comparing it both to the 1994 crime bill and the new
GOP bill. Klain proposed including a $1 billion cut in prevention programs
(reallocating $700 million to new juvenile prisons), more cops in schools,
and “tougher truth in sentencing.” In some areas, his outline was harsher
than the GOP legislation — “broaden[ing] the range of offenses for which
juveniles may be tried as adults” and “enhanc[ing] penalties for lesser drug
crimes.” In other areas, like the “deportation of criminal aliens,”
it simply adopted the Republican line.
Finally, the proposal reintroduced an idea favored both by
Clinton and his foes in Congress: “habeas corpus
reform,” previously cut from the crime bill and now part of the
Taking Back Our Streets Act. Sometimes called the “Great Writ” for its
treasured place in constitutional law, habeas corpus referred to the
long-standing right of prisoners to challenge their incarceration in court. For
the federal courts, this meant reviewing state convictions for constitutional
violations, a process that took years. In the zero-tolerance climate of
the ’80s and ’90s, the concept of habeas corpus had met
with increasing impatience; critics accused people on death
row of gaming the system, filing “appeal after appeal” just to stay alive.
“In brief,” Klain wrote, “these reforms would limit death row inmates to a
single habeas petition — to be filed within strict time limits — while
providing such inmates with competent counsel to assist in preparing this
single filing.” While the Republican version of habeas reform made no
guarantee on the right to counsel, both sides could agree on the need
to speed up the death penalty.
After the Oklahoma City bombing, Clinton appeared on “60 Minutes”
calling for the perpetrator to be executed.
Klain’s imagined crime bill sequel never came to pass — he
left the DOJ early the next year. But his top priority lived on. In
February 1995, as Clinton threatened to veto the looming GOP bill over
the COPS program, White House staff received talking points
titled “DEBUNKING THE MYTHS: THE 100,000 COPS PROGRAM WORKS!!!” In the
meantime, others considered the habeas provisions in the Taking Back
Our Streets Act. The administration seemed poised to fight for
competent counsel; one memo from February 1995 is particularly notable.
Apart from providing for lawyers at the post-conviction stage,
it stressed that habeas reform “must provide for competent trial counsel,”
since “excessive delays in capital cases result not only from manipulation of
habeas corpus procedures, but also from a high rate of constitutional error in
capital trials.” This point tended to be aggressively ignored in the
calls to speed up the death penalty, which usually blamed prisoners
for abusing their rights.
As the GOP bill continued to advance that spring, the White
House was planning PR events to blunt its political impact. “Our strategy on
crime has always been to associate ourselves with police officers,” Rahm
Emanuel and Bruce Reed wrote to Clinton in March, urging him to “bolster
this image.” But then, suddenly, everything changed.
On the morning of April 19, 1995, a massive explosion rocked the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people and injuring
hundreds more. On the ground days later, Clinton gave a powerful eulogy
— PR events were no longer needed. It was now up to the president to
keep Americans safe, not just from criminals, but from terrorists.
Dropping its work on the GOP crime bill, Congress vowed to pass a new
counterterrorism bill by Memorial Day.
But at least one key criminal justice priority survived. On
the Sunday after the Oklahoma City bombing, Clinton appeared [6] on 60
Minutes, calling for the perpetrator to be executed. The 1994 crime bill
had expanded the death penalty “for purposes such as this,” he said. “If this
is not a crime for which capital punishment is called, I don’t know what is.”
Asked by co-host Ed Bradley how he could deliver on his promise [7] that
“justice will be certain, swift and severe,” Clinton called for speeding up
death penalty appeals. “Congress has the opportunity this year to reform the
habeas corpus proceedings,” he said. “And I hope that they will do so.”
If it was unclear how proposals to shorten appeals for state
prisoners related to federal terror cases, prosecutors
nonetheless applauded Clinton’s remarks. In a letter to the White House, a
bipartisan group of state attorneys general warned that failure to overhaul
habeas corpus would endlessly delay justice for “such acts of senseless
violence” and undermine “the expression of our level of opprobrium as a nation
for acts of terrorism.”
