Showing posts with label DOJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DOJ. Show all posts

Bishop Lori Defends Religious Liberty In Front Of House Judiciary Committee

    Here is Bishop Lori's testimony before the House Judiciary Committee. 



     Mr. Chairman and distinguished members of the Subcommittee, allow me to 
    thank you for the invitation and opportunity to be with you today to offer testimony 
    on religious liberty.  Let me also express my appreciation to you for calling this 
    hearing on a topic of fundamental importance to our Church and to our Nation.
    I am here today representing the United States Conference of Catholic 
    Bishops (USCCB).  I serve as Bishop of the Diocese of Bridgeport, and as the 
    newly appointed Chair of the USCCB’s Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty. 
    I will summarize my remarks and ask that my full written testimony be entered into 
    the record.

    I hope to address three topics today.  First, I would like to offer a few brief 
    reflections on the Catholic vision of religious freedom for all, as rooted in the 
    inherent dignity of every human person, and this vision’s deep resonance with the 
    American experiment.  Second, I would like to identify certain threats to religious 
    liberty that have emerged with particular urgency in America today.  And third, I 
    would urge you to action in support of particular legislative measures that would 
    secure religious liberty against these threats.

    I.
    Religious liberty is not merely one right among others, but enjoys a certain 
    primacy.  As the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI recently explained: “It is indeed 
    the first of human rights, not only because it was historically the first to be recognized 
    but also because it touches the constitutive dimension of man, his relation with his 
    Creator.”   (Pope Benedict XVI, Address to Diplomatic Corps, 10 Jan. 2011.)   The 
    late Pope John Paul II taught that “the most fundamental human freedom [is] that 
    of practicing one’s faith openly, which for human beings is their reason for living.”  
    (Pope John Paul II, Address to Diplomatic Corps, 13 Jan. 1996, No. 9.)   Not 
    coincidentally, religious liberty is first on the list in the Bill of Rights, the charter of 
    our Nation’s most cherished and fundamental freedoms.   The First Amendment 
    begins: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or 
    prohibiting the free exercise thereof….”   It is commonly, and with justice, called our 
    “First Freedom.”

    Religious liberty is also prior to the state itself.  It is not merely a privilege 
    that the government grants us and so may take away at will.  Instead, religious 
    liberty is inherent in our very humanity, hard-wired into each and every one of us by 
    our Creator.  Thus government has a perennial obligation to acknowledge and 
    protect religious liberty as fundamental, no matter the moral and political trends of 
    the moment.   This insight as well is reflected in the laws and traditions of our
    country from its very inception.  The Declaration of Independence boldly 
    proclaimed as a self-evident truth that our inalienable rights are “endowed by our 
    Creator”—not by the State.

    Religious freedom is most commonly understood as an individual right, and it 
    certainly is that.  Religious freedom proceeds from the dignity of each person, and 
    so protects each person individually.   “[T]he exercise of religion, of its very nature, 
    consists before all else in those internal, voluntary and free acts whereby man sets the 
    course of his life directly toward God” (Second Vatican Council, Dignitatis 
    Humanae, No. 3).   Therefore individuals are “not to be forced to act in manner 
    contrary to [their] conscience,” nor “restrained from acting in accordance with [their] 
    conscience.”   (Ibid.)   Congress has shown special vigilance in protecting these 
    individual rights of conscience, for example, in the form of the Religious Freedom 
    Restoration Act (RFRA), which forbids the federal government from imposing any 
    “substantial burdens” on religious exercise absent the most compelling reasons.

    But religious freedom also belongs to churches and other religious 
    institutions, comprised of citizens who are believers and who seek, not to create a 
    theocracy, but rather to influence their culture from within.  The distinction 
    between Church and State, between God and Caesar, remains “fundamental to 
    Christianity” (Pope Benedict XVI, Deus Caritas Est, No. 28).  We look to the State 
    not to impose religion but to guarantee religious freedom, and to promote harmony 
    among followers of different religions.  The Church has “a proper independence 
    and is structured on the basis of her faith as a community the State must recognize”
    (Ibid.).   An indispensable element of this independence is the right of churches
    “not to be hindered, either by legal measures or by administrative action on the part 
    of government, in the selection, training, appointment, and transferral of their own 
    ministers” (Second Vatican Council, Dignitatis Humanae, No. 4).  We are grateful 
    that federal courts in the United States—at least to date—have uniformly 
    recognized this core protection under the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment.

