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Obama Administration Defending Bush Secrets
Justice Department seeks to hold back lawsuits as FOIA rules rewritten
WASHINGTON - Despite President Barack Obama's vow to open government more than ever, the Justice Department is defending Bush administration decisions to keep secret many documents about domestic wiretapping, data collection on travelers and U.S. citizens, and interrogation of suspected terrorists.
U.S. President Barack Obama takes part in a town hall meeting Concord Community High School in Elkhart, Indiana, February 9, 2009. "This is not change," said ACLU executive director Anthony Romero. "President Obama's Justice Department has disappointingly reneged" on his promise to end "abuse of state secrets."(Reuters/Jim Young) In half a dozen lawsuits, Justice lawyers have opposed formal motions or spurned out-of-court offers to delay court action until the new administration rewrites Freedom of Information Act guidelines and decides whether the new rules might allow the public to see more.
In only one case has the Justice Department agreed to suspend a FOIA lawsuit until the disputed documents can be re-evaluated under the yet-to-be-written guidelines. That case involves negotiations on an anti-counterfeiting treaty, not the more controversial, secret anti-terrorism tactics that spawned the other lawsuits as well as Obama's promises of greater openness.
"The signs in the last few days are not entirely encouraging," said Jameel Jaffer, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed several lawsuits seeking the Bush administration's legal rationales for warrantless domestic wiretapping and for its treatment of terrorism detainees.
The documents sought in these lawsuits "are in many cases the documents that the public most needs to see," Jaffer said. "It makes no sense to say that these documents are somehow exempt from President Obama's directives."
Groups that advocate open government, civil liberties and privacy were overjoyed that Obama on his first day in office reversed the FOIA policy imposed by Bush's first attorney general, John Ashcroft. The Bush Justice Department said it would use any legitimate legal basis to defend withholding records from the public. Obama pledged "an unprecedented level of openness in government" and ordered new FOIA guidelines written with a "presumption in favor of disclosure."
But Justice's actions in courts since then have cast doubt on how far the new administration will go.
Justice: FBI did enough
In a FOIA case seeking access to the rules governing the FBI's Investigative Data Warehouse - a computer database containing searchable documents about Americans and foreigners - Justice lawyers told a district court here Thursday, "It is not clear that the new guidelines, once issued, will be retrospective to FOIA requests that the agency already has finished processing."
They asked the court to rule instead that the FBI has done enough. The bureau has reviewed 878 pages, withheld 76 and released some portions of 802.
To withhold some material, the FBI cited discretionary FOIA exemptions and ones that require balancing privacy and public interests. David Sobel, attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based group that advocates civil liberties in cyberspace and brought the lawsuit, said those decisions might come out differently under the new guidelines.
The issue isn't retroactivity, Sobel said. "The issue is whether the new administration is going to devote legal resources to fighting old battles now that the president has announced a fundamental change in the government's approach to FOIA."
Other lawsuits in which Justice's civil division has expressed opposition to delays until the administration writes its FOIA guidelines and uses them to review Bush decisions:
- One seeking documents about the Automated Targeting System used by Customs officers to screen all travelers leaving or entering the country.
- A case seeking records of lobbying by telecommunications companies to get legal immunity for cooperating in warrantless domestic wiretapping.
- A case seeking Justice's legal opinions justifying that wiretapping. One of the plaintiff attorneys, Meredith Fuchs, of the National Security Archive, a private group that publishes formerly classified government documents, said, "I'm somewhat surprised they did not take the opportunity to look at these again, but maybe it's because the administration doesn't have all its top Justice appointees in office yet."
- Three cases seeking Justice legal opinions about detention and interrogation of terrorism detainees. Civil division attorney Caroline Wolverton wrote the ACLU's Jaffer that Justice would proceed "consistent with the principles" in Obama's FOIA order "and also with due regard for the legitimate confidentiality interests of the executive branch and the national security interests of the United States."
Jaffer called that "a nonresponse response."
Two cases may be reviewed
So far, Justice has expressed willingness to review Bush decisions in two cases, only one because of FOIA changes.