Almost a year later, on April 24, 1996, a signing ceremony took
place on the South Lawn of the White House. “In a presidential election year,” the AP [8] reported, “it
was an opportunity for a warm display of bipartisanship on a sunny, spring
day.” The New York Times described [9] “the
Marine band playing and American flags whipping in the breeze.”
“We send a loud, clear message today all over the world, in your
names,” the president told families in attendance whose loved ones had died in
Oklahoma City. “America will never surrender to terror.” Then he signed
the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act.
Twenty years later, AEDPA has long been eclipsed as a
counterterrorism measure by the USA Patriot Act, which was built on its
foundations. As crime legislation, it remains relatively unknown, even
amid renewed debate over Clinton’s other policies. But for people in prison,
its legacy has been sweeping and harsh. For all the rhetoric that accompanied
the signing of AEDPA, it has been most severely felt by state prisoners with no
connection to terrorism — and especially those who insist they are innocent.
AEDPA is most notorious for its impact on death penalty cases. “I
suspect that there may well have been innocent people who were executed because
of the absence of habeas corpus,” said former D.C. Circuit Judge Abner Mikva, a
Carter appointee who later served as White House counsel in 1994 and 1995. For
Mikva, who turned 90 this year, his failure to stop so-called habeas
reform is one of the major regrets of his career. He still recalls his time as
a young law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sherman Minton in the 1950s;
when habeas petitions would reach his desk, Mikva said, “I saw how complicated
it was for him to review these handwritten records — which is what they had at
the time — and how uncertain some of the convictions were.”
Abner
Mikva, a former D.C. circuit judge who served as White House counsel, attending
a ceremony at the Supreme Court, May 8, 1995. Photo: The LIFE Images
Collection/Getty
But AEDPA’s reach spans much further than death row. For anyone
wrongfully convicted — whether they are actually innocent or the victim of an
unfair trial — the law presents a daunting barrier: a one-year countdown clock
for federal review that begins the moment state-level appeals have run
out. For New York exoneree Jeff Deskovic, who was in prison when AEDPA passed,
the new law “filled me with terror.” Deskovic had given a false confession as a
teenager to the rape and murder of a classmate following hours of punishing
police interrogation in 1989. He was sentenced to life.
“I was writing a bunch of letters trying to get help,” he
recalled, when under AEDPA, “the situation became more dire.” Amid the
confusion over how the law applied to old cases — for prisoners like
Deskovic, who had exhausted his state appeals, the one-year
countdown began upon enactment of AEDPA — his lawyer missed the
April 24, 1997, deadline by four days. The district attorney argued that his
petition should be dismissed on these grounds. The courts
agreed (including the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, whose decision was co-written [10] by Sonia
Sotomayor). Deskovic spent six more years in prison before the Innocence
Project convinced the new district attorney to test DNA in his case. It
matched someone else and his conviction was vacated.
Deskovic was lucky to have an attorney at all. “I don’t think
people realize that [non-death row] inmates are not provided with attorneys in
federal court,” Deskovic said. Although AEDPA contained no promise of
competent counsel in the end, people on death row are entitled
to post-conviction representation. Others are often left
to file pro se petitions, essentially representing
themselves. “So now you have poor people who are often poorly
educated — certainly not lawyers, certainly not having formal legal education —
wading through this procedural thicket, and they can very easily get tripped
up. And federal courts think nothing of saying, ‘Oh, you didn’t follow this
rule? This procedure? We’re not looking at your case anymore.’”
Even more profound than the strict limits and deadlines it imposed
in individual cases is the way AEDPA altered the balance of power between state
and federal courts, favoring finality over fairness. Under AEDPA, federal
courts may only grant habeas relief if a state court ran afoul of “clearly
established federal law,” or if its ruling was rooted in “an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented.” In the oblique
language of the law, this drastically raised the bar for overturning state
convictions. Federal judges have been “pretty much shut out … from granting
habeas relief in most cases, even when they believe that an egregious
miscarriage of justice has occurred,” 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge
Alex Kozinski wrote [11] in the Georgetown
Law Journal last year. “We now regularly have to stand by in impotent
silence, even though it may appear to us that an innocent person has been
convicted.”
