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believe_it
I haven't fully read this or listened completely yet myself. I take things like this in small doses.

QUOTE
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/11/3/appe...s_in_maher_arar
Appeals Court Rules in Maher Arar Case: Innocent Victims of Extraordinary Rendition Cannot Sue in US Courts
November 03, 2009

VIDEO

On Monday, a federal court of appeals dismissed Canadian citizen Maher Arar’s case against US officials for their role in sending him to Syria to be tortured. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that victims of extraordinary rendition cannot sue Washington for torture suffered overseas, because Congress has not authorized such lawsuits. In 2002, Syrian-born Maher Arar was held in New York on his way back to Canada from a family vacation in Tunisia. A subsequent Canadian public inquiry has shown Arar was held on erroneous advice from Canadian officials who accused him of ties to Islamic militants. US authorities then flew Arar to Syria, where he was imprisoned and tortured for a year. Canadian authorities exonerated Arar in 2007, apologized for their role in his torture, and awarded him a multi-million-dollar settlement. [includes rush transcript]

Guest: Maria LaHood, Maher Arar’s attorney and senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights.

TRANSCRIPT:
AMY GOODMAN: On Monday, a federal court of appeals dismissed Canadian citizen Maher Arar’s case against US officials for their role in sending him to Syria to be tortured. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that victims of extraordinary rendition cannot sue Washington for torture suffered overseas, because Congress has not authorized such lawsuits.

In 2002, Syrian-born Maher Arar was held in New York on his way back to Canada from a family vacation in Tunisia. A subsequent Canadian public inquiry has shown Arar was held on erroneous advice from Canadian officials who accused him of ties to Islamic militants. US authorities then flew Arar to Syria, where he was imprisoned and tortured for a year. Canadian authorities exonerated Arar in 2007, apologized for their role in his torture, and awarded him a multi-million-dollar settlement.

Following Monday’s 7-to-4 verdict, Maher Arar said, quote, “this recent decision and decisions taken on other similar cases, prove that the court system in the United States has become more or less a tool that the executive branch can easily manipulate through unfounded allegations and fear mongering. If anything, this decision is a loss to all Americans and to the rule of law,” he said.

In his dissent, Judge Guido Calabresi wrote, quote, “I believe that when the history of this distinguished court is written, today’s majority decision will be viewed with dismay.”

For more on this case, I’m joined here in our firehouse studio by Maher Arar’s attorney Maria LaHood. She’s a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Welcome to Democracy Now!

MARIA LAHOOD: Thanks for having me.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the significance of this.

MARIA LAHOOD: Well, what the decision was, the court decided 7-to-4 that even if—or assuming that what Maher says is true, which we all assume at this point, that he was prevented from going to court in order to stop federal officials from sending him to Syria to be tortured and that he was in fact sent to Syria to be tortured—even assuming that’s true, he has no remedy in the United States federal courts.

And the court said that was for two reasons. One, because of foreign policy and national security, the court was going to defer to the executive on their policy. First of all, Maher doesn’t challenge the policy; he challenges what happened to him, being sent to Syria to be tortured. Second of all, it’s the courts role to uphold our rights and to be the check and balance for the executive branch. The second reason was for secrecy purposes. Basically, the court said if state secrets might be at issue—the court didn’t reach whether state secrets was—it was better to have a decision to preclude a remedy in open court rather than having to deal with classified information. It’s an outrage.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to turn to Maher Arar in his own words right now. Two years ago, he described his ordeal in videotaped testimony to the House Judiciary and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee. He spoke via videoconference because he’s barred from entering the United States.
MAHER ARAR: Let me be clear: I am not a terrorist. I am not a member of al-Qaeda or any other terrorist group.

I am here today to tell you about what happened to me and how I was detained and interrogated by the United States government, transported to Syria against my will, tortured and kept there for a year.

Upon viewing my valid Canadian passport, an immigration officer pulled me aside. Officers from the FBI and the New York Police Department arrived and began to interrogate me. My repeated requests for a lawyer were all denied. I was told that I had no right to a lawyer, because I was not an American citizen.

I was then taken to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where I was kept for the next ten days. After five days of repeated requests, I was finally allowed to make a brief phone call to alert my family of my whereabouts.

On October 8th at 3:00 in the morning, I was awakened and told that they had decided to remove me to Syria. By then, it was becoming more and more clear to me that I was being sent to Syria for the purpose of being tortured.

