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The Daily Muck
The ACLU contends that the U.S. is using other countries to detain U.S. citizens without charges or access to lawyers, in a suit the organization plans to file today. The suit holds the U.S. responsible for the imprisonment of Naji Hamdan, an American Muslim, in the United Arab Emirates. The FBI has admitted to interviewing people being held by other countries, but denies involvement in Hamdan's arrest. (McClatchy)
The U.S. Postal Service has hired an outside investigator to determine whether mortgage giant Countrywide Financial waived fees on a $322,700 mortgage issued to Postmaster General John Potter. Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) also received "VIP" loans from the company. All three have said they were unaware they were receiving discounts. Countrywide, which was bought out by Bank of America in January, had been a large issuer of subprime loans. (AP)
The House Energy and Commerce Committee will investigate allegations by agency scientists that Food and Drug Administration managers ignored warnings and approved medical devices that are unsafe or ineffective. The letter does not specify which products were thought to be wrongly approved. (New York Times)
As the Bush administration winds down, requests for presidential pardons have ramped up. A record 555 people submitted applications in the year ending Sept. 30; another 103 requests rolled into the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney in October alone. There has been widespread speculation that the president might use his power to pardon convicted administration officials like Scooter Libby, who was sentenced to prison for lying during the investigation of the Valerie Plame leaks. Bush commuted the sentence last year. (Newsweek)
Aafia Siddiqui, a former MIT student arrested in July in Afghanistan for her alleged connections to Al-Qaeda, is too mentally unstable to stand trial, a judge ruled Monday. Human rights groups have said that the U.S. held Siddiqui in one of its secret overseas prisons, where it subjected her to abusive interrogation. (ABC)
Gulf War Illness, a condition linked to exposure toxic chemicals and a drug meant to protect against nerve gas, affects about one fourth of Gulf War veterans, according to a report presented Monday to the Sec. of Veterans Affairs. Symptoms include chronic head, stomach, and back pain, as well as memory loss; it has been connected to high rates of Lou Gehrig's disease. The drug given to soldiers at the time is no longer in use. (CNN)
The Justice Department must release documents relating to Steven Hatfill, named by investigators as an early "person of interest" in the anthrax case. Hatfill has since been exonerated. In yesterday's ruling, Justice Royce Lamberth sided with the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, who had brought suit to require the Justice Department to make the records public. (Washington Post)
Two Obama advisers told the Associated Press that it is unlikely that the president-elect will prosecute government employees for torture. During the campaign, Obama was an outspoken critic of torture; since being elected he has promised to close Guantanamo. (AP)
And speaking of Guantanamo, the base's senior military judge, who had been overseeing the trial of 9/11 defendants, announced his retirement yesterday, a decision that military lawyers and the ACLU agreed would disrupt the process--though whether it would speed up trial or delay it remained in dispute. The judge, Ralph H. Kohlmann, had been scheduled to step down in April 2009. (Washington Post)













One of the big items Obama pushed was the rule of law. Now, supposedly, kidnappers, murderers, torturers, and those who authorized these atrocities will not face the consequences of their acts. I guess we were wrong to initiate the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials and Far Eastern war crimes trials and instead should have let bygones be bygones.
What kind of world would we have if Hermann Goring, Martin Bormann, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hideki Tojo, and others of that ilk were not prosecuted? It would be interesting to view a parallel universe where such leaders were allowed into society and into government:
Though would you want to live there?
How can Obama let these actions go uninvestigated and unprosecuted and expect the US to gain some respect in the world. Or equally, how it will effect US morals, with the continuation of two classes of Citizens; those with unchecked power who are above the law, and the rest of us.
If Obama and the Democrats actions on FISA and the Constitution are an indication, bygones will be bygones, and we will continue down the road of an Imperial President where any authorized action are now de facto, if de facto is the phrase I want, and outside the law. Privilege indeed.
November 18, 2008 12:23 PM | Reply | Permalink
For a hint of what sort of actions we may look forward to by the Dems I think we need look no further than their pussyfooted treatment of Joe Lieberman.
Nevermind that the man is the epitome of odiousness, he has been absolutely useless as chair of Reichland Security ... unless covering of its many crimes is the purpose, in which case his performance has been stellar.
Get ready to be disappointed if you want the rule of law to be applied in the U.S. The only real hope is that these curs will travel outside the country and be seized by countries that actually value justice and have the cajones to prosecute these war criminals/monsters.
November 18, 2008 1:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
Take a look at the new hirees...
Look at their ethics... see if they are prone to exaggeration, disinformation, withholding facts, lying...
This will tell us if we will be led by more cronies, more crooks, more folks who relish power more than the welfare of this country.
I was hoping Obama would be different, but so far the only change I see is different mobsters will rule for awhile.
Integrity is what we need in leadership. Once again, I believe our nation has chosen opportunists...
just different opportunists... IMHO
November 18, 2008 5:37 PM | Reply | Permalink