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State Secrets, No-Fly List Showdown Looms

schwit1 writes "The Obama Administration and a federal judge in San Francisco appear to be headed for a showdown over the controversial state secrets privilege in a case about the U.S. government's 'no-fly' list for air travel. U.S. District Judge William Alsup is also bucking the federal government's longstanding assertion that only the executive branch can authorize access to classified information. From the article: 'The disputes arose in a lawsuit Malaysian citizen and former Stanford student Rahinah Ibrahim filed seven years ago after she was denied travel and briefly detained at the San Francisco airport in 2005, apparently due to being on the no-fly list. In an order issued earlier this month and made public Friday, Alsup instructed lawyers for the government to "show cause" why at least nine documents it labeled as classified should not be turned over to Ibrahim's lawyers. Alsup said he'd examined the documents and concluded that portions of some of them and the entirety of others could be shown to Ibrahim's attorneys without implicating national security.'"

19 of 216 comments (clear)

  1. sudden outbreak of judicial mental clarity by OrugTor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I want this judge on the Supreme Court.

    1. Re:sudden outbreak of judicial mental clarity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is the same judge who had the Oracle-Google Java case. He gave Oracle a huge slap down when they tried to argue that a trivial piece of code should bring down Android. I would love to see this guy on the Supreme Court, but unfortunately common sense and plain speaking will not endear him to anybody in Washington DC. #makestoomuchsense

    2. Re:sudden outbreak of judicial mental clarity by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That mental clarity is why he'll never get nominated. Presidents aren't looking for sharp judicial minds, they're looking for reliable votes on whatever the successor case to Roe v Wade will be.

      The sharp judicial minds have this annoying habit of thinking for themselves and coming to conclusions that are significantly different from the politicians who put them on the court. Some examples of this: David Souter, John Paul Stevens, John Roberts. What most politicians actually want is another Clarence Thomas.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  2. Warrant by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just the things being investigated and when can tip off associates, or, in the case of mistaken identities due to similar names, the real target.

    While I am all for increased legislative oversight of all spy and terrorist-related investigations, good luck with this. The real Constitutional crime is not just warrantless stuff, but warrantless without cursory review by elected legislators or judges.

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    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Warrant by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just the things being investigated and when can tip off associates, or, in the case of mistaken identities due to similar names, the real target.

      Which just goes to show that no one in the intelligence community was consulted before the list was created in the first place. Someone you suspect of being a terrorist shows up at the airport and his experience is suddenly radically different than everyone around him? That's a flashing neon sign, isn't it? I'm sorry, but I had the idea that when you suspect someone of being an enemy agent, you do nothing to alert them to the fact you suspect them, right up until the point where you bring the hammer down. You don't want a bomber to know you're coming. That's a good way to get blown up. It should have been the Pay-Really-Close-Attention-and-Screen-Really-Well List, not the No-Fly List.

  3. Re:No tech content? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Executive branch claims it and it alone can authorize access to classified information. If this is deemed as stupid as it sounds, especially in a supposedly free society and by a President that campaigned on unprecedented transparency, then this may be the start of something wonderful.

  4. Re:No tech content? by jasper160 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It doesn't matter which party they are in they want to control you.

    --
    No good deed goes unpunished.
  5. Boston Legal episode..."Nuts" by kannibal_klown · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I like David E Kelley's Boston Legal in general. Granted, lots of people hated his shows because his main characters tended to go on rants and act as mouth-pieces for his political views, but I enjoyed his shows and think that even if you disagree that he would at least make good points about them.

    Anyway, there was an episode about the No Fly list and that monologue always stuck with me.

    The main character (Alan Shore) went on and on about how poorly contrived it was and how INSANE it was that a system that cost SOOOO much money was less advanced than an iPod that fits in his pocket. That the iPod could store meta-data AND pictures for 20,000+ items but the No Fly List only handled names. Names which could be faked AND shared with others.

    How it's insane that in a country that has Google, Apple, and even small-yet-innovative companies that the contract went to a system as worthless as what became the no-fly-list.

    The plot-point was "Denny Crane" couldn't even fly on his private jet because his name was an alias for a terrorist. Then the main character had a dozen+ people named Denny Crane from the Boston area to come in to show how ridiculous it was they couldn't fly (even the children).

    The monologue was found here: http://www.boston-legal.org/script/BL03x12.pdf
    But the delivery of it was quite solid and emotional.

    1. Re:Boston Legal episode..."Nuts" by Bearhouse · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, the rules surrounding private planes are pretty strict.
      They're trying to make them even more so:
      http://www.dhs.gov/general-aviation

      Even as it is, there's a whole host of people who can turn up unannounced and check a number of things, including searching you and the airplane, without requiring a warrant, btw.

    2. Re:Boston Legal episode..."Nuts" by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but claiming that it would somehow magically be better (and cheaper) if they just issued iPods to everyone and let them download no-fly-list updates from the Apple Store is not realistic

      Luckily for all of us (except you, perhaps) that OP made no such claim, and didn't even hint that that might be a solution.

      What was actually suggested was that PICTURES accompany NAMES on the No-Fly List, since there are frequently multiple people with the same name in the USA (note that I have an unusual surname, and yet I've managed to run into several people who knew someone with my FULL NAME)...

