We are
happy that terrorist suspects be held for twenty-eight days without charge.
So there is no problem about the principle. But government now wishes
to extend this to forty-two days, and all hell breaks loose. But on what
grounds? Since the principle of holding without charge has been established,
the time-scale is neither here nor there. Or is it?
Though there was no such thing as a state-controlled prosecution service
in the ancient world – all actions were brought privately – there
was intense discussion about what the law was for and how it should be
applied. As we saw four weeks ago, Cicero was in no doubt about what its
main purpose was – security. ‘Our ancestors wrote laws whose
sole aim was the stability and interests of the state. The state is best
off when governed according to laws, but all laws should be interpreted
in the light of that goal. Epaminondas of Thebes [who extended his military
command longer than the law permitted] rightly passed over the /letter/ of
the law, thinking it sheer madness not to interpret in terms of the stability
of the state a law that had been enacted for that stability. By assuring
the stability of the state and looking to the common interest, he could
not possibly fail to obey the laws.’
Cicero, then, would have had no problems about a 42-day period. Julius
Caesar, however, might have offered a different view. When Cicero, as consul,
wanted to execute citizens involved with Catiline in a state conspiracy,
Caesar argued that citizens faced with the death penalty had the option
of going into exile. He went on, according to the historian Sallust: ‘These
men deserve their fate, but you must consider the precedent it will set.
Bad precedents all emerge from measures good in themselves. When power
passes from you into the hands of unworthy and ignorant men, the precedent
you will have established by imposing an extraordinary punishment on men
who deserve it will be used against the innocent, who do not deserve it.’
That, surely, is the point. Since even 28 days have never yet been needed,
there can be no case for extending them to 42 days. It is bad law, setting
a bad precedent with serious implications for all future legislation. If
more than 28 days is ever needed, it passes belief that it is /impossible/ to
provide for it /ad hoc/. Then, if necessary, legislate.
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