In the New York Times Magazine [12] last
summer, Emily Bazelon cited Kozinski as one of a growing number of critics who
have called for the repeal of AEDPA. Federal judges “are now raising alarm that
the law is systematically failing to provide the necessary safeguards against
miscarriages of justice,” she wrote. There are many examples of the way AEDPA
has been “cruel” and responsible for “much human suffering,” according
to Kozinski. But Deskovic, who now runs a foundation [13] to
help the wrongfully convicted, points to the case of a man named Lorenzo
Johnson as particularly egregious.
Johnson was convicted in Pennsylvania for his involvement in a
1995 murder. The state never claimed he was the triggerman or even that he had
a direct role in the killing, yet at 22 Johnson was sentenced to mandatory life
without parole. In October 2011, the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals
overturned his conviction, finding that, while Johnson might have been present
at the scene, the claim that he intended to commit murder was “mere
speculation” by the state. After 16 years behind bars, Johnson walked out of
prison. With Deskovic’s help, Johnson found a job, reunited with his family,
and pursued public speaking.
But in 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed [14] the
3rd Circuit’s ruling, holding that it had “failed to afford due respect to
the role of the jury and the state courts of Pennsylvania.” Although the
federal court had found insufficient evidence to keep Johnson in prison, the
“state court of last review” disagreed — “and that determination in turn is
entitled to considerable deference under AEDPA.” After four months of freedom,
Johnson got a phone call from his lawyer telling him he had to go back to
prison. “It was surreal and horrifying,” said Deskovic, who drove him back
to Pennsylvania from New York. Along the way, Johnson made calls to friends and
family, struggling to explain. To Deskovic, it was a grotesque ruling by the
Supreme Court — a “rush to repudiate a line of reasoning by the lower federal
court,” rather than an interest in justice. Johnson “shouldn’t have had to be
returned back to prison on a technicality.”
Today Johnson writes articles behind bars that are published at
the Huffington Post. In a recent article [15] titled “Clinton’s Other
Terrible Crime Bill,” he described the lasting impact of AEDPA. “Although I’m
living through a nightmare, I’m also just one of many others,” he wrote,
pointing out the record number of exonerations in recent years. “But these
numbers have not even scratched the surface; there are many other wrongfully
convicted people still in prison.”
President
Bill Clinton sits between House Speaker Newt Gingrich, left, and Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole, right, during an April 26, 1995, meeting at the White
House. Photo: Luke Frazza/AFP/Getty Images
In the recent debates about crime policy from the ’90s, a
common Clinton defense has been one of unintended consequences, in which
bad laws were born of the best intentions. But White House memos in the
run-up to AEDPA make clear that Clinton had been thoroughly warned about
its dangers. What’s more, news articles from the era betray the
extent to which criminal justice policies were being crafted with
political strategy in mind, rather than as serious solutions to crime. “It’s
been the most careful political calculation,” former Deputy Attorney General Philip
Heymann told [16] the New York
Times after leaving the DOJ in 1994 — “with absolutely sublime
indifference to the real nature of the problem.”
Indeed, with crime rates falling in the mid-90s, even the
landmark features of the 1994 crime bill largely boiled down to
posturing. In the New Republic, a former operative
for Clinton’s 1992 campaign recalled the origins of the $8.8 billion
COPS program that Joe Biden defends to this day: “Clinton had a big crime
speech coming up. We had no idea how many extra cops would be a good thing.
… Bruce Reed and I called [Ron Klain] from Little Rock. He said, ‘Would
100,000 be enough?’” Not surprisingly, in contrast to Biden’s boasting,
the COPS program failed to deliver [17] on
its promises.
By the time AEDPA passed, Clinton had learned how effectively he
could undercut the Republicans by co-opting their ideas on crime. Republicans
were outraged. “We say habeas corpus, they say sure. … We say prisons; they say
sure,” one frustrated GOP source complained to the New York Times [16] as
the 1996 election against Bob Dole approached. But critics pointed out
that the costs of such a winning political strategy were far too
high. “I have absolutely no faith that constitutional principles matter to this
president when they emerge in a criminal-justice context,” American Civil
Liberties Union legislative director Laura W. Murphy told the Times. AEDPA
marked “a total collapse” on the issue.
In the end, the final question for Clinton when it came to
gutting habeas corpus was how to spin it.
