By MICHAEL C. DORF
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
FindLaw’s Writ

Earlier this week, the Bush Administration announced plans to seek the death penal­ty for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and five oth­er per­sons who alleged­ly played a role in the 9/​11 attacks. The Administration plans to try the six defen­dants before mil­i­tary com­mis­sions, as autho­rized by the Military Commissions Act (MCA) of 2006. But that plan rais­es a host of dif­fi­cult legal questions.

Will the defen­dants or at least their lawyers have access to all of the evi­dence against them, and if not, what mea­sures will be used to ensure the reli­a­bil­i­ty of that evi­dence? Will the gov­ern­ment seek to intro­duce state­ments made by Mohammed as a result of the water­board­ing to which the Administration acknowl­edges he was sub­ject­ed, or would that be deemed a vio­la­tion of Section 948r(b) of the MCA, which for­bids mil­i­tary com­mis­sions from admit­ting any state­ment obtained by use of torture”?

Would oth­er evi­dence derived from such state­ments be admis­si­ble? And so on.

In this col­umn, I will set aside such impor­tant issues to address a more basic one: Is the Administration right to seek the death penal­ty in the first place? Answering that ques­tion in the spe­cial con­text of these high-pro­file ter­ror­ism cas­es will in turn shed light on the debate about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment more generally.

The Worst of the Worst

Many peo­ple in the United States and around the world cat­e­gor­i­cal­ly oppose cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on moral grounds. To such death penal­ty abo­li­tion­ists, the death penal­ty is always wrong, even for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed.

However, a major­i­ty of Americans believe that the death penal­ty is some­times jus­ti­fied, and the U.S. Supreme Court has held that, sub­ject to appro­pri­ate pro­ce­dur­al safe­guards, it is con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly per­mis­si­ble as a tool of domes­tic crim­i­nal law. If one begins with the premise that there are some crimes that are so heinous, and some crim­i­nals who are so beyond redemp­tion, that they deserve to die, then it is hard to imag­ine bet­ter can­di­dates for the death penal­ty than mass murderers.

Accordingly, if the gov­ern­ment proves its case against these 9/​11 defen­dants, then one would expect that all but the most ardent death penal­ty abo­li­tion­ists would find the death penal­ty a fitting punishment.

Nonetheless, a num­ber of fac­tors would seem to counsel restraint.

Can the Death Penalty Deter a Martyr?

Death penal­ty sup­port­ers some­times point to deter­rence as a basis for gov­ern­ment impo­si­tion of the ulti­mate penal­ty. Whether the death penal­ty in fact deters crime is the sub­ject of seri­ous debate. Some recent stud­ies claim to find a deter­rent effect, while oth­er schol­ars have point­ed to flaws in the method­ol­o­gy of these stud­ies that, the crit­ics say, make the researchers’ conclusions unreliable.

So, does the death penal­ty have a greater deter­rent effect than the prospect of life impris­on­ment? Whatever the right answer to that ques­tion may be, the ques­tion of deter­rence has a very dif­fer­ent com­plex­ion when applied to ter­ror­ists whose very aim is to die while car­ry­ing out an attack on civil­ians. People who hope to suc­ceed by dying are high­ly unlike­ly to wor­ry about the pos­si­bil­i­ty of being killed if they are captured.

This log­ic applies most direct­ly to Mohamed al-Qahtani, the alleged twen­ti­eth hijack­er,” as he would have died in the 9/​11 attacks if he had suc­cess­ful­ly entered the United States in August 2001. One might think, how­ev­er, that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed – the alleged mas­ter­mind of the attacks – and the four oth­er defen­dants – who are alleged to have played sup­port­ing roles – were not plan­ning to die, and thus that exe­cut­ing them after a guilty ver­dict would indeed be, for them, a pun­ish­ment rather than vindication.

Yet for two rea­sons, this line of rea­son­ing is faulty. First, what­ev­er else one can say about al Qaeda oper­a­tives and their lead­er­ship, it is dif­fi­cult to accuse them of insin­cer­i­ty. People who vol­un­tar­i­ly forego com­fort­able lives to live in caves, fight in wars, and mur­der civil­ians in large num­bers, all for the sup­posed glo­ry of God, are dead­ly seri­ous about their will­ing­ness, even eager­ness, to become martyrs.