    Finally, the Church teaches that these rights of religious freedom—prior to all 
    other rights and even to the State, and protecting both individuals and 
    institutions—are held not just by Catholics, but by all people, by virtue of their 
    common humanity.   Government has the duty “to assume the safeguard of the 
    religious freedom of all its citizens, in an effective manner, by just laws and by other 
    appropriate means” (Second Vatican Council, Dignitatis Humanae, No. 6 (emphasis 
    added)).  Even in societies where one particular religion predominates, it is 
    “imperative that the right of all citizens and religious communities to religious 
    freedom should be recognized and made effective in practice” (Ibid.).   The United
    States stands strongly for the principle that these rights of freedom are also rights of 
    equality—that government should not impose any special civil disadvantages or 
    otherwise discriminate against its citizens based on religion.  And although it may 
    not have always lived up to this or other religious freedom principles in practice, our 
    country’s unique capacity for self-correction has always provided avenues to repair 
    to these principles that have made it a great nation.

    II.
    Regrettably, now is the time for such self-correction and repair.  In the 
    recent past, the Bishops of the United States have watched with increasing alarm as 
    this great national legacy of religious liberty, so profoundly in harmony with our 
    own teachings, has been subject to ever more frequent assault and ever more rapid 
    erosion.

    As I mentioned previously, I am the Chair of the USCCB’s new Ad Hoc 
    Committee for Religious Liberty, which was instituted precisely to help resist these 
    assaults and reverse this erosion.  The Bishops of the United States decided in 
    principle to institute a committee like this in June of this year, based on 
    developments over the months and years preceding that date.   That I am already 
    appointed as Chair represents action at near light-speed in Church time, and attests 
    to the urgency of the matter from the Bishops’ perspective.

    Although the Bishops’ decision was based on facts arising before June, I am 
    here today to call to your attention grave threats to religious liberty that have 
    emerged even since June—grim validations of the Bishops’ recognition of the need 
    for urgent and concerted action in this area.   I focus on these because most of them 
    arise under federal law, and so may well be the subject of corrective action by 
    Congress.

    · In August, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued 
    regulations to mandate the coverage of contraception (including 
    abortifacients) and sterilization as “preventive services” in almost all private 
    health insurance plans.  There is an exception for certain religious 
    employers; but to borrow from Sr. Carol Keehan of the Catholic Health 
    Association, it is so incredibly narrow that it would cover only the “parish 
    housekeeper.”  And the exception does nothing to protect insurers or 
    individuals with religious or moral objections to the mandate.   The 
    “preventive services” mandate is but the first instance of conscience 
    problems arising from the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act 
    enacted in March 2010 – an act whose goal of greater access to health care the 
    Bishops have long supported, but that we had persistently warned during the 
    legislative process did not include sufficient protections for rights of 
    conscience.

    · In May, HHS added a new requirement to its cooperative agreements and 
    government contracts for services to victims of human trafficking and to 
    refugees who are unaccompanied minors, so that otherwise highly qualified 
    service providers, such as USCCB’s Migration and Refugee Services (MRS), 
    will be barred from participation in the program because they cannot in 
    conscience provide the “full range” of reproductive services—namely, 
    abortion and contraception.   This requirement is exactly what the American 
    Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has urged HHS to adopt in a lawsuit 
    challenging the constitutionality of MRS’s longstanding contract with HHS
    to serve victims of human trafficking.  Ironically, ACLU has attacked the 
    Church’s exemplary service to these victims as a violation of religious 
    liberty.   Already, HHS has taken its major program for serving trafficking 
    victims away from MRS and transferred it to several smaller organizations 
    that frankly may not be equipped to assume this burden.

    · The State Department’s U.S. Agency for International Development 
    (USAID) is increasingly requiring contractors, such as Catholic Relief 
    Services (CRS), to provide comprehensive HIV prevention activities 
    (including condom distribution), as well as full integration of its programs 
    with reproductive health activities (including provision of artificial 
    contraception) in a range of international relief and development programs.  
    Under this new requirement, of course, some of the most effective providers 
    helping to prevent and treat AIDS in Africa and other developing nations will 
    be excluded.

