Richard B. SchmittCourt OKs secret imprisonmentsWed Jun 18 03:43:51 2003208.152.73.91Court OKs secret imprisonments http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/nationworld/orl-asecdetainees18061803jun18,0,5249937.story?coll=orl-news-headlines By Richard B. Schmitt | Washington Bureau Posted June 18, 2003 WASHINGTON -- A divided federal appellate court ruledTuesday that the Bush administration was justified inrefusing to identify hundreds of foreigners chargedwith immigration violations after the Sept. 11attacks.The 2-1 decision by a panel of the U.S. Circuit Courtof Appeals for the District of Columbia here reversedan August 2002 ruling by a lower court that thegovernment had failed to offer evidence thatdisclosure of the names alone would harm itsantiterror campaign. Plaintiffs in the case, brought by a group ofhuman-rights and civil-liberties organizations, saidthey would appeal. They said a June 2 report by theJustice Department's inspector general that foundsignificant abuses in the treatment of the post-Sept.11 detainees illustrated the problems that can occurwhen people are charged and held in secret. Thecourt's ruling did not address the report.For now, the ruling stands as another legal victoryfor Justice Department officials and the tactics theyhave employed in an attempt to root out and preventfurther terror attacks."Today's ruling is a victory for the JusticeDepartment's careful measures to safeguard sensitiveinformation about our terrorism investigations as wellas the privacy of individuals who chose not to makepublic their connection to the government's probe,"Attorney General John Ashcroft said."The Justice Department is working diligently toprevent another catastrophic attack on America," hesaid. "We are pleased the court agreed we should notgive terrorists a virtual road map to ourinvestigation that could allow terrorists to chart apotentially deadly detour around our efforts."The ruling stems from a December 2001 lawsuit filedagainst the Justice Department by a group of 20advocacy groups, including the Center for NationalSecurity Studies, the American Civil Liberties Unionand the American Immigration Lawyers Association.At the time, department officials said more than 1,200people had been interviewed as part of an intensivepost-Sept. 11 manhunt. Eventually, 762 people weredetained across the country. Most of them weresubsequently deported after being charged withimmigration-law violations, such as carrying a falseor expired passport.The groups had asked the Justice Department, under theFreedom of Information Act, to disclose the names ofthe detainees and their lawyers, and otherinformation.The Justice Department had agreed to disclose thenames of 108 people who had been criminally charged.But it would not disclose the rest. The departmentclaimed it was exempt from having to divulge thenames, citing a provision in the law allowingwithholding of documents whose publication would harmongoing law-enforcement proceedings.In August 2002, U.S. District Judge Gladys Kesslerrebuffed the department, saying the secret arrestswere "odious to a democratic society," and ordered thegovernment to release the names, pending appeal.But the appeals court held that Kessler gave shortshrift to the government's position, and said courtssince the 1970s have sided with the executive branchin cases where they assert that disclosure ofinformation would threaten national security."America faces an enemy just as real as its formerCold War foes, with capabilities beyond the capacityof the judiciary to explore," the court said.It added: "We hold that the government's expectationthat disclosure of the detainees' names would enableal-Qaeda or other terrorist groups to map the courseof the investigation and thus develop the means toimpede it is reasonable."The advocacy groups and the court's dissenting membersaid the decision rests on a faulty assumption -- thatmany or most of the people being detained wereterrorists. The majority on the appeals court alsoseemed reassured by Justice claims that the detaineeshad ready access to lawyers and were free to contactwhomever they wanted.The inspector general found that even midlevel JusticeDepartment lawyers were concerned that many detaineeshad no terrorist connections.The report said that some Justice officials encouragedfederal prison authorities to "not be in a hurry" toprovide detainees with access to communications,including calls or visits.The report also cited instances of physical andemotional abuse of detainees at a federal prison inNew York City."Keeping the arrests secret allowed the JusticeDepartment to cover up its abuses," said Kate Martin,director of the Center for National Security Studies,and the lead plaintiffs' counsel in the case.She said the ruling was the first time a U.S. courthad approved secret arrests.Richard B. Schmitt is a reporter for the Los AngelesTimes, a Tribune Publishing newspaper.Copyright © 2003, Orlando Sentinel
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