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High Court Urged to Reject White House Appeal to Keep Abuse Photos Secret

by: Jason Leopold, t r u t h o u t | Report

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A naked prisoner chained to prison bars. (Photo: CID)

    The American Civil Liberties Union asked the US Supreme Court this week to deny a request by the Obama administration to review and, if justices take up the case, reverse a lower court's ruling ordering the government to comply with a Freedom of Information Act request and release more than four dozen photos depicting US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan abusing prisoners.

    The group's 37-page opposition was supported by friend-of-the-court briefs filed by Human Rights Watch, the International Center for Transitional Justice and Amnesty International and another filed by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and 16 media organizations. The ACLU filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit in 2003 to gain access to the images.

    "These photos may be profoundly disturbing, but they are a crucial part of the historical record and the appeals court was right to find that they should be released," said Jameel Jaffer, director of the ACLU National Security Project. "It's disappointing that the Obama administration, which in other contexts has recognized the close connection between transparency and accountability, is continuing to argue that the photos should be suppressed."

    But even if the court refuses to take up the case, President Barack Obama has vowed to continue to suppress the images.

    Obama sent a letter July 29 to Sens. Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham informing them that he would work with Congress to ensure legislation is passed that would block the release of the photographs.

    The disclosure was made in a footnote in a 33-page petition the Obama administration filed last month with the US Supreme Court. Neither the White House nor spokespeople for Lieberman and Graham responded to phone calls and email queries seeking a copy of the letter.

    The petition confirms that the contents of the 44 images at issue includes one in which a female solider pointed a broom at one detainee "as if I was sticking the end of a broom stick into [his] rectum."

    Other photos at issue show US soldiers pointing guns at the heads of hooded and bound detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan. The filing also notes that the detainee abuse was investigated by the US Army's Criminal Investigation Division and "three of the six investigations led to criminal charges and in two of those cases, the accused were found guilty and punished."

    In June, the Senate unanimously passed the Detainee Photographic Records Protection Act of 2009, an amendment to the supplemental appropriations spending bill sponsored by Lieberman and Graham. The House of Representatives referred the amendment to two House committees on June 18 where it is pending.

    Additionally, on July 9, the Senate unanimously passed the amendment again as it was attached to the Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill.

    "The President recently informed the sponsors of the pending detainee photograph legislation that he 'support[s] this legislation' and 'will work with Congress to get it passed,'" says the footnote in the Supreme Court petition prepared by Solicitor General Elena Kagan, quoting from Obama's July 29 letter to Lieberman and Graham.

    The bill has faced opposition in the House and that may explain why the Obama administration has decided to appeal to the US Supreme Court if the House kills the measure altogether

    Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Graham (R-South Carolina) were sharply critical of Obama's decision not to fight a final ruling in March by the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that called upon the Department of Defense to release the photographs. Obama indicated he would abide by that decision, but he abruptly shifted his stance after he was publicly criticized by the likes of Dick Cheney and Cheney's daughter, Liz.

    Lieberman and Graham's amendment would authorize the Secretary of Defense to prohibit the release of the abuse photographs and videos for three years and renew it for three-year intervals thereafter. The Obama administration would, presumably, drop its appeal if the House passes the legislation when it returns from its summer break in September.

    In June, Graham said during a floor speech, before the appropriations spending bill was passed, that White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel assured him that the abuse photographs would never "see the light of day" and would sign an executive order if the Supreme Court refuses to take up the case or rule in favor of the administration if it decides to hear the appeal or if Congress does not pass legislation banning the disclosure of the images.

    "I wanted to be assured by the administration that if the Congress fails to do its part to protect these photos from being released, the President would sign an Executive order which would change their classification to be classified national security documents that would be outcome determinative of the lawsuit," Graham said on June 17. "Rahm Emanuel has indicated to me that the President is committed to not ever letting these photos see the light of day, but they agree with me that the best way to do it is for Congress to act."

    Obama had originally decided to release the photos because the administration did not believe the Supreme Court would take the case.

    At a press briefing on April 24, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters, "the Department of Justice [had] decided based on the [Second Circuit's] ruling that it was hopeless to appeal."

    Gibbs's comment came a day after acting US attorney Lev Dassin confirmed in a letter filed with US District Court Judge Alvin Hellerstein that the Obama administration would not challenge the Second Circuit's decision.

    But in May, following the long-awaited release of Bush administration torture memos that Republicans and former Bush officials sharply criticized, the Obama administration changed its position and said it would fight to keep the photographs secret, fearing that releasing it would stoke anti-American sentiment in the Middle East and put the lives of US soldiers at greater risk.

    Obama's decision to fight to conceal the photos to the Supreme Court marks an about-face on the open-government policies that he proclaimed during his first days in office.

    On January 21, Obama signed an executive order instructing all federal agencies and departments to "adopt a presumption in favor" of Freedom of Information Act requests and promised to make the federal government more transparent.

    "The Government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed, or because of speculative or abstract fears," Obama's order said. "In responding to requests under the FOIA, executive branch agencies should act promptly and in a spirit of cooperation, recognizing that such agencies are servants of the public."

