Torturers aren't safe in America, unless …

Good news!

Anti-Torture Statute Used to Indict Son of Liberia's Ex-Leader:

The Justice Department invoked a 12-year-old federal anti-torture statute for the first time yesterday, indicting the son of former Liberian president Charles Taylor in connection with the alleged use of a hot iron, scalding water and an electrical device to shock and burn an ally of his father's political opponents.

The indictment involves a rare use of a U.S. human rights law against a foreign national or a U.S. citizen over an act committed outside U.S. territory. Taylor's son allegedly committed the torture in the Liberian capital of Monrovia in July 2002, while he headed an "antiterrorist unit" charged with protecting Taylor. …

"These cases are hard cases," Julie L. Myers, head of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, said at a news conference yesterday. "In this case alone, we had agents from . . . three different agencies flying all over the world to get evidence."

Myers called the indictment a milestone. She said it will send "a clear message that the United States will not be a safe haven for human rights violators."

Meanwhile in Washington, U.S. Denies Liability in Torture Case:

The Bush administration asserted in federal court yesterday that Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and three former military officials cannot be held liable for the alleged torture of nine Afghans and Iraqis in U.S. military detention camps because the detainees have no standing to sue in U.S. courts.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General C. Frederick Beckner III also argued that a decision by the court to let a trial proceed would amount to an infringement by the judiciary on the president's power to wage war and would open the door to new litigation in U.S. courts by foreign nationals who feel aggrieved by U.S. government policies.

When antiterror groups use torture in Liberia, it's a crime in US courts. When antiterror groups do it in Afghanistan or Iraq, it isn't.

More like this

A Boston man, the head of an elite Anti Terrorist Unit, has become the first person ever charged by the US Department of Justice with committing torture abroad. Charles "Chuckie" Taylor is being held in Miami. Surprised? Didn't think the US would move against one of its own citizens for flagrant…
Let there be no doubt, Bush still has tremendous potential to foul things up (and make lots of people dead). But Little Lord Pontchartrain just cried uncle: In a concession to the Senate's new Democratic majority, President Bush won't rename four controversial federal appeals court nominees whose…
There are so many misbehaviors, such as the Foley sex scandal and "PlameGate" (need I say more?), that deserve attention and action by the Rethuglicans, yet these issues fester while BushCo signs the terror bill into law. Bush's plan becomes law just six weeks [italics mine] after he acknowledged…
One of the most astonishing things about the Bush administration, in my view, is how many former officials have come out and criticized things the administration has done, and how little impact it has had politically. This can partially be chalked up to an uninformed populace, of course, but also…

Wah? There's the Torture Victims Protection Act, there's the Alien Tort Claim Act, where's the lack of jurisdiction?