In an email to The Intercept, Klain defended the
1994 memo in which he sought to outmaneuver the GOP by proposing a tough
new Democratic crime bill. “Clearly we were trying hard to stave off draconian
legislation being advanced by the new Republican majority,” he wrote. As for
habeas corpus, he drew a clear distinction between what the Democrats advanced
and what ended up in AEDPA. “We explored a number of strategies to prevent
their plans to gut appeal rights without providing adequate counsel,” he said.
“The GOP version passed after I left.”
It is true that many Democrats fought against the version of
habeas reform that passed as part of AEDPA. Among them was Joe Biden,
who for years had hoped to pass a habeas reform law of his own. But
his proposed legislation, most recently aimed at the 1994 crime
bill, had been drafted with state prisoners in mind, meaning that
“the Biden bill would not affect the case of Timothy McVeigh,” as Bruce Reed
wrote to Clinton on May 3, 1995, two weeks after the bombing. “We should go
along with some form of limits on appeals by federal prisoners,” Reed advised.
In the margins, Clinton appears to have written “agree.”
Two days later, White House lawyer Chris Cerf sent
a memo [18] to his colleagues
comparing the dueling versions of habeas reform before Congress. He analyzed
their legal implications and their chances of passing. Biden’s bill, which
included myriad provisions on the right to counsel, was “dead on
arrival.”
A measure brought forward by Senate Judiciary Chair Orrin
Hatch as part of the terrorism bill introduced by Bob Dole was
somewhat “less radical” than other GOP versions, but still “a very
significant incursion into traditional habeas law.” Cerf raised particular
caution over provisions that required higher standards of deference to
state courts and made it harder for federal courts to grant
evidentiary hearings. “For all practical purposes,” he wrote, these two
combined “would eliminate federal habeas hearings.”
The White House should accept the Hatch bill on a set of strict
conditions, Cerf wrote. Among them: the deletion of those troubling
provisions and the addition of language to ensure “competent
counsel at all phases of a capital case.” If Hatch refused, Cerf wrote,
the White House should reject his proposal and instead aggressively
try to “unbundle habeas from the counterterrorism bill,” saving the
fight for another day. But he was not optimistic. “My sense … is that the
habeas train is coming down the track and is unstoppable,”
Cerf wrote, “especially after the president’s comments on 60 Minutes.”
In an underlined sentence, he warned, “We do not want to put the
president in the position of having to accept highly objectionable habeas
provisions merely because they are tied to the counterterrorism bill.”
Indeed, while it would take almost a year to pass AEDPA, Clinton’s
immediate call to speed up the death penalty days after the
bombing had rigged the game from the start. As Democrats began
threatening to throw gun control amendments at Dole’s terror
bill to force the removal of habeas reform, Hatch seized on Clinton’s own
rhetoric, declaring, “The American people do not want to witness the spectacle
of these terrorists abusing our judicial system … by filing appeal after
meritless appeal.” For a moment, Clinton stood his ground. In late May
1995, a month after the attack, he sent a letter to Dole arguing against
passing habeas reform as part of the terrorism bill and
stressing the need to protect “the historic right to meaningful federal
review.” But less than two weeks later, on Larry King Live,
Clinton suddenly reversed course. Habeas reform “ought to be done in the
context of this terrorism legislation,” he said, “so that it would apply to any
prosecutions brought against anyone indicted in Oklahoma.”
Inside the White House, Abner Mikva believed he knew what had
happened. In early June 1995, just days after Clinton wrote to Dole,
a delegation from Oklahoma City arrived in Washington. It included survivors of
the bombing as well as grieving family members. They called themselves “the
habeas group.” Convinced it would result in swifter justice for the
terrorist attack, they were lobbying for streamlining death row appeals. Mikva
and his staff had been trying at the time to convince the president to
support a more cautious version of habeas reform put forward by the NAACP
Legal Defense Fund. But after the visit, Mikva recalls, all bets were off.
“He wrote on my memo, ‘No. Oklahoma.’ And that was the end of our efforts.”
