Media Advisory
January 16, 2007
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Contact: MATT KOVARY
(212) 382-6713 |
HARASSMENT BY THE U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT
OF ATTORNEYS REPRESENTING GUANTANAMO DETAINEES
REQUIRES CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION
THE NEW YORK CITY BAR ASSOCIATION APPEALS TO THE
NEW CONGRESS
The New York City Bar Association today appealed
to the new Congress in Washington, and the U.S.
Department of Defense, to investigate “highly
inappropriate comments” by the deputy assistant
secretary of defense – Charles D. Stimson – who
last Thursday in a radio interview urged corporate
CEOs to end their attorney-client relationships
with law firms he singled out by name as representing
Guantanamo detainees.
“The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that
those detained at Guantanamo are entitled to counsel,
and procedures have been established to facilitate
that representation,” the Association wrote
in its letter to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. “Indeed,
while Mr. Stimson presumes that the detainees are
all “terrorists,” the whole purpose
of providing representation is to seek to establish
a fair process for determining whether the detainees,
who are currently being imprisoned indefinitely
without charge, are in fact “terrorists” or
innocent victims of false or mistaken information
wrongfully detained without jurisdiction.
The president of the New York City Bar Association,
Barry Kamins, also urged the chairs of the Armed
Services Committees in both Houses of Congress
to hold hearings on efforts by the Executive Branch,
including those by Mr. Stimson, to harass and intimidate
lawyers who are providing pro bono representation
to detainees.
New York City Bar President Barry Kamins today
contacted the Defense Department, the House of
Representatives and the Senate to urge hearings
into the matter. These letters are attached above.
About the Association
The New York
City Bar Association (www.nycbar.org)
was founded in 1870, and since then has been
dedicated to maintaining the high ethical standards
of the profession, promoting reform of the law,
and providing service to the profession and the
public. The Association continues to work for
political, legal and social reform, while implementing
innovative means to help the disadvantaged. Protecting
the public’s welfare remains one of the
Association’s highest priorities.
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