A follow up on due process, from Wikipedia: notified of the accusations, to confront the accuser, to obtain witnesses and to retain counsel.
While Wikipedia is not case law, having done a year in law school, I can attest that those pages are some of the most accurate out there. Definitely seems as though the notice requirement, in particular, is not being met by the government, as the punishment (not being able to fly) is being discovered prior to the accused even having the limited options presented to them. There's also good arguments that their right to counsel and trial by jury is being violated (although there are some larger loopholes for avoiding those - namely that trial by jury and some other 6th Amendment protections only being available in criminal trials, which I assume the government would dispute, having never formally filed charges, as well as the hazy catch-all the US has learned to use - classifying those who it wants to treat as criminals without having to obey constitutional and legal standards as enemy combatants. I doubt they would resort to this, however, as it would be inevitable that someone misclassified would get some media traction, and potentially force a judicial ruling on enemy combatant status, which is not in US interests).
While Wikipedia is not case law, having done a year in law school, I can attest that those pages are some of the most accurate out there. Definitely seems as though the notice requirement, in particular, is not being met by the government, as the punishment (not being able to fly) is being discovered prior to the accused even having the limited options presented to them. There's also good arguments that their right to counsel and trial by jury is being violated (although there are some larger loopholes for avoiding those - namely that trial by jury and some other 6th Amendment protections only being available in criminal trials, which I assume the government would dispute, having never formally filed charges, as well as the hazy catch-all the US has learned to use - classifying those who it wants to treat as criminals without having to obey constitutional and legal standards as enemy combatants. I doubt they would resort to this, however, as it would be inevitable that someone misclassified would get some media traction, and potentially force a judicial ruling on enemy combatant status, which is not in US interests).