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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (725114)2/12/2006 7:57:43 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
THE AIPAC CASE: CRIMINALIZING PUBLIC SPEECH

In an unprecedented and previously unimaginable case, two former
employees of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee were
accused last year of mishandling classified government
information. Now they are asking a federal court to dismiss the
charges against them.

The prosecution of the former AIPAC officials, Steven J. Rosen and
Keith Weissman, represents an extraordinary attempt by the Bush
Administration to use the Espionage Act to restrict the
activities and even the conversations of members of the public
who are not government employees.

"The prosecutors in this case have taken the unprecedented step of
criminalizing an alleged leak not just against the government
official who was charged with protecting such information, but
also members of public policy organization with First Amendment
protection who listened to what this government official had to
say," the new defense motion to dismiss states.

"If this indictment is allowed to stand, a statute which in the
first instance is intended to address classic spying will not
only be applied to erring government officials but now will be
applied to private American citizens pursuing first amendment
protected activities."

What Rosen and Weissman are charged with is nothing more than
"what members of the media, members of the Washington policy
community, lobbyists and members of congressional staffs do
perhaps hundreds of times every day," the defense says.

There is no allegation that Rosen or Weissman "ever stole,
secreted, purloined, paid for or otherwise obtained classified
information from any person -- inside or outside government -- by
any illegal means."

Instead, they listened to, and repeated, information provided by
former Pentagon official Lawrence A. Franklin that was
purportedly classified.

"Never has a lobbyist, reporter, or any other non-government
employee been charged... for receiving oral information the
government alleges to be national defense material as part of
that person's normal First Amendment protected activities."

"The government's construction of [the Espionage Act] would allow
for the punishment of any private citizen who obtains classified
information -- regardless of how or why -- and then discloses it
to another private citizen."

"Such a result would be profoundly disturbing," according to the
Defendants' motion.

Remarkably, the legal memorandum on behalf of the defendants was
co-authored by Viet Dinh, the former Justice Department attorney
who is best known as one of the architects of the USA Patriot
Act.

The defense memorandum was filed under seal on January 19 and
unsealed by the court in the Eastern District of Virginia on
February 9.

A copy was obtained by Secrecy News and posted on the Federation
of American Scientists web site. See (4.2 MB PDF file):

fas.org