How To Beat The Naked Body Scanners

Posted in big brother on March 7th, 2012

We all knew that the roll-out of the naked body scanners was a joke and that it was all about manufacturing fear to keep tax-payer money flowing into the defense industry. What we didn’t know was how poorly thought out the whole scanning process is. It turns out that the scanners are very easily beaten by just altering the placement of the object you are trying to hide. Instead of putting it in your front pocket you need to put it in a side pocket.

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US Acknowledges Secret Prisons for ‘Domestic Terrorists’

Posted in prison on March 4th, 2011

Secretive political prisons for “domestic terrorists” called Communications Management Units have been operating for more than three years on U.S. soil. Last week the federal Bureau of Prisons quietly submitted a proposal to make the experimental units permanent: a process that, by law, should have occurred before they were ever opened.

As a quick introduction, there are two Communications Management Units, or CMUs, in the country. They radically restrict prisoner communications with the outside world to levels that rival, or exceed, the most restrictive facilities in the country, including the “Supermax,” ADX-Florence. [For more information on CMUs and who is housed there:"Secretive U.S. Prison Units Used to House Muslim, Animal Rights and Environmental Activists."]

On April 6, the Bureau of Prisons submitted a proposed rule (Docket No. 1148-P), listed in the federal register. Under the Administrative Procedures Act, there is now a required public comment period for responses to this proposal.

The public notice comes after the Center for Constitutional Rights and the American Civil Liberties Union each filed lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the secretive facilities, where political prisoners have been transferred without notification, without explanation, and without opportunity for appeal. [See "5 Things You Should Know About America’s 'Little Guantanamo.'"]

FOLLOWING THE LAW IN HINDSIGHT

The submitted proposal is clearly a response to these lawsuits, and an acknowledgment that the Communications Management Units were opened secretly and illegally. Now government officials are trying to cover their tracks and follow the legal process in hindsight.

It is a positive development that the government is recognizing, and being forced to defend, prison facilities kept hidden from the public. There is the possibility of placing true checks and balances on the government’s power to create experimental units that are unparalleled in the federal prison system.

However, this step in the right direction is negated by the Bureau of Prisons’ proposal to actually make these secretive prisons even more inhumane.

INCREASING RESTRICTIONS

The lawsuit by the Center for Constitutional Rights argues that the facilities are unconstitutional for a variety of reasons, including the fact that they are cruel and inhumane. The extreme restrictions on inmate communications, including not allowing them to hug family members at the few visits they are allowed, go against a body of research and official government policy on prisoner treatment. Generally, the government encourages contact visits by family because they improve prisoner behavior, increase morale, and further rehabilitation.

“I haven’t been able to hug my husband, or even hold his hand, for two years,” said Jenny Synan, the spouse of a CMU prisoner and a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “This proposed rule does not explain how prohibiting a husband from holding his wife’s hand or keeping a father from hugging his daughter, is necessary for prison security.”

The new proposal includes even more restrictions, including:

  • “Written correspondence may be limited to three pieces of paper, double-sided, once per week to and from a single recipient;
  • Telephone communication may be limited to a single completed call per calendar month for up to 15 minutes;
  • and Visiting may be limited to one hour each calendar month.

MORE POWER, LESS OVERSIGHT

It should be noted that all federal prisoners have their communications monitored. And there are already policies in place for dangerous inmates who need additional monitoring.

The most prevalent of those policies are called Special Administrative Measures, or SAMs. SAMs are authorized by the attorney general based on information from the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s office.

This new proposal lowers the threshold for such special restrictions. According to the proposal, it allows for prison officials to act on “evidence which does not rise to the same degree of potential risk [emphasis added] to national security or risk of acts of violence or terrorism which would warrant the Attorney General’s intervention by issuance of a SAM.”

The government is arguing two competing claims simultaneously: (1) That Communications Management Units are needed because the inmates are heightened security risks, and (2) That traditional oversight is too cumbersome because these inmates are not dangerous enough.

The aim is, admittedly, to place more unchecked power in the hands of lower-ranking government officials.

POLITICAL PRISONS

If, according the Bureau of Prisons, these inmates “do not rise to the same degree of potential risk to national security,” who is housed here?

As I have discussed here before, inmates and guards at the CMUs call them “Little Guantanamo.” They have also been described as prisons for “second-tier” terrorists.