    But in the Supreme Court petition Solicitor General Kagan filed Friday, the administration argued that a specific provision of FOIA allows the withholding of information if it threatens the lives of individuals.

    The petition says that the Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that FOIA "mandates the public disclosure of such photographs - regardless of the risk to American lives - because FOIA Exemption 7(F) requires the government to 'identify at least one individual with reasonable specificity' and show that disclosure 'could reasonably be expected to endanger that individual.'"

    Kagan wrote that the Second Circuit Court of Appeals misinterpreted the law when it ruled that the government had to identify specific individuals who would be harmed by the disclosure of the photographs

    The Obama administration argued that Exemption 7(F), "is inconsistent with the text of Exemption 7(F), which broadly encompasses danger to 'any individual,' with no suggestion of the court's extra-textual requirement of victim specificity. The history of drafting that exemption "underscores that conclusion. Congress did not mean for public disclosure of agency records to trump the life and physical safety of individuals - particularly in a case such as this, in which the government has already made public the underlying investigative reports revealing all relevant allegations of wrongdoing and the associated investigative conclusions."

    "The President and the United States military fully recognize that certain photographs at issue depict reprehensible conduct by American personnel and warranted disciplinary action," the brief states. "There are neither justifications nor excuses for such conduct by members of the military. But the fact remains that public disclosure of the photographs could reasonably be expected to endanger the lives and physical safety of individuals engaged in the Nation's military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The photographs therefore are exempt from mandatory disclosure under FOIA. Review by this Court is warranted to give effect to Exemption 7(F) and the protection it affords to the personnel whose lives and physical safety would be placed at risk by disclosure."

    The ACLU said in its opposition brief that the Obama administration's "argument here would turn FOIA on its head by affording the greatest protection from disclosure to records that depict the worst governmental misconduct."

    The Obama administration's arguments against disclosure are not that much different from the Bush administration's, and have, as the ACLU noted, been rejected by Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The appeals court said threats needed to be specific in order to justify withholding information.

    The appeals court also shot down the Bush administration's attempt to radically expand FOIA exemptions for withholding the photos, stating that the Bush administration had attempted to use the FOIA exemptions as "an all-purpose damper on global controversy" and "an alternative classification mechanism."

    "It is plainly insufficient to claim that releasing documents could reasonably be expected to endanger some unspecified member of a group so vast as to encompass all United States troops, coalition forces, and civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan," the appeals court panel of judges ruled.

    The appeals court further deemed the Bush administration's position legally flawed and added that releasing "the photographs is likely to further the purposes of the Geneva Conventions by deterring future abuse of prisoners."

    Last September, in upholding a lower court ruling ordering the release of the photos, the appeals court noted that past US administrations had championed the release of photos that showed prisoners of war being abused and tortured.

    Notably, after World War II, the US government publicized photos of prisoners in Japanese and German prisons and concentration camps, which the court noted, "showed emaciated prisoners, subjugated detainees, and even corpses. But the United States championed the use of the photos as a means of holding the perpetrators accountable."

    The petition heavily recycles the Bush administration's legal arguments and includes a previous sworn declaration from the likes of former Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers warning that releasing the photographs to the ACLU would threaten national security and could lead to the deaths of American servicemen and women in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    In it's opposition brief filed with the Supreme Court, the ACLU contends that granting the Obama administration's petition "would only serve to further delay the disclosure of information that is of extraordinary interest to the public and of crucial importance to the ongoing national discussion about the abuse of prisoners in US custody overseas."

  

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Jason Leopold is the Deputy Managing Editor at Truthout. He is the author of the Los Angeles Times bestseller, News Junkie, a memoir. Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.

Comments

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How amazing that the

How amazing that the "protection of American Servicemen and Women" (overseas on illegal and offensive missions against other peoples) is grounds for supression of evidence of crimes leading all the way to the White House, while Japanese "atrocites" can be used for propaganda favorable to US interests. This makes US Soldiers even more pawns on the chessboard of international intrigue. If they were not occupiers of Iraq and Afghanistan, their safety would be assured. Would that the citizens of these countries could say the same. These are, in spite of our insistance from DC, NOT "good wars, with US the "good guys" against the "bad guys."

Is anyone really that

Is anyone really that surprised? The admin's decision is in line with all of the recent positions taken onBush & Company war crimes. With Holder showing a little independence vis. the special prosecutor, these fotos would have added to the howls to go up the chain of command, and Obama does not want to prosecute. Meanwhile, the PM of Taiwan resigns for not preparing for and reacting quickly enough to the recent typhoon, and a former PM is put away for life for embezzling a few million. Is it too much to aspire to the same level of accountability? We don't have to hang Bush and Cheney, as much as they deserve it, just put them away for the rest of their lives.

There is only accountability

There is only accountability if you are poor and not well connected to the shadow government. You can lose your job, your health care,your freedom, and your house, but the criminals in government and on Wall Street lose nothing.

