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villager

(26,001 posts)
Mon Mar 30, 2015, 01:01 AM Mar 2015

A court case so secret, US Govt says it can't go on

<snip>

This Kafkaesque scenario couldn't happen in the U.S., right?

Not until Monday, it couldn't. That's when a federal judge in the Southern District of New York did exactly that, dismissing a defamation suit by Greek shipping magnate Victor Restis against a shady advocacy group called United Against Nuclear Iran.

This is the first time a US court has dismissed a lawsuit on the basis of state secrets when the case didn't involve either the Government or a defence contractor deeply enmeshed with classified government contracts.

It's also a marvelous example of how secrecy fundamentally distorts the legal process and subverts the rule of law.

When I write about a case, I usually begin by describing the facts. Here the facts are so secret I can barely say anything.

United Against was founded in 2008 by a former CIA director and a group of retired diplomats to advocate against the nuclear Iran.

Its board includes former directors of foreign intelligence services including the U.K.'s MI-6, Germany's BND - and Israel's Mossad.

One of the strategies pursued by United Against is a campaign to "name and shame" entities that trade with Iran. The organization named Restis, who in turn sued United Against for falsely claiming his companies were "front men for the illicit activities of the Iranian regime."

The Department of Justice intervened in September, asserting the state secrets privilege. That so-called privilege doesn't come from the Constitution or from statute.

It's an unwritten judicial rule that allows the Government to block discovery of information through ordinary litigation "when disclosure would be inimical to national security," as the district court described it.

What followed would be comical if it weren't so serious.

<snip>

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=11424037

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A court case so secret, US Govt says it can't go on (Original Post) villager Mar 2015 OP
Thanks, villager. "Couldn't happen in the US" is something I wish merrily Mar 2015 #1
It not only *can* happen here -- it *has*! villager Mar 2015 #4
kr ND-Dem Mar 2015 #2
They need to appeal; that avenue is available to them and they should take it. MADem Mar 2015 #3
Highly recommend. n/t Jefferson23 Mar 2015 #5
K&R....for exposure... KoKo Mar 2015 #6

merrily

(45,251 posts)
1. Thanks, villager. "Couldn't happen in the US" is something I wish
Mon Mar 30, 2015, 01:10 AM
Mar 2015

political commentators would stop saying.

For one thing, it's deceptive. Awful things happen here and always have. We find out about some of them. Others we don't. Giving readers the impression something is unthinkable or that much of an aberration is just wrong. (I am not accusing this writer of being intentionally deceptive in the least, nor am I saying that only bad things happen in the US. Far from it, on both counts.)

But, good story, thanks.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
3. They need to appeal; that avenue is available to them and they should take it.
Mon Mar 30, 2015, 04:10 AM
Mar 2015
... Here's hoping Restis appeals, and that the appellate court, and maybe even the Supreme Court, has a chance to revisit the issue - and maybe save the dignity of the judiciary and the majesty of the rule of law.
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