Rendition Rewind: ACLU Lawsuit to be Heard
Earlier this week, a federal appeals court announced
that it will hear the government's appeal of an earlier
ruling that allowed the ACLU's lawsuit against Boeing
subsidiary, Jeppesen DataPlan Inc., to go forward.
In
2007, the ACLU sued Jeppesen for its role in the Bush
administration's unlawful "extraordinary rendition" program.
Our lawsuit was filed on behalf of five men who were
forcibly disappeared and then tortured in U.S.-run secret
overseas prisons or by foreign intelligence
agents.
Shortly after the lawsuit was filed, the Bush
administration intervened, asserting the "state secrets"
privilege and asking the judge to have the case thrown out
without considering any evidence in support of the men's
case.
Although the lower court upheld the government's
claims, in April, a three-judge panel reversed the lower
court's dismissal of the lawsuit. The panel held--contrary
to the assertions of Obama administration lawyers, and as
the ACLU had argued--the "state secrets" privilege can only
be invoked with respect to specific evidence and not to
dismiss the entire suit.
In June, the Obama
administration appealed the decision, and asked an "en banc"
panel of 11 judges to rehear the case which the court
announced this week that it will hear.
"We are
disappointed by the court's decision to re-hear this case,
but we hope and expect that the court's historic decision to
allow the lawsuit to go forward will stand," said Ben
Wizner, staff attorney with the ACLU's National Security
Project and counsel in the case. "The CIA's rendition and
torture program simply is not a 'state secret.' In fact,
since the court's decision in April, the government's
sweeping secrecy claims have only gotten weaker, with the
declassification of additional documents describing the
CIA's detention and interrogation practices. The Obama
administration's embrace of overbroad secrecy claims has
denied torture victims their day in court and shielded
perpetrators from liability or accountability. We hope that
the court will reaffirm the principle that victims of
torture deserve a remedy, and that no one is above the
law."
The San Francisco Chronicle's coverage of the
rehearing points out that, "Of the five plaintiffs, two are
still imprisoned in Egypt and Morocco, and the other three
were released without U.S. charges." To date, no torture
victim from the Bush-administration's "War on Terror" has
had his day in
court.
ENDS