Only in Sobel's lawsuit for anti-counterfeiting treaty documents has Justice joined a plaintiff to obtain a court delay to give the administration time to write FOIA guidelines and use them to "review its determinations on the documents at issue."
But that case is unusual because Justice is represented by its Office of Information and Privacy, not by the civil division that handles all the other FOIA lawsuits. The information and privacy office provides governmentwide guidance on how to obey the FOIA. Attorneys in these cases worry that the information and privacy office doesn't have the clout of the much larger civil division and may not control administration policy.
The civil division has sought a delay to review one case - involving three 2005 Justice legal memos on the definition of "cruel and unusual" interrogation tactics. But its request didn't mention the new FOIA policy. Instead it said Obama's Jan. 22 executive order on detention and interrogation might alter the government position.
Even if the new administration reviews Bush decisions, that's no guarantee the outcome will change.
Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder announced a review of every court case in which the Bush administration used a different legal tool to preserve secrecy: the state secrets privilege it invoked a record number of times to have lawsuits thrown out. On the same day, however, civil division attorney Douglas Letter cited the state secrets privilege in asking a federal appeals court to uphold dismissal of a lawsuit accusing a Boeing Co. subsidiary of illegally helping the CIA fly suspected terrorists to allied foreign nations where they would be tortured.
Three times Letter assured the judges his position had been approved by Obama administration officials.
"This is not change," said ACLU executive director Anthony Romero. "President Obama's Justice Department has disappointingly reneged" on his promise to end "abuse of state secrets."
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21 Comments so far
Show AllThe tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of
patriots and tyrants. ....Thomas Jefferson
ALL politicians lie. It's a lifestyle. Have we not figured this out by now?
O,
Why do you keep quoting Thomas Jefferson, one of the biggest hypocrites of the founding fathers?
He would rape his slaves; then broke his promise to the slaves to free them upon his death. He sold his slaves down the river upon his death; because he had debts to his follow slave holders.
Like the ruling elite today i.e. Mr. Bush, he was loyal to his "class."
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of
patriots and tyrants. ....Thomas Jefferson
No doubt he was an elitist et al, but many things he said have value and pertinence.
Does anyone know of a progressive in Obama's adminisration?
I heard Hillary Clinton describe herself as a progressive...
I agree LOL! Hillary a progressive? Please.....
A little humor, and also a point---the definition is subjective, and it changes over time.
Yet another example proving the federal government's failure as an institution and why it must be replaced.
I see two possible explanations for Obama covering for Bush: 1) he wants to use these powers himself, or 2) he doesn't want to prosecute. Either way, if he continues this travesty---which goes against his campaign promises---he's going to lose my support. This issue is SO important.
What is it that keeps you hanging on?
I've been pretty psyched about Obama so far. This country is not going to elect a Hugo Chavez anytime soon. I think Obama is as far left as we're capable of, given the state of the media and the state of the populace, with the added influence of corporations.
We just had a brush with fascism after all---and this is all very refreshing to me.
Is Hugo Chavez running?
"We just had a brush with fascism after all---and this is all very refreshing to me"
POOEEAAHH!
damn, my whole keyboard is now covered in coffee
man, a "brush"?? the Us is way up to the eyebrows in fascism and has been for more than 8 years!
you obviously confuse fasciasm with nazism.
but fascism doesn't need swastika's, or SS men wearing stahlhelmets or cargotrains with Jews leaving for Auschwitz.
fascism needs just a few things:
a massive merging of coorporate and politics: done. one needs to buy important people to get elected.....raise millions of dollars.....
a hyped up media controlled by conservative coorporates and the military industrial complex; done.
a scapegoat; in this case anything resembling Mulsim culture; done
a nationwide obsession with sex and anything to do with genitals and procreation: done
a merging of church and state; done: a nation "under god", "in god we trust", "god bless the US", add all the overly religious fawning of politicians from both parties etc
total and utter nationalism from day 1; even tiny kids have to say "the pledge" every single schoolgoing day under the flag, massive worshipping of the flag etc.
believe in being a 'special people', "god's own country" and on and on; that's the same as Ubermensch or Herrenrasse, it's only in English instead of German. done
huge military budget: done. in fact, 60% of all money on the globe is spend on weaponry and of that amount more than half is spend by the US and the Pentagon...more than Russia, China, the EU, israel etc all wrapped up together......
done
the list goes on.
fascism has been up and running since 'saint ronny reagon' ran the whole circus, it's just becoming more visible and obvious for the last 8 years.
