Submit your comments on this article | |
Home Front: WoT | |
Judge Orders Release of Gitmo Detainee IDs | |
2006-01-24 | |
![]() Most of the hundreds of prisoners at the U.S. prison in Cuba have been held since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks without being charged or publicly identified, which has troubled human rights groups The AP filed its Freedom of Information Act lawsuit seeking the documents last year. The government then turned over the transcripts of 558 tribunals but redacted facts about each detainee's identity. The judge gave the government until Wednesday to decide whether to appeal to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and ask him to suspend his order. Earlier this month, the judge rejected government arguments that the detainees' names should be kept secret to protect their privacy, but gave the government one last chance to change his mind. In response, the government argued that releasing the identities could subject the families, friends and associates of the detainees to embarrassment and retaliation. In a written ruling Monday, the judge said he found that argument unconvincing. He said family members and the others "never had any reasonable expectation" of anonymity.
Last year, the judge ordered the government to ask each detainee whether he or she wanted personal identifying information to be turned over to the AP as part of the lawsuit. Of 317 detainees who received the form, 63 said yes, 17 said no, 35 returned the form without answering and 202 declined to return the form. The judge said none of the detainees, not even the 17 who said they did not want their identities exposed, had a reasonable expectation of privacy during the tribunals. | |
Posted by:Steve White |
#1 ...Okay - release the names. And then state for the record that each and every one of them is now cooperating with us. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2006-01-24 12:12 |