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The Daily Muck
Sen. Leahy and the ACLU have something in common: they want to know more about how civilians have died in Iraq. Following on recent anecdotes about trigger-happy Blackwater guards, both are asking that the Pentagon provide evidence to support its claims that civilian killings are on the decline. (The Boston Globe)
SITE Intelligence, a small private intelligence firm that monitors Islamic extremist groups, had a scoop on the latest Osama bin Laden video before its public release. SITE tipped off the Bush administration on the condition that officials not reveal the video until its official Al Qaeda release. But within a few hours of revealing it to the administration, the video had gone viral and ended up on cable news. SITE’s years’-long surveillance operations have been destroyed. (Washington Post)
The Supreme Court will soon decide whether the government can assert a “state secrets” claim as a defense against allegations that the CIA improperly abducted, imprisoned, and tortured a wrongly-identified terrorist. The plaintiff in the case filed suit against George Tenet (then director of the CIA) and several private contractors who took him from his vacation home in Macedonia to a prison camp in Afghanistan. (LA Times)
Newsweek reports that the legal system in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba is in disarray. Since the creation of the military commissions there six years ago, just one detainee has been found guilty as part of a plea deal that guarantees the defendant’s freedom by the end of the year. (Newsweek)
Two's a trend. The Secret Service is investigating why one of their agents accidentally discharged his firearm, the second time such an event has happened this year. This time there were no injuries (save to the car's floorboard), but it probably doesn't help our foreign policy that the firing occurred while the agent was on duty to guard Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. (ABC's The Blotter)
Giuliani has been the target of a number of murky allegations since he left public office for the private sector. Politico has learned that a prominent Republican and Texas businessman is now suing Giuliani's firm, alleging that a partner "schemed and conspired to steal $10 million."
What's $144 million among friends? The new U.S. embassy in Iraq is set to run a bit over budget, in addition to being completed months behind schedule. Two key buildings are not even expected to be finished before 2009, despite original plans that had the place all done by last month. (Washington Post)

Comments (3)
Dee Illuminati wrote on October 9, 2007 11:18 AM:First this is evidence that OSI (open source intelligence) is an active component of 'intelligence' and secondly the SITE website owner breached a contract with their subscribbers by allowing non-subscribers access to the information outside a NDA (non-disclosure-affidavit) and thus dilluted the contracted services.
If I were a paying subscriber to the SITE services, I would demand a refund.
The last time I saw someting this ludicrous was when an individual inserted his SS number into a database of confederate data and then did a 'bollywood drama shuffle dance' concerning his breaching of his information, both of these individuals deserve the Darwin arward.
If I were a paying subsciber I would be PISSED!
SPENCER wrote on October 9, 2007 12:47 PM:One quote from the SITE story says it all about the Admin's obsession with politicizing those videos, using them to instill fear in the public and boosting their polls:
"But within minutes of Katz's e-mail to the White House, government-registered computers began downloading the video from SITE's server, according to a log of file transfers. The records show dozens of downloads over the next three hours from computers with addresses registered to defense and intelligence agencies.
By midafternoon, several television news networks reported obtaining copies of the transcript."
Yellow Dog wrote on October 9, 2007 3:46 PM:Guantanamo has a legal system?