The proposal confirms this, saying: “One important category of inmates which might be designated to a CMU is inmates whose current offense(s) of conviction, or offense conduct, included association, communication, or involvement, related to international or domestic terrorism.”

It references past behavior as grounds for inmates being transferred there, but as I have reported, and as the recent lawsuits make clear, many of these inmates have no disciplinary history and no communications violations. Furthermore, these individuals were not the 9/11 hijackers or what most people think of as terrorists. They are prisoners like Daniel McGowan, who destroyed property as part of the Earth Liberation Front in the name of defending the environment.

The Bureau’s proposal makes clear that the CMUs are intended to keep these cases isolated, and to keep political prisoners with “inspirational significance” from communicating with the communities and social movements of which they are part.

These secretive prisons are for political cases the government would rather have out of the public spotlight.

Source: Green Is The New Red


 

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FBI Being Sued For Placing GPS Tracker Car

Posted in FBI on March 4th, 2011

Yasir Afifi, a 20-year-old Arab-American student, is suing the FBI for placing a GPS tracking device on his car and then threatening him with charges when he tried to keep it.

The lawsuit, filed by by Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Wednesday, accused Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Mueller of violating Afifi’s constitutional rights.

The suit, obtained by Talking Points Memo, explained that Afifi, an American-born student at Mission College in Sara Clara who also works as a salesman, was concerned that the device found on his car might be a pipe bomb.

After posting photos of the device on Reddit.com, agents came to his apartment in a “bizarre mission to retrieve the device” and questioned him, according to the lawsuit.

“Even after requesting counsel, the FBI agents continued to make demands of Mr. Afifi and interrogate him,” the suit claimed. “They asked him whether he was a national security threat, whether he was excited about an upcoming (but undisclosed) trip abroad, whether he was having financial difficulties, whether he had been to Yemen, why he traveled overseas, and many other questions.”

Afifi eventually relented and turned over the device after being threatened with federal charges.

One agent named Jennifer Kanaan “made clear that she knew intimate, private details of Mr. Afifi’s life” like that he had recently gotten a new job. She also complimented his taste in restaurants, the suit said.

The lawsuit noted that an FBI report obtained under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) detailed statements he had made to the media.

The report also identified people he contacted, hospitals he went to, organizations he belong to and religious services he attended.

Afifi had no connections to terrorism and was not politically active, CAIR attorney Zahra Billoo told The San Francisco Chronicle.

“He fit the profile – an Arab American male, young, lives by himself, travels frequently to the Middle East to visit his family,” she said.

A call to Billoo was not returned at the time of publication.

The FBI had not disclosed why it was monitoring Afifi.

Source: Raw Story

 

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List of September 11th, 2001 Casualties

Posted in terrorism on December 26th, 2010

The following in the most complete list we could find of all of the casualties of the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001.  As you go through the list of airplane passengers you will notice that the names of the alleged attackers are suspiciously missing.