    · The federal Department of Justice (DoJ) has ratcheted up its attack on the 
    Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) by mischaracterizing it as an act of 
    bigotry.  As you may know, in March, DoJ stopped defending DOMA 
    against constitutional challenges, and the Conference spoke out against that 
    decision.  But in July, the Department started filing briefs actively attacking 
    DOMA’s constitutionality, claiming that supporters of the law could only 
    have been motivated by bias and prejudice.  If the label of “bigot” sticks to 
    our Church and many other churches—especially in court, under the 
    Constitution—because of their teaching on marriage, the result will be 
    church-state conflicts for many years to come.

    · DoJ has also undermined religious liberty in the critically important 
    “ministerial exception” case now pending before the Supreme Court, 
    Hosanna Tabor v. EEOC.   DoJ could have taken the position that the 
    “ministerial exception,” though generally providing strong protection for the 
    right of religious groups to choose their ministers without government 
    interference, didn’t apply in the case before the court.   This would be 
    consistent with the uniform judgment of the federal Courts of Appeals for 
    decades, as well the DoJ itself until now.   Instead, DoJ needlessly attacked 
    the very existence of the exception, in opposition to a vast coalition of 
    religious groups urging its preservation through their amicus curiae briefs.

    · At the state level, religious liberty protections associated with the redefinition 
    of marriage have fallen far short of what is necessary.  In New York, county 
    clerks face legal action for refusing to participate in same-sex unions, and gay 
    rights advocates boast how little religious freedom protection individuals and 
    groups will enjoy under the new law.   In Illinois, Catholic Charities has been 
    driven out of the adoption and foster care business, because it recognizes the 
    unique value of man-woman marriage for the well-being of children.

    III.
    These are serious threats to religious liberty, and as I noted previously they 
    represent only the most recent instances in a broader trend of erosion of religious 
    liberty in the United States.   The ultimate root causes of these threats are profound, 
    and lie beyond the scope of this hearing or even this august body to fix—they are 
    fundamentally philosophical and cultural problems that the bishops, and other 
    participants in civil society, must address apart from government action.  But we 
    can—and must—also treat the symptoms immediately, lest the disease spread so 
    quickly that the patient is overcome before the ultimate cure can be formulated and 
    delivered.

    As to the “preventive services” mandate, and related problems under the 
    health care reform law, there are three important bipartisan bills currently in the 
    Congress:  the Protect Life Act (H.R. 358), the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act 
    (H.R. 361), and the Respect for Rights of Conscience Act (H.R. 1179).  All three go 
    a long way toward guaranteeing religious liberty and freedom of conscience for 
    religious employers, health insurers, and health care providers.   United with my 
    brother bishops, and in the name of religious liberty, I urge these three bills be 
    swiftly passed by Congress so they may be signed into law.   We welcome the fact 
    that H.R. 358 was recently approved by the House in a bipartisan vote, and that the 6
    text of H.R. 361 has been included in the House subcommittee draft of the 
    Labor/HHS appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2012.

    As to the illegal conditions that HHS and USAID are placing on religious 
    providers of human services, this may call for a Congressional hearing or other form 
    of investigation to ensure compliance with the applicable conscience laws, as well as 
    to identify how these new requirements came to be imposed.  Additional statutes 
    may be appropriate, possibly to create new conscience protections, but more likely 
    to create private rights of action for those whose rights under the existing protections 
    have been violated.  Unfortunately, the authority to enforce the applicable 
    conscience protections now lies principally with the very federal agencies that may 
    be violating the protections.
    As to the attack on DOMA, this body should resist legislative efforts to repeal 
    the law, including the Respect for Marriage Act (H.R. 1116).  We also applaud the 
    decision of the House to take up the defense of DOMA in court after DoJ abandoned 
    it, and we urge you to sustain that effort for as long as necessary to obtain definitive 
    confirmation of its constitutionality.  Moreover, DoJ’s decisions to abandon both 
    DOMA and the “ministerial exception” seem to warrant congressional inquiry.

    The religious freedom threats to marriage at the state level may fall beyond 
    the scope of authority of Congress to control—except to the extent that state 
    adoption and foster care services are federally funded.  We believe this avenue for
    protecting the religious liberty of faith-based service providers should be explored 
    more fully.