There, I was put in a dark underground cell that was more like a grave. It was three feet wide, six feet deep and seven feet high. Life in that cell was hell. I spent ten months and ten days in that grave.

During the early days of my detention, I was interrogated and physically tortured. I was beaten with an electrical cable and threatened with a metal chair, the tire and electric shocks. I was forced to falsely confess that I had been to Afghanistan. When I was not being beaten, I was put in a waiting room so that I could hear the screams of other prisoners. The cries of the women still haunt me the most.

After 374 days of torture and wrongful detention, I was finally released to Canadian embassy officials on October 5th, 2003.

These past few years have been a nightmare for me. Since my return to Canada, my physical pain has slowly healed, but the cognitive and psychological scars from my ordeal remain with me on a daily basis. I still have nightmares and recurring flashbacks. I am not the same person that I was. I also hope to convey how fragile our human rights have become and how easily they can be taken from us by the same governments that have sworn to protect them.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Maher Arar describing his own ordeal before the House Judiciary and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee. I shouldn’t exactly say “before” the committee; he’s not allowed into the United States, so he spoke via video conference, barred from entering this country. I mean, that is a very graphic description, Maria LaHood. What exactly does this mean, that the US government can take someone from US soil, US citizen or otherwise, and send them off to another country that they know engages in torture?

MARIA LAHOOD: Absolutely, and even that if they intend them to be tortured. And it doesn’t have to be a foreign citizen. This decision is broad enough to affect any of us. Basically, if the federal government decides to do something that it purports to be in our national security to do, they could torture any of us, they could kill any of us, and there would be no relief in the federal courts.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the dissenting opinion of Judge Guido Calabresi.

MARIA LAHOOD: Well, as you quoted from him earlier, he says that, you know, he thinks that history will look with dismay on this decision. He talks a lot about how the courts have really turned the separation of powers notion on their head. You know, here, the majority says that it must defer to the executive, because of separation of powers, but he points out that separation of powers is the reason that courts must actually uphold the law and challenge what the executive does. He really looks to the long view.

And he—one of his statements is that he—he adds these words in his dissent—there were four dissents, all of them really well done—that he adds them in sorrow more than anger, because of how much this opinion reaches out, you know, he says, in judicial activism. And he uses it in the real meaning of the term, which is that they—this court decided things they didn’t have to decide. They eliminated rights they didn’t have to eliminate. They could have dealt with state secrets. They could have decided the issue more narrowly, but they didn’t. They basically reached out to eliminate a remedy.

AMY GOODMAN: Are you appealing the decision?

MARIA LAHOOD: We haven’t decided whether or not we’ll petition the Supreme Court for review, but it does seem like it’s a difficult thing to let this decision stand.

AMY GOODMAN: Why would you leave it?

MARIA LAHOOD: You know, there’s other things that I think need to be done. I don’t know what the Supreme Court would do. You know, there could be a remedy in Congress. There could be prosecutions. The reason Maher brought this case, to begin with, was accountability. He wanted to make sure that this didn’t happen again and also to get some acknowledgment of what was done to him and an apology.

AMY GOODMAN: The remedy in the House could be a bill forbidding extraordinary rendition?

MARIA LAHOOD: It could be a bill forbidding extraordinary rendition, providing specifically for remedy, as the court called out, although we don’t think that’s necessary. It could be a particular bill for an apology and compensation for Maher.

AMY GOODMAN: He has gotten what? He settled for $10 million from the Canadian government—

MARIA LAHOOD: From the Canadian government.

AMY GOODMAN: - for their participation in the giving information over to the US government that was false that led to his rendition.

MARIA LAHOOD: Exactly, exactly. Not having anything to do with the US’s role.

AMY GOODMAN: Are there cases now relating to extraordinary rendition in the courts?

MARIA LAHOOD: There’s currently a case brought by five victims of extraordinary rendition in the Ninth Circuit, en banc, against Jeppesen, the Boeing subsidiary who was involved with the flight plans for the renditions. And there, the district court dismissed on state secrets—

AMY GOODMAN: So this is Jeppesen based in California?

MARIA LAHOOD: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: That flew the planes, that flew [inaudible]—

MARIA LAHOOD: They dealt with the flight plans for the planes for the trips for the extraordinary renditions.

AMY GOODMAN: Mm-hmm.

MARIA LAHOOD: The district court there dismissed on state secrets. The Ninth Circuit actually remanded to the district court to re-review the state secrets, saying that what it is is an evidentiary privilege, it’s not a reason to dismiss the case all out. And the full Ninth Circuit has decided to rehear that opinion in December.

