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http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0517,webmondo1,63324,6.html

The Silencing of Sibel Edmonds
Court won't let public hear what FBI whistleblower has to say
 by James Ridgeway
(The Village Voice)

WASHINGTON, D.C.�The unsettling story of whistleblower Sibel Edmonds took
another twist on Thursday, as the government continued its seemingly
endless machinations to shut her up. The U.S. Court of Appeals here denied
pleas to open the former FBI translator's First Amendment case to the
public, a day after taking the extraordinary step of ordering a secret
hearing.

Edmonds was hired after 9-11 to help the woefully staffed FBI's
translation department with documents and wiretaps in such languages as
Farsi and Turkish. She soon cried foul, saying the agency's was far from
acceptable and perhaps even dangerous to national security. She was fired
in 2002.

Ever since, the government has been trying to silence her, even
classifying an interview she did with 60 Minutes.

Oral arguments in her suit against the federal government were scheduled
for this morning, but yesterday the clerk of the appeals court
unexpectedly and suddenly announced the hearing would be closed. Only
attorneys and Edmonds were allowed in.

No one thought the three-judge appeals court panel would be especially
sympathetic to the Edmonds case. It consists of Douglas Ginsburg, who was
once nominated for the U.S. Supreme Court by President Reagan. He withdrew
after it was revealed he had smoked pot as a college student; he later
joined the appeals court. Another member, David Sentelle, was chair of the
three-judge panel that appointed Ken Starr to be the special prosecutor
investigating Clinton. Karen LeCraft Henderson was appointed a federal
judge during the Reagan period, then put on the appeals court by the elder
President Bush.

In making a plea to open the Edmonds hearing, the ACLU noted appellate
arguments normally are accessible to the public. �When the United States
asked the Supreme Court to close part of the oral argument in the Pentagon
Papers case�a case that involved classified information of the greatest
sensitivity�that motion was denied," the ACLU said. �Likewise, in an
appeal in the ongoing prosecution of Zacarias Moussaoui, an alleged
conspirator in the September 11th terrorist plot, the court rejected the
government's move to close the entire hearing.�

Edmonds, an American citizen, was born in Iran and grew up in Turkey. She
speaks Farsi, Turkish, and other languages of central Asia. She was hired
by the FBI in the hectic aftermath of 9-11 to translate various top-secret
materials collected by the bureau from wire taps, surveillance reports,
interviews with agents, etc.

In that capacity she began observing the bureau�s bizarre, even surreal
practices, including such things as sending people to Guantanamo to
translate statements by prisoners who spoke Farsi. Only trouble was the
translators weren't speakers of Farsi, but were instead Kurds speaking a
Turkish dialect. She stumbled across various mistranslations and
interpreters who were not able to make accurate translations. Then she
discovered someone was signing her initials to approve translations she
never made. And she observed translations being doctored or blocked by the
actions by one translator or another. She discovered one translator whose
relative was working for an embassy which the FBI had under surveillance.

When Edmonds protested to her supervisors, she has said, the ignored her
or told her off, at one point calling her �a whore.� Eventually she was
fired by a supervisor who told Edmonds he�d look forward to meeting her
again�in jail.

Taking her protests to Congress, she won support from the leaders of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, who exchanged letters with the Justice
Department�s Inspector General's office, which said it was making an
investigation. In the midst of all this, then attorney general John
Ashcroft stepped in and threw down a gag order by invoking the arcane
states secrets privilege, under which the government can classify whatever
materials it wishes in the interests of national security. Last year, the
Edmonds case was dismissed by a federal district court judge. The
government had never even bothered to file an answer to her complaint.

The case that was argued this morning concerned a complaint by Edmonds
that the government was denying her First Amendment rights. Only after she
was fired did Edmonds go to the Congress. She is saying she played by the
rules and was squashed by the government without cause or explanation. And
when she went outside the official channel to reveal what was going on
within the bureau, the government responded by classifying her previous
attempts to speak out, including press accounts written before the
classification came down. One of them was a 60 Minutes segment.

"The federal government is routinely retaliating against government
employees who uncover weaknesses in our ability to prevent terrorist
attacks or protect public safety," said Ann Beeson, associate legal
director of the ACLU. "From firing whistleblowers to using special
privileges to cover up mistakes, the government is taking extreme steps to
shield itself from political embarrassment while gambling with our
safety."

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