The
U.S. Supreme Court has put an end to a lawsuit over the CIA's so-called
torture flights, refusing to consider a long-running case against a San
Jose-based subsidiary of Boeing accused of participating in the
operations.
In a one-line order, the Supreme Court on Monday
refused to review a federal appeals court ruling that found the lawsuit
could not proceed because of the possibility it might reveal national
security secrets. As a result, the ruling stands, derailing an American
Civil Liberties Union lawsuit against Jeppesen Dataplan, the Boeing
subsidiary accused of carrying out the flights under a contract with the
government.
ACLU lawyers expressed disappointment in the Supreme
Court's decision, and the Brennan Center for Justice urged the Obama
administration to reconsider its approach to invoking the state secrets
privilege in legal battles around the country.
"With today's
decision, the Supreme Court has refused once again to give justice to
torture victims and to restore our nation's reputation as a guardian of
human rights and the rule of law," said Ben Wizner, the ACLU's
litigation director for national security issues.
The Supreme
Court's action also means the justices declined to jump into reviewing
one of the more controversial methods used in the government's war on
terrorism, which has been in the forefront with the recent killing of
Osama bin Laden.
Both the Obama and Bush administrations had fought hard to
block the lawsuit from going
forward, arguing that it could expose government secrets. The case
tested the government's power to invoke the "state secrets" privilege to
fend off lawsuits.A sharply divided panel of the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 6-5 ruling last year, sided with the U.S.
Justice Department's arguments, saying the case "presents an
unacceptable risk of disclosure of state secrets no matter what the
legal or factual theories Jeppesen would choose to advance during a
defense."
The four-year legal battle stems from a case filed by
five former terrorism suspects who allege they were transported to
foreign countries and subjected to brutal CIA interrogation tactics.
ACLU lawyers insisted the government was abusing its state secrets
privilege to conceal the handling of the terrorism suspects.
Jeppesen
and Boeing have refused to discuss the company's relationship with the
CIA and the government's "extraordinary rendition" program, which was
launched in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.
The
Supreme Court, meanwhile, has two other major California cases to
decide before it finishes up its term next month. The justices are
considering a legal challenge to California's law banning the sale of
violent video games to minors, and also federal court orders requiring
the state to shed nearly 40,000 inmates from its overcrowded prison
system.
Contact Howard Mintz at 408-286-0326.
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