The Pentagon

  • Paul W. Ambrose
  • Spc. Craig S. Amundson, Army Petty Office
  • Melissa Rose Barnes, Navy
  • Master Sgt. Max J. Beilke, Army, Retired
  • Yeneneh Betru
  • Petty Officer Kris Romeo Bishundat, Navy
  • Carrie R. Blagburn
  • Col. Canfield D. Boone, Army National Guard
  • Mary Jane Booth
  • Donna M. Bowen
  • Allen P. Boyle
  • Bernard C. Brown II
  • Petty Officer Christopher L. Burford, Navy
  • Capt. Charles F. Burlingame III, Naval Reserve, Retired
  • Petty Officer Daniel M. Caballero, Navy
  • Sgt. Jose O. Calderon-Olmedo, Army
  • Suzanne M. Calley
  • Angelene C. Carter
  • Sharon A. Carver
  • William E. Caswell
  • Sgt. 1st Class John J. Chada, Army, Retired
  • Rosa Maria Chapa
  • David M. Charlebois
  • Sara M. Clark
  • Julian T. Cooper
  • Asia S. Cottom
  • Lt. Cmdr. Eric A. Cranford, Navy
  • Ada M. Davis
  • James D. Debeuneure
  • Capt. Gerald F. DeConto, Navy
  • Rodney Dickens
  • Lt. Col. Jerry D. Dickerson, Army
  • Eddie A. Dillard
  • Petty Officer Johnnie Doctor Jr., Navy
  • Capt. Robert E. Dolan Jr., Navy
  • Cmdr. William H. Donovan, Navy
  • Lt. Cmdr. Charles A. Droz III, Navy, Retired
  • Cmdr. Patrick Dunn, Navy
  • Petty Officer Edward T. Earhart, Navy
  • Barbara G. Edwards
  • Lt. Cmdr. Robert R. Elseth, Naval Reserve
  • Charles S. Falkenberg
  • Leslie A. Whittington
  • Dana Falkenberg
  • Zoe Falkenberg
  • Petty Officer Jamie L. Fallon, Navy
  • J. Joseph Ferguson
  • Amelia V. Fields
  • Gerald P. Fisher
  • Darlene E. Flagg
  • Rear Adm. Wilson F. Flagg, Naval Reserve, Retired
  • Petty Officer Matthew M. Flocco, Navy
  • Sandra N. Foster
  • 1st Lt. Richard P. Gabriel, Marine Corps, Retired
  • Capt. Lawrence D. Getzfred, Navy
  • Cortez Ghee
  • Brenda C. Gibson
  • Col. Ronald F. Golinski, Army, Retired
  • Ian J. Gray
  • Diane Hale-McKinzy
  • Stanley R. Hall
  • Carolyn B. Halmon
  • Michele M. Heidenberger
  • Sheila M.S. Hein
  • Petty Officer Ronald J. Hemenway, Navy
  • Maj. Wallace Cole Hogan Jr., Army
  • Staff Sgt. Jimmie I. Holley, Army, Retired
  • Angela M. Houtz
  • Brady Kay Howell
  • Peggie M. Hurt
  • Lt. Col. Stephen N. Hyland Jr., Army
  • Lt. Col. Robert J. Hymel, Air Force, Retired
  • Sgt. Maj. Lacey B. Ivory, Army
  • Bryan C. Jack
  • Steven D. Jacoby
  • Lt. Col. Dennis M. Johnson, Army
  • Judith L. Jones
  • Ann C. Judge
  • Brenda Kegler
  • Chandler R. Keller
  • Yvonne E. Kennedy
  • Norma Cruz Khan
  • Karen Ann Kincaid
  • Lt. Michael S. Lamana, Navy
  • David W. Laychak
  • Dong Chul Lee
  • Jennifer Lewis
  • Kenneth E. Lewis
  • Samantha L. Lightbourn-Allen
  • Maj. Stephen V. Long, Army
  • James T. Lynch Jr.
  • Terence M. Lynch
  • Petty Officer Nehamon Lyons IV, Navy
  • Shelley A. Marshall
  • Teresa M. Martin
  • Ada L. Mason-Acker
  • Lt. Col. Dean E. Mattson, Army
  • Lt. Gen. Timothy J. Maude, Army
  • Robert J. Maxwell
  • Renée A. May
  • Molly L. McKenzie
  • Dora Marie Menchaca
  • Patricia E. Mickley
  • Maj. Ronald D. Milam, Army
  • Gerard P. Moran Jr.
  • Odessa V. Morris
  • Petty Officer Brian A. Moss, Navy
  • Teddington H. Moy
  • Lt. Cmdr. Patrick J. Murphy, Naval Reserve
  • Christopher C. Newton
  • Khang Ngoc Nguyen
  • Petty Officer Michael A. Noeth, Navy
  • Barbara K. Olson
  • Ruben S. Ornedo
  • Diana B. Padro
  • Lt. Jonas M. Panik, Naval Reserve
  • Maj. Clifford L. Patterson Jr., Army
  • Robert Penninger
  • Robert R. Ploger III
  • Zandra F. Ploger
  • Lt. Darin H. Pontell, Naval Reserve
  • Scott Powell
  • Capt. Jack D. Punches, Navy, Retired
  • Petty Officer Joseph J. Pycior Jr., Navy
  • Lisa J. Raines
  • Deborah A. Ramsaur
  • Rhonda Sue Rasmussen
  • Petty Officer Marsha D. Ratchford, Navy
  • Martha M. Reszke
  • Todd H. Reuben
  • Cecelia E. (Lawson) Richard
  • Edward V. Rowenhorst
  • Judy Rowlett
  • Sgt. Maj. Robert E. Russell, Army, Retired
  • Chief Warrant Officer William R. Ruth, Army National Guard
  • Charles E. Sabin Sr.
  • Marjorie C. Salamone
  • John P. Sammartino
  • Col. David M. Scales, Army
  • Cmdr. Robert A. Schlegel, Navy
  • Janice M. Scott
  • Lt. Col. Michael L. Selves, Army, Retired
  • Marian H. Serva
  • Cmdr. Dan F. Shanower, Navy
  • Antionette M. Sherman
  • Diane M. Simmons
  • George W. Simmons
  • Donald D. Simmons
  • Cheryle D. Sincock
  • Petty Officer Gregg H. Smallwood, Navy
  • Lt. Col. Gary F. Smith, Army, Retired
  • Mari-Rae Sopper
  • Robert Speisman
  • Patricia J. Statz
  • Edna L. Stephens
  • Norma Lang Steuerle
  • Sgt. Maj. Larry L. Strickland, Army
  • Hilda E. Taylor
  • Lt. Col. Kip P. Taylor, Army
  • Leonard E. Taylor
  • Sandra C. Taylor
  • Sandra D. Teague
  • Lt. Col. Karl W. Teepe, Army, Retired
  • Sgt. Tamara C. Thurman, Army
  • Lt. Cmdr. Otis V. Tolbert, Navy
  • Staff Sgt. Willie Q. Troy, Army, Retired
  • Lt. Cmdr. Ronald J. Vauk, Naval Reserve
  • Lt. Col. Karen J. Wagner, Army
  • Meta L. (Fuller) Waller
  • Spc. Chin Sun Pak Wells, Army
  • Staff Sgt. Maudlyn A. White, Army
  • Sandra L. White
  • Ernest M. Willcher
  • Lt. Cmdr. David L. Williams, Navy
  • Maj. Dwayne Williams, Army
  • Chief Petty Officer Marvin Roger Woods, Navy, Retired
  • Capt. John D. Yamnicky Sr., Navy, Retired
  • Vicki Yancey
  • Petty Officer Kevin W. Yokum, Navy
  • Chief Petty Officer Donald M. Young, Navy
  • Edmond G. Young Jr.
  • Lisa L. Young
  • Shuyin Yang
  • Yuguang Zheng