    Thank you for your attention, and again, for your willingness to give religious 
    freedom the priority it is due.  
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Operation Fast and Furious - Gunwalker: White House Lied and People Died

    Included among the recent shakeup of resignations and transfers in the D.O.J. was the sudden resignation of U.S. attorney Dennis Burke. After the sacking of Burke occurred the investigation into Fast and Furious gained momentum and it revealed evidence of a huge coverup which was initiated within mere hours after the death of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.  Is the coverup worse than the crime? And, yes I do call what the Department Of Justice instituted a crime. The crime and the coverup are both horrific and unconscionable. How much brain power or logic does it take to know you shouldn't put guns in the hands of criminals, let the Mexican drug cartels walk across the border with those guns without their being supervision of the criminals or the guns and then just let the criminals keep the guns courtesy of the U.S. government. This was all about the Obama administration setting up a situation so they could promote their anti-second amendment gun control agenda. They obviously didn't care about the safety of either Americans or Mexicans. Liberalism kills. This is just one more example of that.


    Eric Holder lied about when he knew about Operation Fast and Furious. He also covered up for the Obama White House when he claimed that the White House didn't have any knowledge of Fast and Furious but emails have now brought to light that the White House was indeed briefed on fast and Furious.  Plus the investigation has now divulged that guns were recovered from the scenes of twice as many violent crimes that were originally told to investigators.

    From Pajamas Media:

    Sharyl Attkisson of CBS News reports that a coverup kicked in within hours of Brian Terry’s murder:

    In a letter, Grassley and Issa say the lead prosecutor on Fast and Furious, Assistant U.S. Attorney Emory Hurley, learned almost immediately that guns allowed onto the street in his case, had been recovered at Terry’s murder. “(I)n the hours after Agent Terry’s death,” says the letter from Grassley and Issa, Hurley apparently “contemplated the connection between the two cases and sought to prevent the connection from being disclosed.” The Justice Department recently transferred Hurley out of the criminal division into the civil division.
    An internal ATF email dated the day after Terry’s death reveals the quick decision to not disclose the source of the weapons found at the murder scene: “… this way we do not divulge our current case (Fast and Furious) or the Border Patrol shooting case.”
    Another ATF email indicates that the justification both offices used to not charge the suspect with crimes related to the murder scene “was to not ‘complicate’ the FBI’s investigation.”
    ATF whistleblowers revealed the link between the two cases to Congressional investigators and CBS News, saying their supervisors were attempting to cover it up.

    Citing the documents in their possession suggesting the conspiracy, Rep. Issa and Sen. Grassley demanded that the new U.S. attorney for Arizona, Ann Scheel, provide documentation — including emails, memos, and even handwritten notes from members of the U.S. Attorney’s Office — that may relate to the coverup. They also stated that they wanted to hear testimony from three more Justice Department officials: Assistant U.S. Attorneys Emory Hurley and Michael Morrissey, and Patrick Cunningham, chief of the DOJ Criminal Division.

    The DOJ originally claimed that Fast and Furious weapons had been recovered at 11 crime scenes in the United States, but a Fox News investigation now reveals that a total of 42 Fast and Furious weapons were recovered at those crime scenes. Revised DOJ figures now also admit that an additional 21 Fast and Furious guns were tracked to violent crimes in Mexico.

    Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Richard Serrano reveals that the White House had been communicating about the gun-running operation, despite previous denials:

    The supervisor of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives operation in Phoenix specifically mentioned Fast and Furious in at least one email to a White House national security official, and two other White House colleagues were briefed on reports from the supervisor, according to White House emails and a senior administration official.
    But the senior administration official said the emails, obtained Thursday by The Times, did not prove that anyone in the White House was aware of the covert “investigative tactics” of the operation.

    The White House response involves an interesting choice of phrasing, stating that these emails did not prove that the White House was aware of the tactic of allowing thousands of guns to “walk” to the cartels. Mike Vanderboegh, one of the bloggers most responsible for bringing Gunwalker to light, calls the White House response a “Nixonian ‘modified limited hangout,’” and states that the smoking gun evidence of more White House involvement does exist.

