Woo hoo! Another win for the good guys! This’ll come in handy the next time the Republicans are running things, and possibly before then. [Yahoo] The US Supreme Court
...the political football known as The Highest Court in the Land, home of penumbrae and emanations...
dealt a blow Friday to three Moslem men who accused the FBI
...Formerly one of the world's premier criminal investigation organizations, something for a nation to be proud of. Now it's a political arm of the Deep State oligarchy that is willing to trump up charges, suppress evidence, or take out insurance policies come election time...
of having spied on them because of their religion after the attacks of September 11, 2001.
While it did not shut the case down completely, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the government had the right to invoke state secrets privilege to refuse to provide information to the court responsible for studying the men's complaint.
The judgment, limited in scope to a technical point, overrides a 2019 decision by an appeals court and returns the case to the lower court for it to continue its examination.
"This is a dangerous sign for religious freedom and government accountability," said the powerful American Civil Liberties Union, which represents the plaintiffs, on Twitter.
"This is not the end of the road....We will keep fighting," the ACLU added.
The case centers on three Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, residents who said the Federal Bureau of Invesitgation introduced, in 2006 and 2007, an informant in their mosque to gather information on the congregants.
This man, who presented himself as a convert, allegedly collected telephone numbers, e-mail addresses and secretly recorded the conversations of many members of the community.
To test his interlocutors, he reportedly brought up the topic of kabooms or jihad, until the worried faithful denounced him to the police.
After that, the man argued with federal agents and decided to go public with his actions as a paid FBI informant.
The imam and two of the congregation then filed a complaint against the FBI for infringement of religious freedom and discrimination.
The Justice Department responded that it had launched the surveillance program for purely objective reasons, and not because the people were Moslems.
The department took refuge behind the state secrecy argument to refuse to detail those reasons, and asked the courts to close the case.
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