World Trade Center

  • Gordon M. Aamoth Jr.
  • Edelmiro Abad
  • Maria Rose Abad
  • Andrew Anthony Abate
  • Vincent Abate Read more »
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Frozen Chicken Shuts Down Airport

Posted in stranger than fiction on December 22nd, 2010

As airport security becomes more of a concern during the holiday travel season, travelers will be seeing delays of all sorts. But an hour-long delay for Lafayette Regional Airport users Tuesday morning was of a nature most fowl.

The airport was briefly shut down as authorities investigated a suspicious package that turned out to contain a frozen chicken and a head lamp, said Lt. Craig Stansbury, spokesman for the Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Office.

Police were called to the airport around 10:48 a.m. Tuesday after a TSA employee saw the package run through the screening process.

According to Stansbury, the outline of the wires from the head-mounted mining light overlapped another image, that of the chicken, during the screening.

The combination made for an odd and not readily identifiable image, so the employee notified other security personnel.

The terminal was evacuated while the package was examined.

Stansbury said bomb dogs and other resources were used to make sure the package did not contain anything dangerous.

The wires coming from the lamp made the chicken look particularly suspicious, he said.

According to authorities, the chicken was reportedly stuffed with crawfish as well,

The all-clear was given around 11:45 a.m., and airport operations resumed as usual.

Source: The Advertiser

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Thousands of anti-terror searches were illegal

Posted in UK government on June 12th, 2010

Thousands of people across the UK might have been stopped and searched illegally, figures released by the Home Office suggest.

Powers under section 44 of the Terrorism Act were used in “error” after the proper authorisations were not given.

In one example, for April 2004, the Met Police wrongly stopped 840 people.

Dozens of other examples from across the UK have been uncovered before rules were tightened in 2008.

Police Minister Nick Herbert said administrative errors were to blame and he has ordered an internal review of procedures.

The Metropolitan Police is also urgently considering what steps can be taken to contact the individuals concerned.

Extremists

Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 allows police to stop and search someone without suspicion that an offence has occurred.