    For now, congressional investigators are tightly focusing their probe into the actions of the Department of Justice and the ATF, and have spent very little time — publicly, at least — delving into the roles that the FBI and DEA have played in the scandal. Likewise, investigators have not yet focused their energies on the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Dennis Burke, the U.S. attorney that just resigned as a result of his actions in the plot and coverup, was the long-time chief-of-staff for Napolitano while she was governor of Arizona. It is unlikely that a high-risk operation run on Napolitano’s “home turf,” where she had been both governor and state attorney general and was still responsible for national security, happened without her being personally briefed.

    Sen. Charles Grassley and Rep. Darrell Issa have made it clear that they aren't going to let the recent shake-up in the DOJ due to "Operation Fast and Furious" slow down their investigation into the criminal questionable program. Not long after this they have made good on their promise and demanded any correspondence such as emails, memos, notes, and other documents from six top officials from the Phoenix office.

    From Hot Air:


    “The level of involvement of the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona in the genesis and implementation of this case is striking,” the letter states. It continues:
    Operation Fast and Furious was a prosecutor-led Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) Strike Force case. The congressional investigation has revealed that your office, and specifically Assistant United States Attorney (AUSA) Emory Hurley, played an integral role in the day-to-day, tactical management of the case. In fact, Mr. Hurley served as a prosecutor on this case until very recently.
    Witnesses have reported that AUSA Hurley may have stifled ATF agents’ attempts to interdict weapons on numerous occasions. Many ATF agents working on Operation Fast and Furious were under the impression that even some of the most basic law enforcement techniques typically used to interdict weapons required the explicit approval of your office, specifically from AUSA Hurley. It is our understanding that this approval was withheld on numerous occasions. It is unclear why all available tools, such as civil forfeitures and seizure warrants, were not used in this case to prevent illegally purchased guns from being trafficked to Mexican drug cartels and other criminals. We have further been informed that AUSA Hurley improperly instructed ATF agents that they needed to meet unnecessarily strict evidentiary standards merely in order to temporarily detain or speak with suspects.
    It is essential for Congress to fully understand your office’s role in Operation Fast and Furious. … In addition, it is imperative that the Committee have an opportunity to discuss the facts above with individuals in your office who are familiar with the details of this operation. It is not our intention to second guess day-to-day decisions of your staff, but rather to make sense of them. The Attorney General has said that “letting guns walk is not something that is acceptable.  … We cannot have a situation where guns are allowed to walk, and I’ve made that clear to the United States Attorneys as well as the agents in charge of various ATF offices.” Operation Fast and Furious is unique in that guns were allowed to walk with the apparent knowledge of, and authorization by, officials in your office.
    Oh my!  Did Eric Holder and the Obama administration seriously think that by shuffling personnel and scapegoating the guys at the bottom of the totem pole was going to stop the investigation this letter makes it abundantly clear that those involved with this investigation are not going to be played for fools.  Eric Holder and the Obama administration better not mess with Sen. Grassley and Rep. Issa.  They mean business and are determined to get to the bottom of this huge scandal and coverup.  
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Megyn Kelly DESTROYS Kirsten Powers on Black Panther Case

Culture War Links 7-7

Obama/Holder DOJ Sides With Black Panther Criminal Thugs: Say Bye Bye To Whites' Voting Rights

    This administration has consistently sided with and given more rights to the suspected terrorists, union thugs, and illegal immigrants crossing our border rather than innocent citizens here in the United States. The Obama administration has been the most divisive and openly contemptuous toward the American people in history. The DOJ's case against the New Black Panthers was a slam dunk and the DOJ had already been handed a default judgement but in what seems to be a both racially and politically motivated move, the new Holder-led DOJ dismissed the charges against the New Black Panthers. The New Black Panthers had violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 but was being ignored because it was a case against blacks so Holder & Co. believes that blacks and any Leftist has the right to do whatever they want against whitey and/or any conservative. Had the roles been reversed you can be damn skippy guaranteed that there would have been a huge firestorm from the liberal media. The fact that the charges were dropped doesn't even make sense since the government had already won their case against the New Black Panthers.


