http://www.onenewsnow.com/Politics/Default.aspx?id=778156
Jim Brown - OneNewsNow - 11/23/2009 7:00:00 AM

Senator
Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) in a Judiciary Committee hearing last
week asked Attorney General Eric Holder a question that the nation's
top cop could not answer. Graham asked: "Can you give me a case in
United States history where a[n] enemy combatant caught on a
battlefield was tried in civilian court?"
The inquiry was followed by an extensive silence before Holder
attempted to answer, and the attorney general could only verbalize: "I
don't know. I'd have to look at that. I think that, you know, the
determination I've made...." before Graham sternly cut him off in
mid-sentence.
"We're making history here, Mr. Attorney General," Graham stated. "I'll answer it for you. The answer is 'no.'"
Robert Alt, deputy director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation,
says Holder's non-response raises a question about the political nature
of the decision to try some Guantanamo Bay detainees in civilian court.
(See related video)
"You would anticipate that any legal decision of this nature would have
been highly researched and that the attorney general would have been
briefed on the questions of any prior usage," Alt mentions. "The fact
that he couldn't even answer that question, I found startling."
Alt notes that Al Qaeda was able to use the civilian trial of blind
sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman in New York as an information-gathering tool --
a list of unindicted co-conspirators was later found in a cave in Torah
Borah, Afghanistan.
Already a member? Click here to log in


This Pennsylvania mom of three is a big fan of the band The Cranberries, loves to eat seafood and enjoys spending time with her family at Knoebel's amusement park.
Read her interview.
Then answer her question for YOU!