The controversial powers can be used only in specific areas on the orders of a police chief, with later approval by the home secretary.

Supporters say such powers can make it harder for extremists to carry out reconnaissance in public areas, such as near high-profile tourist attractions.

But critics, including the government’s reviewer of terror legislation, Lord Carlile, say they unfairly target some ethnic groups and increase community tensions.

The Met is responsible for the vast majority of section 44 operations, many of which take place in Westminster and at major transport hubs or “iconic” tourist sites such as Buckingham Palace.

The force only discovered the April 2004 blunder after a request was made under the Freedom of Information Act earlier this year.

Officials researching stop and search authorisations found a Home Office minister had not signed within 48 hours.

A Met spokesman said the mistake was not noticed in 2004 due to an “oversight” and procedures have been reviewed.

Asked whether the force now faced a flood of legal actions, he said: “It is a matter for individuals to seek legal advice in relation to this issue.”

The spokesman also denied the force had misled the public, saying: “The Met first became aware of the issue in April 2010 during the process of compiling data in answer to a Freedom of Information request.

“All public statements issued before that date were made in good faith and there was no intention to mislead the public.”

The Met case sparked a trawl for errors across the UK.

Officials discovered 33 occasions when forces asked for a 29-day search window, even though the legislation only allows a maximum of 28 days. In two cases, forces asked for 30 days.

‘Public confidence’

The Home Office has written to each of the 14 police forces concerned to alert them to the errors.

It said the forces were now in the process of assessing how many individuals were illegally stopped and searched and would “do their best to contact those involved”.

Security Minister Baroness Neville-Jones said: “I am very concerned by these historical administrative errors. To maintain public confidence in our counter-terrorism powers, it is absolutely crucial all those responsible for exercising them do so properly.

“I take these matters extremely seriously and have instructed the department to conduct an urgent review of current procedures to ensure that errors can be prevented in future.

“The government is already committed to undertaking a review of counter-terrorism legislation which will include the use of stop and search powers in section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000. We shall make our findings known as soon as possible.”

Officials at the Home Office, National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA) and Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) are examining the mistakes.

The 40 flawed operations uncovered by officials include three which have previously been identified as being based on flawed paperwork.

The forces involved are: Metropolitan Police, North Yorkshire, Hampshire, Bedfordshire, Essex, Greater Manchester, Fife, South Wales and Thames Valley.

Invalid operations linked to Sussex Police and South Wales Police have been highlighted to Parliament previously.

Acpo lead officer on stop and search, Chief Constable Craig Mackey, said: “Stop and search can work well when it is carried out with the support and understanding of the community. Used correctly, it can create a hostile environment for terrorists to operate in and help protect the public.”

In January this year, the powers were ruled illegal by the European Court of Human Rights. The new coalition government has said it is reviewing their use, as part of a wider overhaul of anti-terror legislation.

Source: BBC

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Secret Jail At Bagram Confirmed By Red Cross

Posted in prison on May 11th, 2010

The US airbase at Bagram in Afghanistan contains a facility for detainees that is distinct from its main prison, the Red Cross has confirmed to the BBC.

Nine former prisoners have told the BBC that they were held in a separate building, and subjected to abuse.

The US military says the main prison, now called the Detention Facility in Parwan, is the only detention facility on the base.

However, it has said it will look into the abuse allegations made to the BBC.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said that since August 2009 US authorities have been notifying it of names of detained people in a separate structure at Bagram.

The ICRC is being notified by the US authorities of detained people within 14 days of their arrest,” a Red Cross spokesman said.

“This has been routine practice since August 2009 and is a development welcomed by the ICRC.”

The spokesman was responding to a question from the BBC about the existence of the facility, referred to by many former prisoners as the Tor Jail, which translates as “black jail”.

“We are being notified about persons at the Bagram Theatre Internment Facility [now Detention Facility in Parwan] since Feb 2008,” the ICRC spokesman added.

In recent weeks the BBC has logged the testimonies of nine prisoners who say they had been held in the so-called “Tor Jail”.

They told consistent stories of being held in isolation in cold cells where a light is on all day and night.

The men said they had been deprived of sleep by US military personnel there.

In response to these allegations, Vice Adm Robert Harward, in charge of US detentions in Afghanistan, denied the existence of such a facility or abuses.