Yes, it is too much to

Yes, it is too much to expect that the people who control the Military - Industrial complex will roll over and permit damning evidence to be made public. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Bush, Cheney, Rove, Rumsfeld, and Wolfowitrz believed they had absolute power and acted on that belief. Over 100,000 Iraqi civilians are dead as a direct result.

We are losing more ground.

We are losing more ground. Never perfect as a leading edge relatively humane nation, but not now held fully accountable to disclose proof of it's bad acts, we regress into our litany of false reasons for hiding evidence of wrong doing. Administration transparency? Promised by President OBAMA? Stopped within days after inauguration when the WH cameras were turned off. "Moving forward" means nobody first rank giving the orders, numbers of which are against our laws, are held responsible for lies and ensuing atrocities. Swept under the rug to reappear bigger bumps to trip over and fall again down the hole of coverups. authorizing more wrong doings, more ruin. The law of physics does apply: For every action there is a reaction that is equal to the force applied.

It's sad, but daily it

It's sad, but daily it becomes clearer that Obama not only inherited Bush's wars and financial mess but also his brain.

After WWII there were

After WWII there were releases of photos and films that showed how the axis' military treated their 'prisoners'. Show the pictures and tell the truth! Good God! Isn't there a single remorseful soul out there, that has the courage admit they were wrong and take their punishment?

Greater good? I'm struggling

Greater good? I'm struggling to understand which values we're honoring by the Obama administration suppression of this evidence. We've proudly proclaimed we stand for Truth, Justice, and The American Way. Let's start there. The evidence certainly leads to Truth. Or said another way, the only way to discover Truth is through the examination of all relevant data. Those photos are certainly relevant for finding Truth. The evidence certainly leads to Justice. I doubt you could subject a member of congress to the acts performed at Guantanemo and not have that called cruel and unusual. Were those punishments performed on U.S. citizens in U.S. prisons, we would be outraged. Clearly there were crimes committed. Those photos are relevant for finding Justice. Ahhh The American Way. That's rather vague, now isn't it? Not really a value, but more of a muddy, prideful boast. Are we talking about The American Way when we stand up for what was right? Or are we talking about The American Way when roll over and accept the jailhouse bargain of being sodomized in return for "safety", like what happened for Bush's Patriot Act, or what happened in Guantanemo? So, maybe it's about something different. Maybe its about realizing that the greater good is served by rallying around the issues in front of us rather than the issues behind us. Maybe it's realizing that we can only have a handful of national debates going on, and the debate about health care and the economy rather than abuses of foreign combatants in American jails. So Truth and Justice be damned. As long as we have health care and roofs over our heads, then we should roll over and not sweat the small stuff. That's The American Way. The least Obama could do is pass the KY.

As a former Special Agent,

As a former Special Agent, crosstrained in interrogation, I want all civilians to know: The Army does NOT train soldiers to do this or condone this. The Geneva Conventions are dear to our hearts. The role of MPs is to transport prisoners from the battlefield to the interrogation station and to safeguard them - that's all. Very few civilians have ever been trained to the degree that professional military interrogators are, so these contractors should be banned. I do not think that anything good will come from showing the abuse photos - save them for the courtroom, when the abusers are prosecuted.

Unfortunately, that's

Unfortunately, that's another of the chicken and egg conundrums. There won't be any prosecution until enough of us have our noses rubbed in the evidence of the crimes committed in our name.

Call it what it IS!!!

Call it what it IS!!! ObamaFRAUD is a Sock Puppet for the Ruling Oligarchs. He is the BIGGEST PUPPET YET!! All of you were disappointed when Nancy Pelosi failed to follow the will of the people. You now are surprised that Obama is doing likewise. What will it take for you to Wake Up?!?! RepubDems is the ONLY party in the USA - the outer face of the Council On Foreign Relations. Rockefeller, Rothschild, etc.run things from the safety of the background. The New World Order is being set in place. Obama is a Fraud, who will do his little Dance of Deception until things are Locked Down. He was a brilliant choice of the Oligarchs to make you THINK there was real and good change afoot. There is NOT!!! They are forcing us to Revolution, as they ready their Global De-Population Mandatory Squalene Loaded Swine Flu Death Shots.... ObamaCare indeed!!! Wake Up America!! 911 Indeed was an Inside Job with Massive Coverup. If they feel no threat of discovery from that one - The criminal perps will do it again when they feel they need it...These are treasonous americans who are Serial Killers. Demand A Real Investigation!! Covering up these crimes IS a crime...INCLUDING keeping those pictures SECRET.... No More Secrets. Time to turn the Microscope around and look at THEM> They don't like that very much. They like it more when WE are the ones shaking in fear. No More Fear - Turn around the Microscope - AUDIT THE FED - Release ALL PICTURES - and NEW 911 REAL INVESTIGATION - NO WITNESSES MUZZLED!!! Heads will ROLL...The Rats will be Rolling over on each other begging for mercy!!! And America can begin a REAL RECOVERY!!!

Did you say this man, Obama,

Did you say this man, Obama, was DIFFERENT from Bush?

If "the truth shall set you

If "the truth shall set you free," what happens to you when the truth is suppressed?