Second, even if a hand­ful of al Qaeda mem­bers har­bor doubts about the 72 vir­gins await­ing them in heav­en, that fact would only be rel­e­vant to spe­cif­icdeter­rence of those par­tic­u­lar per­sons, but the core con­se­quen­tial­ist argu­ment for the death penal­ty is that it enhances gen­er­al deter­rence. In this view, ter­ror­ists at large will see the exe­cu­tion of Mohammed, al-Qahtani and the oth­ers, and aban­don their nefar­i­ous plans for fear of a sim­i­lar fate. Given the moti­va­tions and meth­ods of ter­ror­ists, how­ev­er, this sce­nario is wildly implausible.

Just Deserts

Many sup­port­ers of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment believe that some killers deserve to die, regard­less of whether the death penal­ty has any spe­cif­ic or gen­er­al deter­rent effect. At least for the worst killers (and in the view of some, for all or near­ly all killers), ret­ri­bu­tion alone is a suf­fi­cient basis for the death penal­ty. Death, in this view, is the just desert for killers.

Retributive jus­ti­fi­ca­tions for the death penal­ty can also be linked to the con­se­quences of not impos­ing it, which may include vig­i­lan­tism. The fam­i­ly and friends of vic­tims, as well as soci­ety at large, may be so out­raged by a killer’s crimes that they threat­en to take mat­ters into their own hands if the state does not deliv­er a suf­fi­cient­ly severe penalty.

Nonetheless, the argu­ment for ret­ri­bu­tion does not rest on this threat. Even if there is no risk of vig­i­lan­tism, ret­ribu­tivists argue, some killers must still be exe­cut­ed in the name of justice.

The ret­ribu­tivist argu­ment for the death penal­ty is indeed strong in these cas­es, at least if three con­di­tions hold. First, one must actu­al­ly believe in the right of human beings to exact ret­ri­bu­tion for its own sake. Second, one must find the evi­dence of the defen­dants’ guilt con­vinc­ing. And third, one must be per­suad­ed that the defen­dants in fact played a sub­stan­tial role in the 9/​11 plot. Depending on the evi­dence, it is pos­si­ble that these con­di­tions would hold for some but not all of the six defendants.

Mitigating Factors

Importantly, to say that, based on their crimes, the defen­dants deserve to die, is not to say that the gov­ern­ment is oblig­ed to impose a death sen­tence. The Supreme Court’s cas­es inter­pret­ing the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ments do not direct­ly apply of their own force to tri­als of aliens cap­tured abroad and tried before mil­i­tary com­mis­sions. However, Section 949s of the MCA for­bids cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment,” and so by statute, the Court’s death penal­ty jurispru­dence may be incor­po­rat­ed into cap­i­tal cas­es before mil­i­tary com­mis­sions. Moreover, even if the Court’s Eighth Amendment prece­dents are not direct­ly applic­a­ble in this way, they remain instruc­tive in think­ing about whether the gov­ern­ment act­ed right­ly in charg­ing the 9/​11 defen­dants with capital offenses.

One prin­ci­ple of the Court’s Eighth Amendment jurispru­dence, as first artic­u­lat­ed in the 1978 case of Lockett v. Ohio, requires that the sen­tencer, in all but the rarest kind of cap­i­tal case, not be pre­clud­ed from con­sid­er­ing, as a mit­i­gat­ing fac­tor, any aspect of a defen­dan­t’s char­ac­ter or record and any of the cir­cum­stances of the offense that the defen­dant prof­fers as a basis for a sen­tence less than death.” In a civil­ian mur­der case, this prin­ci­ple would be giv­en effect by per­mit­ting a defen­dant to offer, for exam­ple, evi­dence that he was severe­ly abused as a child or that, while in jail await­ing tri­al, he had sincerely repented.

The Lockett case does not say that the sen­tenc­ing judge or jury can­not impose the death penal­ty on a defen­dant who was abused as a child, who has repent­ed, or who has offered oth­er evi­dence of mit­i­ga­tion. But it does require that the sen­tencer at least take into con­sid­er­a­tion all man­ner of mitigating evidence.

