Gary Conner
New member
This is your problem and the problem of so amy others who aren't lawyers or who don't understand the law. Jurisdiction is never presumed. Jurisdiction MUST BE EXPRESSLY GRANTED either constitutionally or by statute. If the enabling statute doesn't specifically give jurisdiction over someone then a court doesn't have it. Its that simple.
Thank you Counselor for pointing out you have yet to read the entire Act.
The authority is intentionally "granted" within this act (unconstitutionally) for a Military Commission Officer to hold you for any amount of time they wish, should they "label" you a suspected "illegal enemy combatant."
That is my whole point. While I ASSURE you I don't believe the Constitution grants jurisdiction over American Citizens for secret trials nor does it grant power to the military to hold a Citizen for an indefinite length of time in secret without his preferred choice of counsel should the Military Commission decide it is a "National Security" matter, the Act itself is intended to EXPRESSLY (meaning "for a particular purpose") GRANT jurisdiction.
That Counselor, is my whole point. Thank you for assisting me in making it.