.....a brush with fascism
wow
where have you been.....
I must agree that Obama was a real "psych-out". Regarding a "brush with fascism", I think it was more than a "brush". It was a full-fledged installation. The incremental build-up of the Police State proceeds at an increasingly faster clip. Obama is a figurehead as much as Bush, or Clinton, or Bush I, or Reagan, etc. There are billions in the "stimulous" package for Homeland Security to advance it's control agenda. The move to federalize the police apparatus of local, county and state governments continues. The move toward corporate/state control of the internet and the demise of net neutrality is proceeding forward, bills aimed at disarming the populace are gaining momentum. Although I'm not personally into guns, I see this as another red flag in terms of the Constitution. The list of bad omens goes on and on. So many are thrilled about Obama's early pronouncements "reversing" some of Bush's policies, but I think we were already familiar with the disconnect between Obama's words and actions. Meanwhile the bailout farce continues. In actuality, I think the Republican obstruction is necessary as a cover, a "Friday Night Smackdown" if you will, which distracts as globalist totalitarian measures continue to be incrementally set in place. Preparations for full martial law have not stopped. This is not just about Republican/Democrat theatrics. There was a coup in 2000 and 2001. We are under this threat even more today. Even if Obama came into possession of a conscience regarding his employers, he could not safely enact meaningful change. We are under the rule of the international banking system, with Northcom set up to enforce the agenda. This was all planned, including the puppet regime of Obama. McCain and Palin were not meant to win in the first place. The goal of total control has not changed. This has happened over and over in history. There should be no surprise here. It is happening here. Other posters are saying basically the same thing, but I think it needs to be hammered repeatedly.
madcow,
"he's going to lose my support."
What does Mr. Obama have to do to the nation, laws, and Constitution to loose your support?
Hasn't he betrayed his promises enough already?
"Yes we can't!"
front company. that's obama. he's good on the campaign speeches, and that's where he's gone off to this week. Give that good old front company speech to the win over the masses, while behind the door the same system crashes.
this is why I say Obama will do more damage to progressives than good. the conservatives are going to come back huge in the form of retroactivity at the voter's booth.
Gawd ! I can't stand Obama doing things like this. The more he does these kinds of things, the more regretful I am that I did not listen to my wife who voted for Nader because I fell for the "practical" choice idea and voted Obama. I feel sick now and I apologize. I guess there's still some GOP residue in me to clean off !
Terrance Mitchell
Redfield, South Dakota
But ... Obama is a "Constitutional lawyer," we were told during the campaign. At other times Obama was JFK, MLK or even FDR, without having to dress the part!
Probably, it was all meant as an inside joke on the public because the Constitution is now rather quaint and abstract. Swearing by the Constitution, as Obama did, is like taking an oath by pixie dust.
The Constitution got shredded years ago when Congress passed the USA PATRIOT Act, so there's a big hardee-har-har on Capitol Hill when it comes to preserving the rule of law or protecting our inalienable rights. And if you thought Obama didn't vote for the PATRIOT Act, you'd be wrong.
For all of the obscene clarity we have in this article - which shows the Obama-era Justice Department defending Bush's secrecy - some loyal Dems just will not get the point. Yet it is these very loyalist Dem voters that must be on the front lines of any pressure on the Obama administration.
Today's fawning must become tomorrow's fanatics for change. Who will lead this zombie nation toward restoring our rights?
I imagine some Oscar-winning actor denouncing Obama's breeches of faith. Would that move loyalist Dems to actively oppose Obama's present Bush-like agenda?
Not sure what it would take. It is a sheep-like nation indeed.
-TIA
Don't forget to add "Honest Abe" Lincoln to the list of JFK, MLK and FDR.