He told the BBC that the Parwan Detention Facility was the only US detention centre in the country.

Source: BBC

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Bill Aims To Strip Certain Americans Of Their Citizenship

Posted in US government on May 10th, 2010

A bipartisan group of legislators on Thursday introduced legislation in Congress to strip citizenship from any American found to be involved in terrorism.

If the Terrorist Expatriation Act passes, an American would lose citizenship if found to have provided material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization — as designated by the secretary of state — or participated in actions against the United States.

Sens. Joe Lieberman, I-Connecticut, and Scott Brown, R-Massachusetts, co-sponsored the bill. An identical bill is being introduced in the House by Reps. Jason Altmire, D-Pennsylvania, and Charlie Dent, R-Pennsylvania.

“As the attempted terrorist attack on Times Square showed us again, our enemies today are even more willing than the Nazis or fascists were to kill innocent civilian Americans [in WWII],” Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, told reporters. “Our enemies today are stateless actors who don’t wear uniforms and plot against Americans abroad and here in the United States.”

Faisal Shahzad, an American citizen, recently admitted driving a Nissan Pathfinder into New York’s Times Square on Saturday and attempting to detonate the vehicle, which was packed with gasoline, propane tanks, fireworks and fertilizer, according to a complaint filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in New York.

Lieberman said the legislation updates the 1940 Immigration and Nationality Act, which identifies seven categories in which citizens can lose citizenship if they voluntarily perform one of the acts.

The list, according to Lieberman, includes acts such as serving in the armed forces of a “foreign state” if such armed forces are engaged in hostilities against the United States; formally renouncing nationality whenever the United States is in a state of war; or committing treason against the United States.

“The bill we’re introducing today would simply update the 1940 law to account for the enemy that we are fighting today,” he said. “Many have said this law goes too far. Remember, this bill only updates an existing statute that has been on the books for 70 years that accounts for the terrorist enemy that we are fighting today.”

Brown, a member of Lieberman’s committee, said the bill isn’t a knee-jerk reaction. “This reflects the changing nature of war and recent events,” he said. “War has moved into a new direction.”

Brian Fallon, a spokesman for New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, said he believes “it would be found unconstitutional in this context and would also be ineffective.”

House Minority Leader John Boehner has similar worries, saying the chances of the bill passing “would be pretty difficult under the U.S. Constitution.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she likes the “spirit” of the bill, but wants to know more on what constitutes taking away an American’s citizenship.

“I do think it’s important to know on what basis [they'd lose their citizenship],” she said. “We are committed to due process in our country. … What’s the standard?”

Pelosi said she’d have to see the language of the bill before deciding whether to support it.

Similar legislation, however, has not been successful.

In 2005, Congress sought to make it a felony for a naturalized citizen to vote in an election in their home country, among other things. The bill, introduced in the House, did not muster enough support to bring it to a vote.

Legal experts, meanwhile, argue that the new bill has serious constitutional problems.

“It’s unconstitutional,” said Christopher Anders, Senior Legislative Counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union.” Taking away someone’s citizenship is a truly extraordinary step and to do that based on mere suspicion and to be giving that power to government bureaucrats without ever having a court trial will be an amazing step.”

Under the new proposed bill, the Department of State would have the ability to revoke an American’s citizenship based on a person renouncing their citizenship. The individual, Lieberman stressed, would still have the right to appeal the determination at the State Department — or take it to federal court.

When asked how the State Department would make their decision, Lieberman said a person would have declare the intent to renounce their citizenship — but added that information from other sources could also “lead the state department to make that conclusion.”

Anders said the government often makes mistakes in determining a person’s involvement in terrorism. In that case, an American citizen could be rendered stateless if they do not have dual citizenship.

Stephen Vladeck, a professor of law at American University Washington College of Law, said the government defines “providing material support to terrorism” so broadly, “that really the most benign, innocent activity could subject the most harmless Americans to this extreme sanction.”

Vladeck predicted that if a case makes its way to the courts, the statute would be in serious trouble.

“Although there have been some crimes that have been historically treated as subject to denaturalization, I think material support is so far away from the kinds of conduct that previously has been punished that way,” he said. “I think the fact that this is up to the secretary of state, and not a court, really is going to make it very hard for this statute to survive a constitutional challenge.”