AMY GOODMAN: Maria LaHood, I want to thank you for being with us, Maher Arar’s attorney here in the United States. She’s a senior staff attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights based here in New York.


Of course, I have a difficult fictional film to recommend about this:
http://www.newline.com/properties/rendition.html
RENDITION

and a difficult documentary (which I purchased in '07 to support the filmmakers but have not watched):
http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/stories/rendition701/
PBS FRONTLINE/WORLD: Extraordinary Rendition
(view online free at link)

plus an advocacy website:
http://ccrjustice.org/


http://ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-relea...im-maher-arar-0

And now because of this decision I'll have to force myself to 1) carefully watch RENDITION a second time with my eyes open until I understand the plot and 2) the PBS FRONTLINE/WORLD documentary, EXTRAORDINARY RENDITION, and 3) have to seriously learn about CCR and consider making my first donation. Let's hope millions and millions of other Americans do the same.
believe_it
WOW.

QUOTE
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/04/i...a_n_345274.html

Italy Convicts 23 Americans In CIA Terrorist Kidnapping Case

byCOLLEEN BARRY | 11/ 4/09 01:23 PM

MILAN — An Italian judge on Wednesday convicted 23 Americans in absentia of the 2003 kidnapping of an Egyptian cleric from a Milan street, in a landmark case involving the CIA's extraordinary rendition program in the war on terrorism.

Citing diplomatic immunity, Judge Oscar Magi told the Milan courtroom Wednesday that he was acquitting three other Americans.

Former Milan CIA station chief, Robert Seldon Lady, received eight years in prison. The other 22 convicted American defendants each received a five-year sentence.

The Americans, all but one identified by prosecutors as CIA agents, were tried in absentia as subsequent Italian governments refused or ignored prosecutors' extradition request.

In Washington, CIA spokesman George Little declined to comment on the convictions. He said, "The CIA has not commented on any of the allegations surrounding Abu Omar," the kidnapped man.

Lawyers for the 23 convicted Americans said they would appeal the convictions. The Americans remain fugitives from Italian justice and prosecutor Armando Spataro said he was considering asking the government to issue an international arrest warrant on the strength of the conviction. The government of Silvio Berlusconi, a close ally of President George W. Bush, has previously refused.

Magi said he was acquitting five Italian defendants because an Italian high court ruled key evidence inadmissible as classified. Two of the Italian defendants were convicted as accomplices to kidnapping and received three-year sentences.

The verdict "sends a strong signal of the crimes committed by the CIA in Europe," said Joanne Mariner of Human Rights Watch. The crimes were "unacceptable and unjustified," said Mariner, who was in the courtroom for the verdict at the end of the nearly 3-year-long trial.

The Americans were accused of kidnapping Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, on Feb. 17, 2003, in Milan, then transferring him to U.S. bases in Italy and Germany. He was then moved to Egypt, where he says he was tortured. He has since been released, but has not been permitted to leave Egypt to attend the trial.

The trial is the first by any government over the CIA's extraordinary rendition program, which transferred suspects overseas for interrogation. Human rights advocates charge that renditions were the CIA's way to outsource the torture of prisoners to countries where it is permitted.

The Milan proceedings have been a sore spot in relations between the United States and Italy. The CIA has declined to comment on the case, and Italy's government has denied involvement.

Among the Americans acquitted was Jeffrey Castelli, a former Rome CIA station chief, who prosecutors had alleged coordinated the abduction. The two other acquitted Americans were also assigned to the U.S. Embassy in the Italian capital and thus were covered by broad diplomatic immunity.

The trial continued despite obstacles that threatened to derail it, including Rome's refusal to cooperate with prosecutors.

In addition, Italy's highest court ruled some key evidence inadmissible because it is considered classified – including dossiers seized from the Rome apartment of an Italian intelligence agent and the testimony of a carabinieri officer allegedly at the scene of the kidnapping. That ruling was cited in the acquittal of the main Italian defendants, including the former head of military intelligence.

The government's will to enforce the verdict against the Americans, however, is unlikely to be tested any time soon. Sentences in Italy aren't served until all appeals are exhausted, a process that can take years.

The court also ruled that those convicted must pay 1 million euros to the Egyptian in damages and 500,000 euros to his wife.


.
Magmak1
A Court Decision that Reflects What Type of Country the U.S. is
Even when government officials purposely subject an innocent person to brutal torture, they enjoy full immunity.


