my fellow law-students,
you may have noticed under the Fairfax papers earlier this week, there have been considerable debate abt the use of torture as a means to extract information.
Opinion, Mike Carlton - Unleash the sadist within
a few hours ago, SMH put this up:
Torture should be used on criminals: QC
Mr Faris' blog entry
my comments:
if we can torture terrorists, what is to stop us from torturing the likes of David Hicks or Mamdouh Habib? what is to stop police from extracting confessions under torture?
it will fucking undermine our whole criminal law system and i will have none of it
you may have noticed under the Fairfax papers earlier this week, there have been considerable debate abt the use of torture as a means to extract information.
Opinion, Mike Carlton - Unleash the sadist within
a few hours ago, SMH put this up:
Torture should be used on criminals: QC
Mr Faris' blog entry
my comments:
what are your thoughts on this issue?with all due respect mr. faris, but as a lawyer do you think you are qualified to judge whether someone is a suspected criminal or a guilty criminal? if you do then obviously the criminal law traditions of our common law system, with the presumption of innocence and the right to silence, mean nothing to you.
your examples are easy to invalidate. sometimes investigatory authorities can and do get things wrong and capture the innocent. is torture under those circumstances correct? to extract ‘confessions’ from a suspect, how far would the authorities go? who is to say they’ve got the ‘real’ criminal?
under all circumstances, the only tribunal that can judge whether someone is guilty or not is a court of law. thus, to torture suspects for ‘confessions’ or ‘information’ is unacceptable, at all times.
if we can torture terrorists, what is to stop us from torturing the likes of David Hicks or Mamdouh Habib? what is to stop police from extracting confessions under torture?
it will fucking undermine our whole criminal law system and i will have none of it
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