The Supreme Court examined citizenship rights in the 1980 case of Vance v. Terrazas. The court’s decision held that in determining the loss of citizenship, the government “must prove an intent to surrender United States citizenship, not just the voluntary commission of an expatriating act such as swearing allegiance to a foreign nation.”

Altmire said the new bill hasn’t changed the government’s burden of proof.

“When someone wants to appeal this [ruling], the burden of proof is on the Department of State. And there’s a very high legal threshold to remain consistent with the bill. None of that has changed.”

Source: CNN

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Abu Zubaydah: Tortured For Nothing

Posted in terrorism, torture on April 7th, 2010

By Andy Worthington

The story of Abu Zubaydah — a Saudi-born Palestinian whose real name is Zayn al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn — has always been absolutely central to the “War on Terror.” Seized in a house raid in Faisalabad, Pakistan on March 28, 2002, he was immediately touted as “al-Qaeda’s chief of operations and top recruiter,” who would be able to “provide the names of terrorists around the world and which targets they planned to hit.” He then pretty much vanished off the face of the earth for four and a half years.

In September 2006, he resurfaced in Guantánamo, when President Bush announced that he was one of 14 “high-value detainees,” previously held in secret CIA prisons, whose existence had been resolutely denied by the administration until that point.

In a speech on September 6, 2006, Bush finally conceded that “a small number of suspected terrorist leaders and operatives captured during the war [on terror] have been held and questioned outside the United States, in a separate program operated by the Central Intelligence Agency,” and claimed that when Abu Zubaydah, who he described as “a senior terrorist leader and a trusted associate of Osama bin Laden,” became “defiant and evasive” after his capture, “the CIA used an alternative set of procedures. These procedures were designed to be safe, to comply with our laws, our Constitution, and our treaty obligations. The Department of Justice reviewed the authorized methods extensively and determined them to be lawful.”

This was a reference to the CIA’s torture program for “high-value detainees,” which was first publicly revealed when a memo that purported to redefine torture so that it could be used by the CIA, written by Justice Department lawyer John Yoo and issued in August 2002, was leaked in the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal in 2004.

However, another narrative had already appeared to challenge the one put forward by the President. In June 2006, Ron Suskind’s book The One Percent Doctrine was published, which explained, as I described it in an article a year ago, that:

Zubaydah “turned out to be mentally ill and nothing like the pivotal figure they supposed him to be,” in the words of Barton Gellman, who reviewed Suskind’s book for the Washington Post in 2006. He “appeared to know nothing about terrorist operations,” and was, instead, the “go-to guy for minor logistics — travel for wives and children and the like” …
Suskind described how, through a close scrutiny of his diaries, in which FBI analysts found entries in the voices of three people — a boy, a young man and a middle-aged alter ego — which recorded in numbing detail, over the course of ten years, “what people ate, or wore, or trifling things they said,” Dan Coleman, the FBI’s senior expert on al-Qaeda, told his superiors, “This guy is insane, certifiable, split personality.”

Since then, more and more compelling evidence has emerged to demonstrate that Abu Zubaydah was indeed nothing more than a “safehouse keeper” with mental health problems, who “claimed to know more about al-Qaeda and its inner workings than he really did,” and a “kind of travel agent” for would-be jihadists, who “was not even an official member of al-Qaeda.” This included Abu Zubaydah’s own testimony at his Combatant Status Review Tribunal at Guantánamo in 2007, when he stated that he was tortured by the CIA to admit that he worked with Osama bin Laden, but insisted, “I’m not his partner and I’m not a member of al-Qaeda.”

Moreover, following on from Ron Suskind’s explanation of how “The United States would torture a mentally disturbed man and then leap, screaming, at every word he uttered,” further confirmation was also provided that his torture yielded no significant information and led only to vast amounts of the intelligence agencies’ time being wasted on false leads. A year ago, summing up the results of Zubaydah’s torture, a former intelligence official stated, bluntly, “We spent millions of dollars chasing false alarms.”

In addition, the details of the torture program that was specifically developed for use on Abu Zubaydah have also been revealed — primarily through a leaked International Committee of the Red Cross report (PDF), based on interviews with the “high-value detainees,” including Abu Zubaydah, and also through other Justice Department “torture memos” released by the Obama administration last April. The grim list of techniques includes waterboarding (a form of controlled drowning), confinement in tiny, coffin-like boxes, prolonged sleep deprivation, prolonged isolation, and the use of violence and stress positions, sustained nudity, loud music and noise.

