BUSH
ARTICLE I. FAILURE TO ENSURE THE LAWS ARE FAITHFULLY EXECUTED

(6) Promoting Kidnappings and Renditions for Illegal Torture

In direct violation of the United Nations Convention Against Torture, Article 3, which states that “No State party shall expel, return or extradite a person to another state where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture,” and the Fourth Geneva Convention, Articles 31 and 45, the said conventions having been ratified by the United States United States Senate and therefore the supreme law of the land as according to Article VI of the Constitution, George Walker Bush, as President of the United States of America, did sign, on September 17, 2001, an executive order (still classified) granting unilateral authority to the Central Intelligence Agency to render detainees to countries where torture is routinely practiced for the express purpose of interrogation, thereby subverting an established program of rendering detainees to justice by bringing them to the United States or to a country in which they were wanted to face criminal charges in a court of law.

And whereas the Central Intelligence Agency did thereafter carry out this order not only by rendering hundreds of detainees to countries where they were subsequently tortured, but also in many cases first illegally kidnapping the detainees, and did subsequently establish secret detention centers, operating outside any known laws, for the express purpose of circumventing all legal protections to which the said detainees were entitled under international law, whereby said George Walker Bush, President of the United States, did commit and was guilty of high crimes against the United States of America.

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