http://fromthetrenchesworldreport.com/u-s-bin-laden-photos-still-too-dangerous-for-release/31094/ just curious? ..if we killed the man responsible 4 9/11 ? ..Y R we still at war?
Orrazz
Twenty months after U.S. special forces killed Osama bin Laden, the United States told a court on Thursday it is not ready to release images taken after the al Qaeda leader’s death because they still might lead to violence.
U.S.: Bin Laden photos still too dangerous for release
Orrazz
Twenty months after U.S. special forces killed Osama bin Laden, the United States told a court on Thursday it is not ready to release images taken after the al Qaeda leader’s death because they still might lead to violence.
A federal appeals court heard
arguments in a lawsuit over whether the government must release the
images under the Freedom of Information Act, a 1966 law that guarantees
public access to some government records.
President Barack Obama’s
administration points to an exception in the law that covers documents
classified in the interest of national defense.
“They’ll be used to inflame tensions. They’ll be used to inspire
retaliatory attacks,” Justice Department lawyer Robert Loeb told the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
Riots or other forms of violence could threaten American soldiers as well as civilians in Afghanistan, Loeb said.
The government has 52 photographs
or videos – the medium has not been revealed – from the May 2011 raid
in which U.S. special forces killed bin Laden after more than a decade
of searching. The images show a dead bin Laden at his compound in
Abbottabad, Pakistan, the transportation of his body to a U.S. ship and
his burial at sea, the government has said.
Some of the photographs were
taken so the CIA could conduct facial recognition analysis to confirm
the body’s identity, according to court papers.
Two of the court’s three judges,
Merrick Garland and Judith Rogers, asked questions indicating they were
inclined to defer to the judgment of officials in sworn court affidavits
advising against release.
“They’re telling us that could
result in death – not just the release of secret information, but
death,” Garland said. “Is that not something we should defer to?”
Michael Bekesha, a lawyer for
Judicial Watch, a government watchdog group suing for the images, said
the government failed to show the danger of releasing the less-graphic
burial images.
Judicial Watch also claims that CIA officials might not have followed procedures when they classified the images as secret.
A decision from the appeals court is likely in the next few months. A lower court judge sided with the government in April.
The case is Judicial Watch Inc v. Department of Defense, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, No. 12-5137.
http://www.orrazz.com/2013/01/us-bin-laden-photos-still-too-dangerous.html
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