Justice Antonin Scalia said something interesting in an interview on 60 Minutes
on Sunday.
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor
cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
Apparently Scalia believes that when the US government tortures prisoners at
Guantanamo Bay, it's not a violation of the Eighth Amendment, not because
torture isn't cruel and unusual, but because it's not punishment. They're not
being tortured as punishment for their crimes, they're being tortured to
extract information, that's a completely different situation.
It's an argument I've never heard before, but Scalia's got a point. The Eighth
Amendment is clearly talking about punishment for crimes as sentenced by a court,
but the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay have never been convicted (or indeed charged,
in most cases - so the Sixth Amendment is still out the window). So while torturing
prisoners still obviously violates the Geneva Convention Against Torture, it doesn't
appear to violate the Bill of Rights.
Interesting.
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