    There just happened to be an unlikely eye witness to the whole incident. The famous civil rights attorney Bartle Bull was there at that Philadelphia polling place when he witnessed members of the New Black Panthers brandishing a billy club, blocking the entrance to a polling place, and issuing verbal threats, specifically to white voters seeking entrance to the polling place in the national election in 2008. Bartle Bull is a liberal and lifelong Democrat and is knowledgable about voter rights. He was a campaign manager for both Robert Kennedy and Jimmy Carter. In the 1960s Bartle Bull worked as a civil rights attorney on the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law seeking to enforce the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in Mississippi, ensuring blacks' right to vote and protecting blacks from voter intimidation. J. Christian Adamson who was a DOJ attorney working on the case has just recently resigned over the corrupt nature of the dismissal of the charges and statements falsely characterizing this case. He has come forward to tell the truth and explains the details here.








    Here is Bartle Bull being interviewed by Megyn Kelly on America Live

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EAGLE FREEDOM LINKS 7-1-2010

Under Mounting Pressure the Department of Justice Released Names of the Al Qaeda 7

    The video called Al-Qaeda 7 which was released yesterday by the conservative group Keep America Safe was extremely effective. YEA!!!! This video proved to be more effective in pressuring the Department of Justice to release the names of the Department of Justice lawyers who represented terrorists at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba than the multiple requests which were made over a period of several months by some congressman. The names of the lawyers are listed below.  Finally, now there has been some transparency from this administration.


    Rep. Frank R. Wolf (R-Va.) sent a letter to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. on Tuesday asserting that "the decision to allow attorneys who advocated for terrorists held at Guantanamo to craft detainee policy during the war on terror would be akin to allowing attorneys for the Mafia to draft organized crime policy during the 1960s."

    I agree with Rep. Frank R. Wolf. There are conflicts of interest for all of these lawyers  who are working at the DOJ now who had previously defended terrorists. I don't see how they could possibly have America's best interest at heart.

    Jonathan Cedarbaum is now working at the Justice Department and previously worked at the firm WilmerHale. With his effort the firm brought the case Boumediene v. Bush to the Supreme Court, which reaffirmed the right of detainees to challenge their detention.

    Karl Thompson is now working at the Justice Department and worked for the firm O'Melveny & Myers. He became one of seven attorneys to represent Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen who was captured in Afghanistan in 2002 and transferred to Guantanamo Bay.

    Joseph Guerra is now working at the Justice Department and worked previously at the firm Sidley Austin. He was one of five lawyers from the firm to help three civil liberties groups, including the self-described "conservative" Rutherford Institute, file a detainee-related brief with the Supreme Court.

    Tali Farhadian now works at the Justice Department and previously worked at the firm Debevoise & Plimpton. In 2006, she helped file a brief with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, urging the federal appeals court to hear the case of Ali al-Marri, the only "enemy combatant" at the time being held on U.S. soil.

    Beth Brinkmann now works at the Justice Department and previously worked at the firm Morrison & Foerster when she helped compile at least two Supreme Court briefs dealing with Guantanamo Bay detainees.

    Tony West now works at the Justice Department and previously worked at Morrison & Foerster's San Francisco office. He represented "American Taliban" Johh Walker Lindh, a move that was hotly debated after West was nominated to the Justice Department in January 2009. West wasn't confirmed until April 2009.

    "Weich acknowledged in the letter that Principal Deputy Solicitor General Neal Katyal previously represented a Guantanamo Bay detainee and that National Security Division Attorney Jennifer Daskal previously worked for Human Rights Watch, which advocates on behalf of detainees."

    I have no problem with the proper counsel being able to help in the terrorists defense, but I don't think pro bono work is meant for suspected terrorists who either tried killing us or aided in that terrorism. It is only proper for the military to call on lawyers to defend terrorists under an arrangement that the suspected terrorists would be tried in the proper manner which is in front of a miliatry tribunal.

    H/T goes to Fox NewsSource URL: http://outlawrepublican.blogspot.com/search/label/DOJ
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The Al Qaeda 7 & Transparency



    I have a few questions: Why would the Justice Department release the names of the lawyers who represented terrorists at Gitmo to Bill O'Reilly, but yet not release these same names to Congress?  In my opinion, this just doesn't make sense.  Are these names bogus?  Bill O'Reilly didn't say the names, so was this a request made to him by the Justice Department, even though they released the lawyer's names to a member of both the media and the public?   This smells fishy.  The Obama administration should start living up to its promise of transparency and release the names of the DOJ lawyers who defended terrorists. The American people have a right to know who is supposedly defending our nation against these terrorists.Source URL: http://outlawrepublican.blogspot.com/search/label/DOJ
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