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"John Galt" wrote in message
om... Will the military obey the Constitution and arrest Bush? http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/...ws/7690067.htm First, "The report, by visiting professor Jeffrey Record" indicates this was one man's opinion, not that of the War College. Second, the militray doesn't have the legal right to arrest the President, and I challenge anyone to demonstrate otherwise. Jarg |
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![]() "Jarg" wrote in message . .. "John Galt" wrote in message om... Will the military obey the Constitution and arrest Bush? http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/...ws/7690067.htm First, "The report, by visiting professor Jeffrey Record" indicates this was one man's opinion, not that of the War College. A visiting professor at the Army War College who usually teaches the same classes at the Air Force equivalent, apparently. Second, the militray doesn't have the legal right to arrest the President, and I challenge anyone to demonstrate otherwise. Hmmmmm.... Can an American civilian ever be arrested by the military? Can a commanding officer ever be arrested by orders of a subordinate? If the answer to both of those is "yes," then it is conceivable (but not terribly likely) that the President of the USA could be arrested by the military. I wouldn't want to be the poor SP/MP ordered to make the arrest however... |
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![]() "LawsonE" wrote in message ink.net... Hmmmmm.... Can an American civilian ever be arrested by the military? Yes, on a military installation. |
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message news ![]() "LawsonE" wrote in message ink.net... Hmmmmm.... Can an American civilian ever be arrested by the military? Yes, on a military installation. Not usually. Normally held for civil authorities. Tex |
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![]() "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... Not usually. Normally held for civil authorities. In other words, you concur with my statement. |
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On Fri, 16 Jan 2004 04:17:39 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: "LawsonE" wrote in message link.net... Hmmmmm.... Can an American civilian ever be arrested by the military? Yes, on a military installation. Actually, no. The military does not have arrest powers for any persons not under the UCMJ. What happens in real life is that - for minor offenses - the subject is cited with a mandatory court appearance before a US Magistrate. For serious offenses the subject is detained pending the arrival of the US Marshals or FBI (who conduct the arrest). (I spent a year pulling 'Military Police Duty Officer' 3-4x a month at Ft Lewis not long ago and I got to be an expert on jurisdictional issues.) "It's not American foreign policy, or the plight of the Palestinians, or America's longstanding support for Israel. A group of people with money and weaponry have simply decided that we, as a civilization, are unfit to live, and want, eventally, to exterminate us." 'Christian Century' magazine |
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On Fri, 16 Jan 2004 05:06:05 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... Not usually. Normally held for civil authorities. In other words, you concur with my statement. No he does not. 'Arrest' is a precise legal term. Military Police do not have arrest authority over civilians. "It's not American foreign policy, or the plight of the Palestinians, or America's longstanding support for Israel. A group of people with money and weaponry have simply decided that we, as a civilization, are unfit to live, and want, eventally, to exterminate us." 'Christian Century' magazine |
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#9
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Second, the militray doesn't have the legal right to arrest the President,
and I challenge anyone to demonstrate otherwise. In less enlightened societies, this is regular practice, and is called a coup. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#10
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![]() "Colin Campbell" (remove underscore) wrote in message ... Actually, no. The military does not have arrest powers for any persons not under the UCMJ. What happens in real life is that - for minor offenses - the subject is cited with a mandatory court appearance before a US Magistrate. For serious offenses the subject is detained pending the arrival of the US Marshals or FBI (who conduct the arrest). (I spent a year pulling 'Military Police Duty Officer' 3-4x a month at Ft Lewis not long ago and I got to be an expert on jurisdictional issues.) So if a civilian commits an offense on a military installation the military police have no power to seize and hold him? |
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