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ACLU and the Gitmo Leak of CIA Agent Photos


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aclu_and_the_gitmo_leak_of_cia_agent_photos.htmlAmerican Thinker: In a May 22, 2010 letter to President Obama, Congressman Todd Akin (R.-2nd Dist, Missouri) called for a "full and thorough investigation" into how the identities of two CIA covert operatives were leaked to the ACLU.

Forty-seven other members of Congress co-signed Congressman Akin's letter.

After one year of the DOJ seemingly taking no action, and then two years of investigating, on January 23, 2010, former CIA employee John Kiriakou was charged with leaking the identities of two CIA officers to three journalists, who then gave the information to an investigator working in the ACLU's John Adams Project.

Photographs of the CIA officers were obtained and inserted into a group of non-CIA personnel photos, and then given to detainees. The detainees were to pick out the faces of their interrogators whom they recognized.

So does Kiriakou's arrest end the investigation? Not for Congressman Akin. He believes there are more concerns attached to this case.

When, on January 24, 2012, Akin's office was contacted for a comment concerning the arrest of John Kiriakou, Press Secretary Steve Taylor responded, "Bottom line: Congressman Akin does not believe all of the concerns have been addressed."

Here's a brief review of the story to refresh your memory.

It began when the ACLU started a program to provide legal assistance to Gitmo detainees. Here's how the ACLU defined their initiative:

The American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers] have taken on the task of assembling defense teams to be available to assist in the representation of those Guantánamo detainees who have been charged under the Military Commissions Act, subject to the detainees' consent. More than 30 lawyers have agreed to work on this important endeavor.

The ACLU efforts on behalf of Gitmo detainees became national news in mid March 2009.

Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. has tapped the Justice Department's most feared prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, to lead a sensitive investigation into whether defense lawyers at Guantánamo Bay compromised the identities of covert CIA officers. The probe was triggered by the discovery last year of about 20 color photographs of CIA officials in the cell of Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi, an alleged financier of the 9/11 attacks, say three current and former government officials who asked not to be identified talking about an ongoing case.

You can read the 26-page Criminal Complaint, dated January 23, 2012, issued from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, here. It offers a clear and straightforward telling of the story.

Among the most sensitive information leaked concerned the CIA's Rendition, Detention and Interrogation Program, and the capture and interrogation of Abu Zubaydah.

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