Tuesday, May 23, 2006

More on El-Masri

Yesterday I blogged about Friday's Washington Post article on Khalid El-Masri, the man who was kidnapped, detained for six months, tortured, and then dumped in Albania in the dead of night, allegedly by CIA personnel. Kevin Drum at the Washington Post points out an excellent article in Slate today by Henry Lanman, who writes about the increased use of the "state-secrets" privilage to have cases against the government dismissed:

The troubling shift today is that in el-Masri and other similar lawsuits — almost all of which involve important challenges to the government's conduct since Sept. 11 — the administration has been routinely asserting the privilege to dismiss the suits in their entirety by claiming that for it to participate in the trials at all would mean revealing state secrets. In other words, in addition to relying on the state secrets doctrine to an unprecedented degree, the administration is now well on its way to transforming it from a narrow evidentiary privilege into something that looks like a doctrine of broad government immunity.

....Despite the burgeoning use of this privilege and the way it's been used to gut entire cases, the most disturbing aspect of the Bush administration's expansion of the state secrets privilege may well be his: More and more, it is invoked not in response to run-of-the-mill government negligence cases but in response to allegations of criminal conduct on the part of the government. These are not slip-and-fall cases. They are challenges to the administration's broad new theories of unchecked executive power. By using the state secrets privilege to shut down whole lawsuits that would examine government actions before the cases even get under way, the administration avoids having to give a legal account of its behavior. And if this tactic persists — if the administration continues to broadly assert this privilege and courts continue to accept it — the administration will have succeeded in creating an insurmountable immunity that can be invoked against pretty much any legal claim that the "war on terror" violates the law. The standard and winning response to any plaintiff who asserted such charges would be, quite simply, that it's a secret.

That of course, is the point.

3 comments:

Alexander Wolfe said...

Thanks for the invite. We are definitely anti-torture, and we'll definitely touch on the issue again soon.

elendil said...

Excellent! Thank you for joining :-)

Nat-Wu said...

I think I'm more against persecution of innocents than physical torture against actual bad guys. I am, but only because it's pretty well proven not to work. This situation is pretty much analogous to the death penalty, in that since it doesn't really do any good and does some real harm (when we kill innocent men), we ought not to use it so freely.