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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBRIEF: Potential Use as “Anti-American Propaganda” Not a Valid Reason to Classify Information
BRIEF: Potential Use as Anti-American Propaganda Not a Valid Reason to Classify InformationFor Immediate Release
The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law is a non-partisan public policy and law institute that focuses on fundamental issues of democracy and justice. Our work ranges from voting rights to redistricting reform, from access to the courts to presidential power in the fight against terrorism.
Friday, April 3, 2015 - 2:30pm
NEW YORK - The U.S. government should not be permitted to classify information simply because it could be used to stir anti-American sentiment abroad, the Brennan Center for Justice and the Electronic Frontier Foundation argued in an amicus brief filed today.
Allowing the U.S. to classify information based on the argument that our enemies could use it as anti-American propaganda contradicts Executive Order 13526, which prohibits the classification of information to conceal misconduct or prevent embarrassment, and would create a limitless basis for future classification, the brief argues.
The U.S. has an overclassification problem, said Elizabeth Goitein, co-director of the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. Too often, the system is used to conceal government misconduct, from illegal warrantless wiretapping to secret CIA torture programs. The governments propaganda argument would legitimize this practice.
"It's vital that courts recognize that the government's classification authority has limits, said Mark Rumold, staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Left unchecked, the ability to hide unflattering information or illegal conduct from the public threatens to undermine public debate and our democratic processes."
The brief was filed in Jihad Dhiab, et al v. Barack Obama, et al, a case in which former Guantanamo Bay prisoner, Abu Wael Dhiab, sued the U.S. to stop force-feedings. Evidence in the case included video recordings of the force-feedings, which were filed under seal because they were classified. Several press outlets intervened and requested to see the videos, and the District Court judge ordered them unsealed. The government is now appealing that decision on the grounds that our enemies could use the videos to stoke resentment against the United States.
Read the brief here.
http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2015/04/03/brief-potential-use-anti-american-propaganda-not-valid-reason-classify
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BRIEF: Potential Use as “Anti-American Propaganda” Not a Valid Reason to Classify Information (Original Post)
KoKo
Apr 2015
OP
salib
(2,116 posts)1. Pretty obvious, I would think.
woo me with science
(32,139 posts)2. K&R This is important.
Secret government is corrupt government.