5. Seizing War Protesters Assets
Sources:
Global Research, July 2007
Title: Bush Executive Order: Criminalizing the Antiwar Movement
Author: Michel Chossudovsky
The Progressive, August 2007
Title: Bushs Executive Order Even Worse Than the One on
Iraq
Author: Matthew Rothschild
Student Researchers: Chris Navarre and Jennifer Routh
Faculty Evaluator: Amy Kittlestrom, PhD
President Bush has signed two executive orders that would allow the
US Treasury Department to seize the property of any person perceived
to, directly or indirectly, pose a threat to US operations in the Middle
East.
The first of these executive orders, titled Blocking Property
of Certain Persons Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq,
signed by Bush on July 17, 2007, authorizes the Secretary of Treasury,
in consultation with the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense,
to confiscate the assets of US citizens and organizations who directly
or indirectly pose a risk to US operations in Iraq. Bushs
order states:
I have issued an Executive Order blocking property of persons determined
1) to have committed, or pose a significant risk of committing, an act
or acts of violence that have the purpose or effect of threatening the
peace or stability of Iraq or the Government of Iraq or undermining
efforts to promote economic reconstruction and political reform in Iraq
. . . or 2) to have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial,
material, logistical, or technical support for, or goods or services
in support of, such an act or acts of violence or any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order . . .
Section five of this order announces that, because of the ability
to transfer funds or other assets instantaneously, prior notice to such
persons of measures to be taken pursuant to this order would render
these measures ineffectual. I therefore determine . . . there need be
no prior notice of listing or determination [of seizure] . . .
On August 1, Bush issued a similar executive order, titled Blocking
Property of Persons Undermining the Sovereignty of Lebanon or Its Democratic
Processes and Institutions. While the text in this order is, for
the most part, identical to the first, the order regarding Lebanon is
more severe.
While both orders bypass the Constitutional right to due process of
law in giving the Secretary of Treasury authority to seize properties
of those persons posing a risk of violence, or in any vague way assisting
opposition to US agenda, the August 1 order targets any person determined
to have taken, or to pose a significant risk of taking, actionsviolent
or nonviolentthat undermine operations in Lebanon. The act further
authorizes freezing the assets of a spouse or dependent child
of any person whose property is frozen. The executive order on Lebanon
also bans providing food, shelter, medicine, or any humanitarian aid
to those whose assets have been seizedincluding the dependent
children referred to above.
Vaguely written and dangerously open to broad interpretation, this
unconstitutional order allows for the arbitrary targeting of any American
for dispossession of all belongings and demands ostracism from society.
Bruce Fein, a constitutional lawyer and former Justice Department official
in the Reagan administration says of the order, This is so sweeping
its staggering. I have never seen anything so broad. It expands
beyond terrorism, beyond seeking to use violence or the threat of violence
to cower or intimidate a population.
In an editorial for the Washington Times, Fein states, The person
subject to an asset freeze is reduced to a leper. The secretarys
financial death sentences are imposed without notice or an opportunity
to respond, the core of due process. They hit like a bolt of lightning.
Any person whose assets are frozen immediately confronts a comprehensive
quarantine. He may not receive and benefactors may not provide funds,
goods, or services of any sort. A lawyer cannot provide legal services
to challenge the secretarys blocking order. A doctor cannot provide
medical services in response to a cardiac arrest. Fein adds, The
Justice Department is customarily entrusted with vetting executive orders
for consistency with the Constitution. Is the Attorney General sleeping?1
(see Story #8).
Citation
1. Bruce Fein, Our Orphaned Constitution, Washington Times,
August 7, 2007.
UPDATE BY MATT ROTHSCHILD
This is a story that went virtually nowhere that I know of in the mainstream
press. When I traveled around the country giving speeches last summer
and brought up the subject of this executive order, people couldnt
believe it and wondered why they hadnt heard about it. Im
still wondering that myself.
Here are a couple of good places to check for issues related to this
story:
The American Civil Liberties Union, http://www.aclu.org.
The Center for Constitutional Rights, http://www.ccrjustice.org.