Given all these facts — that the Bush administration implemented torture for use on a man whose importance was hideously overstated, which led to no useful intelligence and a hideous waste of the agencies’ time — Abu Zubaydah’s story is one of the most distressing examples of hubris in the whole of the Bush administration’s brutally inept “War on Terror,” but his story has not come to an end, of course, and his continued detention, and the Obama administration’s attempts to justify it, continue to throw up new revelations, as was made clear just last week when a court submission filed by the government in September 2009 was unclassified.

In response to 213 requests by Abu Zubaydah’s lawyers for discovery in his habeas corpus petition, the government itself provided the most comprehensive rebuttal to date of the kind of claims put forward by the Bush administration in defense of its torture program, and, specifically, its claims regarding Abu Zubaydah, on the basis that requests for discovery are only relevant when they refer to claims made by the government.
In seeking to turn down the lawyers’ requests, the government revealed that it “has not contended … that Petitioner was a member of al-Qaeda or otherwise formally identified with al-Qaeda” and “has not contended that Petitioner had any personal involvement in planning or executing either the 1998 embassy bombings in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, or the attacks of September 11, 2001.”

Instead, the government now claims that the ongoing detention of Abu Zubaydah “is based on conduct and actions that establish Petitioner was ‘part of’ hostile forces and ‘substantially supported’ those forces,” and that he “facilitat[ed] the retreat and escape of enemy forces” after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001.

In response, as Jason Leopold reported for Truthout:

Zubaydah’s attorneys claim that “the persons whom [Zubaydah] assisted in escaping Afghanistan in 2001 included ‘women, children, and/or other non-combatants’” and that the government has evidence to support those assertions. The lawyers also questioned the government’s history of falsehoods about their client.

“The Government’s accounts frequently have been at variance with the actual facts, and the government has generally been loath to provide the facts until forced to do so,” said Zubaydah’s attorney, Brent Mickum, in an interview. “When the Government was forced to present the facts in the form of discovery in Zubaydah’s case, it realized that the game was over and there was no way it could support the Bush administration’s baseless allegations. So it changed the charges.”

Mickum continued, “I’m not surprised at all that the Government has dropped the old charges against our client and is alleging new charges against him. That is their tried-and-true modus operandi … [W]hen their case falls apart, they re-jigger the evidence, and come up with new charges and [say] ‘we will defend the new charges with the same zeal we defended the earlier bogus charges.’”

Since taking up Abu Zubaydah’s case and filing a habeas corpus petition in February 2008, his lawyers have always maintained not only that their client was not a member of al-Qaeda, but also that Khaldan, the training camp for which he was the “safehouse keeper,” was closed down by the Taliban in 2000 after the camp’s leader refused to allow it to come under the control of Osama bin Laden. Even the government now accepts that Khaldan was “organizationally and operationally independent of al-Qaeda,” and as Brent Mickum told Jason Leopold, reviewing all of the above, “We have never deviated from that position, and now the government admits that we were correct all along.”

These extensive concessions on the part of the government seem only to reveal that the Justice Department is painting itself into a corner with Abu Zubaydah, engaged in a slow-moving legal process, which senior officials must be hoping can be strung out indefinitely. Otherwise, profoundly difficult truths will emerge — about the extent of Abu Zubaydah’s torture, its particular futility, and, it should be noted, his relationship to Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, the emir of Khaldan who turned down Osama bin Laden.

Rendered to Egypt after his capture at the end of 2001, al-Libi was tortured until he confessed that Saddam Hussein was helping al-Qaeda obtain chemical weapons, a wildly improbable scenario, which, nevertheless, was used to justify the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. What makes the revival of al-Libi’s story particularly unappealing for the US government is that, after years of detention in secret prisons, he was returned to Libya, where, last May, he conveniently died in prison — reportedly by committing suicide — just three days before the US embassy reopened in Tripoli after being closed for 40 years.

When it comes to dealing with Khaldan, the stories of Abu Zubaydah and Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi not only demonstrate the Bush administration’s legacy at its most toxic and self-defeating, but also at its most cruel and pointless, from which, it seems clear, there is no easy way out.

Source: Eurasia Review

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