Yet, for all the political gamesmanship that paved the way to
AEDPA, Mikva places the ultimate blame for the erosion of habeas corpus on the
judiciary — particularly conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice William
Rehnquist. Rehnquist had long railed against [19] the
drawn-out appeals that delayed executions for making “a mockery of our criminal
justice system.” Upon assuming the Supreme Court bench, in 1988, Rehnquist
formed the Ad Hoc Committee on Federal Habeas Corpus in Capital Cases, naming
retired Justice Lewis Powell Jr. as its head. Powell “came up with some very
draconian changes to habeas,” Mikva recalled, “which were basically the
substance of what ultimately passed.”
Federal judges at the time were alarmed by the recommendations. In
1989, at a Senate Judiciary hearing [20] convened
by Joe Biden, Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the 9th Circuit decried Powell’s
report. “Finality and speed are the presumed objectives,”
Reinhardt testified. “They seem to outweigh the concerns for fairness,
justice, due process, and compliance with the constitution.” Citing his
experiences with prosecutors who withheld evidence in capital cases —
violations that can take years to discover — Reinhardt posed the question:
“What can I do if someone comes in with affidavits and proof asking for relief
from me when a man is about to be executed and the statute says I have no
jurisdiction or authority to grant a stay or any habeas relief?”
Yet habeas reform efforts continued along parallel tracks in the
legislative and judicial branches. By the time AEDPA passed, a series of
Supreme Court rulings had already made it more difficult to challenge
state convictions. (Indeed, in one 1995 White House memo to Clinton, Bruce
Reed noted that Republicans had ultimately dropped habeas reform from the
1994 crime bill over fears that “a Democratic crime bill would
undermine recent Supreme Court decisions that have strengthened prosecutors’
hands.”) To some legal scholars at the time, this made AEDPA mostly symbolic —
an attempt by lawmakers to take credit for what the judiciary had already done.
In Congress, however, others saw the dangers posed by AEDPA. On
April 17, 1996, during the final round of fighting in the Senate, New York
Democrat Daniel Patrick Moynihan warned that the provisions curtailing
habeas corpus would “introduce a virus that will surely spread throughout
our system of laws.” One of just eight senators to vote [21] against
the law — Biden was not among them — Moynihan read from a letter to
Clinton sent by four attorneys general.
They urged him to
“communicate to the Congress your resolve, and your duty under the
Constitution, to prevent the enactment of such unconstitutional legislation and
the consequent disruption of so critical a part of our criminal punishment
system.”
But in the end, the final question for Clinton when it came to
gutting habeas corpus was how to spin it. On April 23, 1996, the day
before the ceremony on the South Lawn, Bruce Reed sent a memo [22] to the White House
staff secretary titled “Habeas language in signing stmt.” The
remarks drafted for the president went into “far more detail” than
they should, he wrote. “I realize this is a controversial issue,” Reed said,
“but it is also one that could get us in trouble if we say more than
necessary.”
AEDPA has fulfilled the very concerns Clinton brushed aside
upon signing the bill. With the presidential election in view, Republicans were already
“blasting us with the charge” that Clinton’s re-election would “be a
bonanza for criminals’ rights,” Reed wrote, somewhat ironically. He
suggested a number of edits to minimize avenues for attack.
Among them: “We should drop the sentence, ‘I am advised that one provision of
this important bill could be interpreted in a manner that would undercut
meaningful federal habeas corpus review and raise profoundly troubling
constitutional issues.’ This sentence could be used against us,” he warned,
“and doesn’t add anything, since we later say we don’t think it will be
interpreted this way.”
Yet Clinton’s final remarks struck a defensive tone.
His signing statement contained four paragraphs on the habeas
provisions in AEDPA, assuring that they would neither “limit the authority of
the federal courts” or “deny litigants a meaningful opportunity” to win
evidentiary hearings. “Our constitutional ideal of a limited government
that must respect individual freedom has been a practical reality because
independent federal courts have the power ‘to say what the law is’ and to apply
the law to the cases before them,” Clinton said. “I have signed this bill
on the understanding that the courts can and will interpret these
provisions … in accordance with this ideal.”
But Clinton was wrong. AEDPA has instead fulfilled the very
concerns he brushed aside upon signing the bill. It is a law “misconceived
at its inception and born of misguided political ambition,” as Judge
Stephen Reinhardt recently wrote, some 25 years after testifying before
Congress, “and repeatedly interpreted … in the most inflexible and
unyielding manner possible.”
