** JUSTICE DEPT BLOCKS RELEASE OF WEN HO LEE REPORT ** ANOTHER LOOK AT THOSE IRAQI TRAILERS ** DEFECTORS MAY SUE CIA ** IG REPORT ON SEPTEMBER 11 DETAINEES


JUSTICE DEPT BLOCKS RELEASE OF WEN HO LEE REPORT


The Justice Department Office of Professional Responsibility is
refusing to release a new report on the Wen Ho Lee case despite
earlier promises that it would be made public.

Wen Ho Lee was a Los Alamos scientist who became the object of
frenzied allegations, uncritically reported in the press, that
he had stolen the "crown jewels" of the U.S. nuclear weapons
program and transferred them to China.  Lee was indicted in
December 1999 on 59 felony counts and held for nine months of
pre-trial detention under particularly harsh conditions.  In
the end, the government was unable to sustain its nuclear
espionage case, and Lee was convicted in September 2000 of one
felony count involving computer security violations.

In an extraordinary turn of events, the judge hearing the case
actually apologized to Lee and criticized the Justice
Department and Energy Department officials who, he said, "have
embarrassed our entire nation and each of us who is a citizen
of it."

"Dr. Lee, I tell you with great sadness that I feel I was led
astray last December by the Executive Branch of our government
through its Department of Justice, by its Federal Bureau of
Investigation and by its United States Attorney for the
District of New Mexico, who held the office at that time," said
Judge James A. Parker at a September 13, 2000 hearing.

http://www.fas.org/irp/ops/ci/whl_plea_transcript.html

In response to Judge Parker's rebuke and the larger controversy
surrounding the case, the Justice Department initiated an
investigation by its Office of Professional Responsibility
(OPR).

The White House announced the OPR review at a September 22, 2000
press briefing and promised public accountability.

"The American public should look forward to an accounting there
and I think that will be done," said White House press
spokesman Joe Lockhart.

http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/2000/09/wh092200.html

The OPR report on the Wen Ho Lee case was finally completed this
year.  But contrary to official promises, the Justice
Department indicated there would be no public accounting.

In response to a request under the Freedom of Information Act
from the Federation of American Scientists, Marlene W.
Wahowiak, assistant counsel for freedom of information at the
Justice Department, wrote on May 29 that "I have determined
that this report should be withheld in its entirety." She cited
FOIA exemptions involving national security, personal privacy
and law enforcement records.  The denial of the request will be
appealed.


ANOTHER LOOK AT THOSE IRAQI TRAILERS


President Bush hailed the discovery in Iraq of trailer-mounted
biological agent production facilities as concrete evidence of
a clandestine Iraqi biological weapons program.  But the closer
one looks at the Central Intelligence Agency report on the
mobile facilities, the more ambiguous the case appears.

In its report last week, the CIA said that the mobile plants
could only be used for illicit production of biological
weapons.

"We have investigated what other industrial processes may
require such equipment -- a fermentor, refrigeration, and a gas
capture system -- and agree with the experts that BW agent
production is the only consistent, logical purpose for these
vehicles," the CIA report said.

But this seems to be an overly hasty conclusion.

"Mobile pilot plant fermentation facilities are not uncommon,"
observed chemist George C. Smith.  In fact, they have a
sufficient number of conventional applications, he noted, that
they are commercially marketed.  One such mobile fermentor is
described here:

http://www.johnmorris.com.au/html/NewBrunswick/bioflow5000.htm

The CIA report said the Iraqi plant design could be specifically
identified as a banned weapons system because of its device for
capturing exhaust gases: "The capability of the system to
capture and compress exhaust gases produced during fermentation
is not required for legitimate biological processes and
strongly indicates attempts to conceal production activity."

But that's not necessarily so either, said Smith, a senior
fellow at GlobalSecurity.org.

Thus, a design for a mobile bioreactor that is used to
decontaminate soil at the U.S. Department of Energy Savannah
River site features an optional "noxious gas adsorber" that has
nothing to do with biological weapons production.  See the
schematic diagram on this page:

http://www.wpi.org/Initiatives/2002/20020603.asp

"Perhaps the CIA analysts are correct when they claim the
fermentors in Iraq are part of a biological weapons program,"
Dr. Smith said.  But "a vapor trap is no smoking gun indicating
the labs must be for bioweapons production."

Furthermore, "it is not that difficult to think of legitimate
reasons for the generation and uses of microbial products in
Iraq."  He cited the production of Bacillus thuringiensis for
pest control as one illustrative hypothesis.

In short, the CIA report does not conclusively prove the case
that it asserts.

Nevertheless, President Bush said last week that the mobile
production facilities were unambiguously intended for
biological weapons.

"For those who say we haven't found the banned manufacturing
devices or banned weapons, they're wrong. We found them," Bush
said May 30, referring of the trailers.


DEFECTORS MAY SUE CIA


In a remarkable reinterpretation of the legal framework
governing the Central Intelligence Agency's relations with
persons who have defected to the United States, a federal
appeals panel of judges ruled last week that two purported
defectors are entitled to sue the CIA for compensation
allegedly owed them.

The CIA had contended that a civil war-era case known as Totten
v. United States barred any such suit.  The Totten doctrine,
which lies near the root of the "state secrets" privilege, has
previously been invoked to preclude litigation by espionage
agents claiming breach of contract.

But the court found that the case should proceed, at least for
now, notwithstanding Totten.

"We should not precipitously close the courthouse doors to
colorable claims of the denial of constitutional rights,"
according to the May 29 ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit.

A vigorous dissent from one member of the appeals panel argued
that the court had no authority to reinterpret Totten.  The 55
page ruling includes dense technical discussion on the laws of
state secrets, with some quotable asides, such as:

"Although a district court must almost always defer to the
government's evaluation of what constitutes a state secret and
why, a district court cannot simply rubber stamp the
government's conclusions."

A copy of the appeals court ruling in Doe v. Tenet, which was
first reported in the Los Angeles Times on May 30, is posted
here:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/othergov/doe052903.pdf


IG REPORT ON SEPTEMBER 11 DETAINEES


A report by the Department of Justice Inspector General on "The
September 11 Detainees: A Review of the Treatment of Aliens
Held on Immigration Charges in Connection with the
Investigation of the Septmber 11 Attacks" was released last
week.  A copy of the 239 page report, dated April 2003, is
posted here:

http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/doj/oig/detainees.pdf

See also this June 2 Justice Department press release:

http://www.fas.org/irp/news/2003/06/detainees.html



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