By Glenn Greenwald
November 04, 2009 "Salon"

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23896.htm

http://utdocuments.blogspot.com/2009/11/blog-post.html
graham4anything
why is it the only thing these couple of people want is mega-money

seems they are just looking to get rich, doesn't it?

frivioulous lawsuits are the reason alot of people pay more than they need, just to end up making some John Edwards type sleezeball have enough to pay the next bimbo eruptus they have.

maybe if these people would actually care about something concrete, instead of the almighty dollar, becoming famous, getting a reality show or book
to publicize on Larry King, a sleezeball show that really is no different from public radio, except people actually watch the King show.

and then they worry more about persecuting and prosecuting someone who's mother was tossed in the ovens in Auswitz like happened to Roman Polanski
Now, he should sue.
Magmak1
Graham, did you actually open the links and read the text and understand what was done to this man?

Do you have an sense of human rights, legal rights, or any understanding of why a government ought to have some limitations?

Do you have any sense of civil law and its role?

Are you so in love with Michelle's arms that you would cede all your rights (and ours along with them) to Mr. Obama?

Is your anger or hatred or self-hatred so thick with catsup and frying oil that you have no sense of empathy, no sense of what this man and his family lost while he was outside the reach of the law?

I think, had the same thing happened to you, you'd still be whining and swearing and you'd be demanding just as much if not more.

Are you really that callous and shallow as a human being, or is all this "stuff" here at CGCS just an extended flourish of self-centeredness?
xyzse
I don't care whose administration is going at the moment, this is a disservice of justice. Parts of the government took this guy to be tortured at a different country in our name.

Was upset when I heard of this decision.
Magmak1
U.S. To Pay DEA Agent $3 Million In Spying Case
Submitted by Chip on Thu, 2009-11-05 16:42.

* Civil Rights / Liberties
* Corruption
* Spying

U.S. to pay DEA agent $3 million in spying case
By Josh Gerstein | Politico

The U.S. Government has agreed to pay $3 million to a former Drug Enforcement Administration official who claims he was spied on by a CIA agent and a U.S. diplomat while working at the U.S. Embassy in Burma more than a decade ago.

The settlement of a long-running lawsuit brought ex-DEA agent Richard Horn was filed tonight [11/04/09] in U.S. District Court in Washington.

Horn claimed that in 1993 a CIA officer in Rangoon, Arthur Brown, and the chief of mission there, Franklin Huddle, conspired to place a listening device in a coffee table at Horn's residence and that the pair then relayed information they obtained to Washington.

The case became a massive headache for the government recently after U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth found that government lawyers committed fraud on the court by pressing forward with state secrets claims in the case even after Huddle's cover was formally rolled back by the CIA. Read more.

http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/47508

###

The Tortured Logic Continues
Submitted by Chip on Thu, 2009-11-05 16:38.

* Criminal Prosecution and Accountability
* Human Rights
* Military Industrial Complex

The Tortured Logic Continues
By Amy Goodman | Truthdig

“Extraordinary rendition” is White House-speak for kidnapping. Just ask Maher Arar. He’s a Canadian citizen who was “rendered” by the U.S. to Syria, where he was tortured for almost a year.

Just this week, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York City, dismissed Arar’s case against the government officials (including FBI Director Robert Mueller, former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge and former Attorney General John Ashcroft) who allegedly conspired to have him kidnapped and tortured. Arar is safe now, recovering in Canada with his family. But the decision sends a signal to the Obama administration that there will be no judicial intervention to halt the cruel excesses of the Bush-era “Global War on Terror,” including extraordinary rendition, torture and the use of the “state secrets privilege” to hide these crimes.

Arar’s life-altering odyssey is one of the best known and best investigated of those victimized by U.S. extraordinary rendition. After vacationing with his family in Tunisia, Arar attempted to fly home to Canada. On Sept. 26, 2002, while changing planes at JFK Airport, Arar was pulled aside for questioning. He was fingerprinted and searched by the FBI and the New York Police Department. He asked for a lawyer and was told he had no rights. He was then taken to another location and subjected to two days of aggressive interrogations, with no access to phone, food or a lawyer. He was asked about his membership with various terrorist groups, about Osama bin Laden, Iraq, Palestine and more. Shackled, he was then moved to a maximum-security federal detention center in Brooklyn, strip-searched and threatened with deportation to Syria. Read more.

http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/47507
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