Among such cases was that of whistle-blower Sibel Edmonds, who was firedfrom her position as a language specialist at the FBI's Washington FieldOffice in March, 2002, after she accused a colleague of covering upillicit activity involving foreign nationals, alleging serious acts ofsecurity breaches, cover-ups, and intentional blocking of intelligencewhich, she contended, presented a danger to U.S. security.
Her case was appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, which refused tohear it. And in 2007, the Supreme Court refused to review the "statesecrets" privilege in a lawsuit brought by ACLU client Khaled El-Masri, aninnocent German citizen who was kidnapped and rendered to detention, interrogation and torture in a CIA "black site" prison in Afghanistan.
Ironically, in what is believed to be the first use of the state secrets privilege, it was invoked to cover up a falsehood. In a 1953 case known as United States v. Reynolds, the widows of three crew members of a B-29 Superfortress bomber that had crashed in 1948 sought accident reports on the crash, but were told the release such details would threaten national security by revealing the nature of the bomber's top-secret mission.
The Supreme Court ruled that the executive branch could bar evidence from the court if it deemed that its release would impair national security. In 1996, the accident reports in question were declassified and released, and when discovered in 2000 were found to contain no secret information. Rather, they contained information about the poor condition of the aircraft itself, which would have compromised to the Air Force's case. Many legal experts have alleged government abuse of secrecy in this landmark case.
Meanwhile, Congress is being pressured to seriously consider legislation to limit the use of the state secrets defense. Major civil rights and open government organizations have written to leaders of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees urging them to pass legislation to restrict the government's ability to use the privilege to dismiss litigation charging government wrongdoing.
Although the Obama administration yesterday announced a new policy in which it essentially promised to use of the state secrets privilege more sparingly, that promise is not good enough, the organizations wrote.
"Both the Bush and Obama administrations have previously relied upon the state secrets privilege to block litigation challenging policies ranging from warrantless wiretapping to extraordinary rendition, and our organizations welcome the new policy as an important first step in bringing much needed reform to the use of this doctrine," the letter said.
However, the new policy does not address all the problems, the organizations wrote. "To ensure proper oversight and an independent check on executive discretion, judges must be able to review the evidence, order the creation of non-privileged substitutes where appropriate, and assess whether there is sufficient non-privileged evidence to enable a case to proceed," the letter said. "Legislation is necessary to implement these key reforms."
The seven organizations which signed the letter include the American Civil Liberties Union's Washington Legislative Office, the Brennan Center for Justice, the Center for Democracy and Technology, the Constitution Project, Human Rights First, the National Security Archive, and OMB Watch.
The legislation they're supporting has been introduced in the Senate as the State Secrets Protection Act: S. 417, sponsored by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and in the House as H.R. 984, sponsored by Representative Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.).
In addition to Mohamed, the four other appellants in the Jeppesen case include:
Italian citizen Abou Elkassim Britel, who In May 2002, was handcuffed, blindfolded, stripped, dressed in a diaper, chained, and flown by the CIA from Pakistan to Morocco where he was tortured by Moroccan intelligence agents and where he is now incarcerated.
Egyptian citizen Ahmed Agiza, who In December 2001, was chained, shackled, and drugged by the CIA and flown from Sweden to Egypt where he was severely abused and tortured and where he still remains imprisoned.
Mohamed Farag Ahmad Bashmilah was taken into custody in October 2003 by the Jordanian General Intelligence Department and tortured and interrogated for days. On the morning of October 26, 2003 he was turned over to agents who beat, kicked, diapered, hooded and handcuffed him before secretly transporting him to the U.S. Air Force base in Bagram, Afghanistan. Bashmilah was finally freed on March 27, 2006, never once having faced any charges related to terrorism.
Iraqi citizen and long-term British permanent resident Bisher al-Rawi was kidnapped in November 2002 and later secretly flown by the CIA to Kabul, Afghanistan. For two months al-Rawi was imprisoned, interrogated and tortured at two separate CIA facilities in Afghanistan, before being transferred to the U.S. detention facility in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba in February 2003. There, he was imprisoned for more than four years until his release on March 30, 2007. On his release, al-Rawi returned to his home in London where he currently resides freely. No charges have ever been brought against him.



