Friday, September 7, 2012

New rules on lawyers restricted by U.S judge

In U.S  Obama government overstepped its authority by trying to impose new restrictions on rules that access to prisoners held at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base ordered by federal judge.The chief judge Royce Lamberth revealed that the previous rules overwhelmed by the U.S. District Court in Washington four years ago were working good and would continue to govern lawyers access to Guantanamo prisoners.

The U.S government told the new rules did not make substantial changes.Taking a decision in this Lamberth called one of the government's words "quite preposterous" and said another "does not pass the smell test." Federal court in Washington having legal challenges crime prevention from Guantanamo prisoners who are seeking their freedom by challenging the government's evidence for holding them. That court negotiated the rules governing lawyers' access to their Guantanamo clients,few months ago the Justice Department sought to put new restrictions on attorney visits to prisoners whose cases had been denied or dismissed. 


Declaring the new rules would have restricted the number of lawyers and interpreters who could visit any given prisoner and put new restrictions and rules on what the lawyers could do with classified information learned from prisoners, including documents the lawyers written in their own,then the Lamberth told few of the prisoners were fluent in English or knowledge about U.S. law, and that they were held in an isolated location without the means to file legal challenges on their own otherwise who had lost their cases still had the right to file appeals or new challenges under laws that had been revised.

No comments:

Post a Comment