Ironically, AEDPA had little bearing in the end on the case of
Timothy McVeigh, whose relatively swift execution in 2001 had more to do
with political will than stringent new review standards. Nor did
AEDPA solve the problem its supporters claimed it would address in the
first place — federal court dockets remain backlogged and prisoners spend
longer awaiting execution than ever.
But in a sense, the cruelest irony is how AEDPA has affected
those who are not on death row yet nonetheless face the prospect of
dying in prison on dubious grounds. Ignored by those
who championed the law — and still largely invisible from the
debate — they have been no less affected by its legacy. As Lorenzo
Johnson wrote from a prison cell last month, “AEDPA has been devastating
for wrongfully convicted prisoners and their families. Reform is long overdue.”
Links:
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsK3aaYq9zA
[2] http://www.vox.com/2016/4/28/11515132/iirira-clinton-immigration
[3] http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/
[4] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820704-RonKlain-November1994.html
[5] https://newrepublic.com/article/90842/the-kids-are-alright
[6] https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/WCPD-1995-05-01/html/WCPD-1995-05-01-Pg689.htm
[7] http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=51239
[8] http://articles.latimes.com/1996-04-25/news/mn-62699_1_clinton-signs
[9] http://www.nytimes.com/1996/04/25/us/clinton-signs-measure-on-terrorism-and-death-penalty-appeals.html
[10] http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F10%2Fnyregion%2F10dna.html%3F_r%3D0
[11] http://georgetownlawjournal.org/files/2015/06/Kozinski_Preface.pdf
[12] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/17/magazine/the-law-that-keeps-people-on-death-row-despite-flawed-trials.html?_r=0
[13] http://www.deskovic.org
[14] http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/supreme_court_reinstates_accomplice_conviction_says_3rd_circuit_failed_to_r/
[15] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lorenzo-johnson/bill-clintons-other-terri_b_9743138.html
[16] http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/01/us/seizing-the-crime-issue-clinton-blurs-party-lines.html?pagewanted=all
[17] http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2001/11/invisible_cops.html
[18] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820703-ChrisCerf-May1995.html
[19] http://www.nytimes.com/1981/04/28/us/rehnquist-assails-court-for-delays-and-litigation-of-death-sentences.html
[20] http://www.c-span.org/video/?11047-1/federal-habeas-corpus-reform-part-3&start=6
[21] http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=104&session=2&vote=00071#position
[22] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820702-BruceReed-April1
[2] http://www.vox.com/2016/4/28/11515132/iirira-clinton-immigration
[3] http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/
[4] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820704-RonKlain-November1994.html
[5] https://newrepublic.com/article/90842/the-kids-are-alright
[6] https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/WCPD-1995-05-01/html/WCPD-1995-05-01-Pg689.htm
[7] http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=51239
[8] http://articles.latimes.com/1996-04-25/news/mn-62699_1_clinton-signs
[9] http://www.nytimes.com/1996/04/25/us/clinton-signs-measure-on-terrorism-and-death-penalty-appeals.html
[10] http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F10%2Fnyregion%2F10dna.html%3F_r%3D0
[11] http://georgetownlawjournal.org/files/2015/06/Kozinski_Preface.pdf
[12] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/17/magazine/the-law-that-keeps-people-on-death-row-despite-flawed-trials.html?_r=0
[13] http://www.deskovic.org
[14] http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/supreme_court_reinstates_accomplice_conviction_says_3rd_circuit_failed_to_r/
[15] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lorenzo-johnson/bill-clintons-other-terri_b_9743138.html
[16] http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/01/us/seizing-the-crime-issue-clinton-blurs-party-lines.html?pagewanted=all
[17] http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2001/11/invisible_cops.html
[18] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820703-ChrisCerf-May1995.html
[19] http://www.nytimes.com/1981/04/28/us/rehnquist-assails-court-for-delays-and-litigation-of-death-sentences.html
[20] http://www.c-span.org/video/?11047-1/federal-habeas-corpus-reform-part-3&start=6
[21] http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=104&session=2&vote=00071#position
[22] https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/2820702-BruceReed-April1
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