Still, it is very dif­fi­cult to imag­ine that a mil­i­tary pan­el that is oth­er­wise per­suad­ed that the 9/​11 defen­dants deserve to die, would impose a less­er penal­ty on the ground that they love their fam­i­lies, or grew up in pover­ty, or have offered any of the oth­er sorts of evi­dence that are typ­i­cal­ly offered in mit­i­ga­tion in a civil­ian criminal trial.

The Wisdom of Donald Rumsfeld

Nevertheless, there is at least one rea­son why the sen­tenc­ing jury might con­clude that a sen­tence of less than death is war­rant­ed: Fear of back­lash. In one of his most lucid mem­o­ran­da while Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld asked in 2003 whether the United States was cap­tur­ing, killing or deter­ring and dis­suad­ing more ter­ror­ists every day than the madras­sas and the rad­i­cal cler­ics are recruit­ing, train­ing and deploy­ing against us.” The ques­tion was and remains urgent, and it is hard­ly obvi­ous that exe­cut­ing six al Qaeda detainees after a tri­al that much of the world will inevitably view as unfair, will increase rather than decrease the secu­ri­ty of the United States.

To be sure, the fact that exe­cut­ing Khalid Shaikh Mohammed could fur­ther fan the flames of anti-American vio­lence is not exact­ly mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence, nor are Mohammed or the oth­er defen­dants well-posi­tioned to make this argu­ment. Nonetheless, it is a valid con­sid­er­a­tion in the deci­sion whether to charge the defen­dants with cap­i­tal offens­es. Even ret­ribu­tivists should care enough about con­se­quences to set­tle for life impris­on­ment where the exe­cu­tion of a death sen­tence would like­ly induce the killing of more innocents.

Exactly how the con­se­quen­tial­ist cal­cu­lus comes out is not entire­ly clear. On one hand, there is the risk of attacks that exe­cut­ing one or more of the 9/​11 defen­dants might inspire; one the oth­er hand, there is the risk of attacks to which their con­tin­ued impris­on­ment might lead. The con­se­quen­tial­ist must bal­ance the two against each oth­er. If the United States were to cap­ture Osama bin Laden, for exam­ple, one prag­mat­ic argu­ment for putting him to death (after a fair tri­al) would be to extin­guish the hope among his sup­port­ers that, like Napoleon return­ing from Elba, bin Laden might once again lead their cause.

Thus, a ret­ribu­tivist Administration could have plau­si­bly reached the con­clu­sion that seek­ing the death penal­ty for the six 9/​11 defen­dants was in the nation­al inter­est. Whether the Bush Administration in fact care­ful­ly con­sid­ered the like­ly con­se­quences of its deci­sion is not clear, however.

A Problem for the Next President

Now that the gov­ern­ment has decid­ed to charge the 9/​11 defen­dants with cap­i­tal offens­es, we can expect years of lit­i­ga­tion before any death sen­tences are car­ried out. In addi­tion to the many legal issues the cas­es raise, there will be an acute polit­i­cal issue. Under Section 950i(b) of the MCA, the President must approve any death sen­tence imposed by a military commission.

Of course, even absent Section 950i(b), the President would have had the pow­er to com­mute a death sen­tence to life impris­on­ment (or some oth­er penal­ty), but Section 950i(b) places the respon­si­bil­i­ty for the pun­ish­ment square­ly on the President’s shoul­ders. And the respon­si­ble President will almost cer­tain­ly not be the current one.

By the time a death sen­tence for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed arrives at the desk of a President Clinton, McCain, or Obama, the domes­tic polit­i­cal pres­sure to car­ry it out will like­ly be great. Yet both Senators Clinton and Obama vot­ed against the MCA as cre­at­ing a flawed set of pro­ce­dures, and Senator McCain, while vot­ing in favor of the MCA, has been a vocal crit­ic of water­board­ing. Thus, a death sen­tence taint­ed in any way by the gov­ern­men­t’s treat­ment of Mohammed would pose for President McCain no less an issue than a death sen­tence taint­ed by the MCA’s pro­ce­dures would pose for President Clinton or President Obama.

Thus, this week’s charg­ing deci­sions, like so many of President Bush’s deci­sions, will leave his suc­ces­sor in a delicate position.