Atlantic: What the Framing of a Terror Suspect Says About GOP Attacks on Due Process

Atlantic: What the Framing of a Terror Suspect Says About GOP Attacks on Due Process by Conor Friedersdorf.

Paul Kevin Curtis was falsely accused in the ricin plot — and the legal requirement to bring him before a judge helped set him free.

On the requirement that the government show its probable cause, which the GOP wants to end for terrorism suspects, apparently not accounting for the framed ones.

After keeping Elvis impersonator Paul Kevin Curtis in jail for a week, interrogating him while he was chained to a chair and turning his house upside down, federal authorities had no confession or physical evidence tying him to the ricin-laced letters sent to President Obama and other public officials. Investigators already had another man in their sights and, according to an FBI affidavit, were collecting physical evidence against this second suspect. But instead of setting Curtis free, court records show, federal officials sought to keep him in custody. First, three days after the arrest, prosecutors asked for a psychiatric evaluation — a request usually made by defense lawyers. That could have extended his stay in federal prison by several months and allowed investigators to continue to question him.

Then, after a judge denied the request, federal prosecutors filed a motion seeking to postpone a court hearing at which they would be required to reveal the evidence they had against Curtis. That motion was also turned down. “They wanted to keep Mr. Curtis in custody while they built a case,” said Hal Neilson, a former FBI agent who is Curtis’s attorney. “They knew early on he wasn’t the right guy, but they fought to hold on to him anyway.”

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.