The government has gone to uncommon lengths to protect the secrecy of the surveillance program, both in Al-Haramain and in other cases. It persuaded the trial judge in the Al-Haramain case to place the secret document in a Secure Compartmentalized Information Facility at the FBI office in Portland.
The government is now trying to prevent the court from using Al-Haramain’s lawyers’ memories of the document as evidence that they were put under warrantless surveillance.
“The level of secrecy in this case strikes me as extraordinary,” said Nancy Marder, a Chicago-Kent College of Law professor who specializes in litigation secrecy. “It has sort of a Kafkaesque air to it. You can’t see certain documents. You can’t recall certain documents, You can’t use the documents that might exist.”
Justice Department lawyers declined to comment on the case. A department spokesman referred questions to the government’s court filings, which say that the court papers in the case contain top secret “sensitive compartmented information.” That information requires special procedures to protect it, the government argues.
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Intimidation?
Eisenberg said that a few weeks after the case was filed, government lawyers called to say FBI agents were on their way to the court house to take possession of the document from the judge.
Eventually, after Judge Garr King balked, the document was placed in a Secure Compartmentalized Information Facility at the FBI office in Portland.
King ultimately ruled that Al-Haramain’s lawyers could not see the document again, but he allowed them to file affidavits describing their recollections of it. Those memories could be enough evidence to show that the plaintiffs were under surveillance and to allow the courts to decide whether the program is unconstitutional.
Eisenberg said the government then told him that he was violating CIA directives by discussing the document in court filings. “It’s been a game of intimidation,” Eisenberg said.
Justice Department lawyers declined to comment on the case. A spokesman referred questions to the government’s court filings.
State Secrets
When the 9th Circuit hears the case next month, it will have to decide whether the state secrets privilege, which allows the government to stop courts from hearing military and state secrets, prevents Al-Haramain’s lawyers from even using their recollections of the secret document to show that they have standing to sue.
If the government prevails, the case will be dismissed.
In court filings, the government argues that the case cannot go to trial without forcing the government to confirm or deny whether Belew and Ghafoor were spied on — a fact, the government contends, that could jeopardize national security. The Justice Department also says the subject matter of the case is a state secret that must be kept out of public view.
A ruling that Al-Haramain is able to sue, the government argues, would itself disclose classified information because it would reveal that the plaintiffs were subject to surveillance under the spying program.
Bradley called dismissing the case because of the state secrets privilege “drastic.” “They’re trying to disqualify any court from reviewing the legality of the program,” he said.
Eisenberg agreed.
“The document is not secret anymore,” he said. “They disclosed it to the very people who were being surveilled.”