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98 Cornell L. Rev. Online 1 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/clro1 and id is 1 raw text is: CUSTODIAL AND COLLATERAL PROCESS: A
RESPONSE TO PROFESSOR GARRETT
Lee Kovarskyt
INTRODUCTION                         ..........1...................................
I. CUSTODIAL VERSUS COLLATERAL PROCESS IN HAMDIAND
BOUMEDIEE.      ............................... ................. 3
II. THE PROBLEMS WITH FUNGIBLE PROCESS        ..................... 9
III. INNOCENCE ANALYSIS                 ...................................... 14
CONCLUSION.................................................... 18
INTRODUCTION
In Habeas Corpus and Due Process, Professor Brandon Garrett
disentangles two threads of decisional law knotted in the federal
courts' post-9/11 national-security detention cases.' Such cases can
be fish-in-barrel targets for withering criticism, but Professor Garrett
makes the novel argument that they reflect confusion about subtle
differences between due process and habeas corpus.      His thesis
centers on the misguided response of the inferior federal courts to
two Supreme Court cases: Hamdi v. Rumsfeld and Boumediene v. Bush.3
Specifically, Professor Garrett argues that Hamdi posits a rule of due
process that should draw from one body of authority and that
Boumediene posits a rule of habeas privilege that should draw from
another.4 When the federal courts allow one concept to bleed into
the other, he observes, they confuse their Article III responsibility to
supervise certain kinds of custody.5
I agree almost entirely with the descriptive and normative
content of Professor Garrett's insights. Due process and the habeas
privilege are distinct constitutional phenomena, federal courts almost
pathologically confuse them, and the confusion makes it impossible
to achieve any decisional equilibrium. My primary quarrel with
Professor Garrett's critique is that he, perhaps reluctantly, embraces
4 Assistant Professor, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.
See Brandon L. Garrett, Habeas Corpus and Due Process, 98 CORNELL L. REv. 47
(2012).
2 542 U.S. 507 (2004).
:3 553 U.S. 723 (2008).
4 See Garrett, supra note 1, at 51-53.
5  See id.
1

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