Showing posts with label national security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label national security. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2008

Secretly Shrinking National Security

Concerns over the lingering Gitmo cases expressed by Judge Leon as reported by AP, here.

Excerpt,

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal judge overseeing cases against dozens of Guantanamo Bay detainees said Wednesday that he fears the public - and the detainees themselves - will be locked out of the courtroom when evidence in the case is scrutinized for the first time.

Hundreds of detainees are awaiting hearings in a Washington federal court in the coming months to determine whether they were properly labeled enemy combatants and imprisoned without being charged.

U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon, who has said he wants to resolve the 24 cases assigned to him before the next president is sworn in, urged President Bush's administration to find a way for at least part of those cases to be held in public.

"If it can't be done, I have great concern that these hearings will be virtually or exclusively classified, closed to the public and, I might add, to the detainees," Leon said.

Update to Doe privacy/national security appeal

The privacy case appeal, involving the Patriot Act, "national security letters" and judicial review powers, link here, (Doe v Mukasey; How Appealing, Lawdotcom), updating my earlier post, "Secret Government" was heard with skepticism on the part of a panel of 2d Circuit judges this Wednesday.

Excerpts from Lawdotcom:

Judge Calabrese expressed his concern to Assistant U.S. Attorney General Gregory Katsas that such language would permit the issuance of NSLs and gag orders in traffic safety investigations or operations seeking to determine if a state governor is patronizing prostitutes.

"Why isn't the appropriate thing to say that Congress here used, in a First Amendment sense, language that simply goes too far?" asked the judge.

The panel also expressed concern that the statute constrained judges reviewing such gag orders to uphold them unless they had "no reason to believe" any harm would arise from permitting disclosure.

Katsas countered that this standard could be "charitably construed" as "no good reason" and said the FBI's certification process was geared toward counterterrorism and national security concerns.

But Calabrese said he was particularly uncomfortable that gag orders could be certified by a special agent-in-charge, rather than a more senior FBI official.

"A special agent-in-charge is not someone who is directly responsible to the people," the judge said.

The ACLU brought the underlying case on behalf of a small Internet service provider served with an NSL several years ago. Jameel Jaffer, the director of the ACLU's national security project, told the court that gag orders were preventing many opposed to the Patriot Act's surveillance programs from speaking out.

But the judges pointed out that, of more than 40,000 NSLs issued, only three parties had complained about their inability to discuss them.

"Do we have any reason to believe there is anyone out there other than your client who is dying to make a speech about this?" Judge Sotomayor asked.