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  6. There should never have been a non-fly list by enrevanche · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real question is why there should even be a no-fly list. No U.S. citizen or legal resident should be denied their right to travel without due process.

    1. Re:There should never have been a non-fly list by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What puzzled me to no end about this whole "no fly list" debacle was: Are these people dangerous only on a plane? Let's assume that list is actually accurate. You know what I mean, let's assume these people are dangerous. Dangerous enough that we'd have to assume they blow up a plane when we let them on one. Because, well, why else should they not be allowed on a plane?

      Then why are they no threat at all if not on a plane?

      This question alone makes the whole list questionable IMO. Either someone is a threat to national security or he is not. There's no "on a plane". It almost feels as sane as the "on the internet" laws.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  7. No-fly list should be a no fly by Snotnose · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can't wrap my brain around the no-fly list. You can't find out if your on it until you're denied boarding. You can't find out how you got on it. You can't get off it once your on it. That's constitutional how? Oh, I forgot. Bush tossed the constitution out on it's ear 9/12/01.

    Why doesn't some hacker group like anonymous start putting politicians and staffers on the damn thing so we can all watch the fun?

  8. Re:Strings or records? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As I am given to understand it, the No-Fly list consists of a list of the names of known terrorists, terrorist suspects, and the aliases that they have used. Back in 2004, Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy was stopped and questioned five times at airports because "T. Kennedy" was an alias used by a terrorist suspect. It took the senator and his staff more than three weeks to get his name removed -- a process likely to be more painful and time-consuming for the average individual who only has access to the DHS TRIP ('Traveler Redress Inquiry Program') site.

  9. Re:Please, stop with the hype by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a sad day when you can tag someone anti-American who is pro-Constitution.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  10. Re:No tech content? by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are two main reasons I think this sort of thing about keeping unnecessary secrets is happening.

    First, is a power play by the executive branch (it happens in the other branches too, don't get me wrong). Ie, when asked to do anything the knee-jerk response at all levels is to say "no", and when being forcefully asked or ordered again, the response is "NO" even louder. Like a petulant child being asked to go to sleep. It's pervasive because it's not a directive that comes down from upper management but just a natural response that most people have.

    The second big reason is to protect loss of face and avoid embarrassment. Ie, these aren't national security secrets, but embarrassing secrets. Not even embarrassing in the sense of explosing malfeasance, but embarrassing because it makes someone looks stupid, or it makes a policy look stupid, or it makes someone who said "no" earlier look stupid if it's discovered there was no reason to say "no".

  11. Re:Strings or records? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Awhile back, 60 Minutes had a story on the No-Fly list, and there was a terrorist named "Robert Johnson", IIRC (if not, it was something similarly common), and a whole bunch of people were screwed from that one.

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  12. Re:No tech content? by anagama · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The second big reason is to protect loss of face and avoid embarrassment

    This is the heart of it. The State Secrets Doctrine in its modern form has its roots in a coverup by the Air Force of its own negligence that led to a plane crash that killed three RCA engineers. When their widows sued and requested the crash report in discovery, the Air Force refused citing State Secrets. Eventually, the Supreme Court upheld the Air Force's right to not turn over the document without any judge having ever looking at what it contained, but rather, just trusting the Government to be honest.

    Fast forward many decades, the report is declassified, and guess what, all it contained was a record of poor maintenance and a failure to install manufacturer recommended heat shields in the engine to prevent the exact type of engine fire that occurred and caused the crash.

    Great interview with the granddaughter who finally got her hands on the document:
    http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/383/origin-story?act=2#play

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  13. Re:No tech content? by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but there's more to this than "I'm a Democrat and expected Obama to do the right thing because he's a Democrat, too".

    I'd like to believe that but as I said, Obama's presidency is proof against your assertion. Take for example Marty Lederman. He used to excoriate the GWB administration for using secret memo to support due process free detention (Gitmo). When he became part of the Obama administration, he began _writing_ Obama's secret memos "authorizing" (*) due process free execution.

    Exactly what besides "my tribe uber alles" can account for that 180 degree switch in position on the core question of whether a person is entitled to trial before punishment is exacted?

    Or try to have a conversation with an Obama apologist, and try to get a straight answer to the question: why was it wrong for GWB to put people in jail without trial, but not wrong for Obama to kill people without trial? Eventually, after all the deflections, slogans, and GWB-blaming, you'll get down to the core: I trust Obama and I did not trust Bush. I did this once with a frequent poster on my local paper's website and that is exactly what he said. His avatar is a picture of Bush with "worst ever" written over it. That is tribal politics, nothing else, and I think it accounts for much more of what we see than it is given credit for.

    The ways in which Obama has extended the GWB era policies are legion. I started to list those before burning out on the project -- I've not updated this in a year, but you can sort of get an idea: http://nothingchanged.org/ Despite the plain facts, people still support him, and nothing can explain that besides the fact that he's a member of their tribe. The silence we hear from "progressives" is proof positive that policy doesn't matter because if it did, the same people that burned GWB in effigy, would be doing that to Obama. He's that bad from a policy perspective. And of course, all those GOPers should be praising him as much as Dick Cheney has praised him. But they don't. They call him a Marxist for coming up with a health care plan to the right of that proposed by Nixon. It really is tribal, at least for the most part.

    (*) legal memos written by your own lawyers are not laws, they are opinions, so to suggest there is some authority there is ridiculous.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good