CIA Destroyed Tapes Despite Court Order
By MATT APUZZO
http://www.journalstar.com

Wednesday, Dec 12, 2007 - 05:46:22 pm CST
WASHINGTON - Federal courts had prohibited the Bush administration from 
discarding evidence of detainee torture and abuse months before the CIA 
destroyed videotapes that revealed some of its harshest interrogation tactics.
Normally, that would force the government to defend itself against obstruction 
allegations.. But the CIA may have an out: its clandestine network of overseas 
prisons.
While judges focused on the detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and tried 
to guarantee that any evidence of detainee abuse would be preserved, the CIA 
was performing its toughest questioning half a world away. And by the time 
President Bush publicly acknowledged the secret prison system, interrogation 
videos of two terrorism suspects had been destroyed.
The CIA destroyed the tapes in November 2005. That June, U.S. District Judge 
Henry H. Kennedy Jr. had ordered the Bush administration to safeguard "all 
evidence and information regarding the torture, mistreatment, and abuse of 
detainees now at the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay."
U.S.. District Judge Gladys Kessler issued a nearly identical order that July.
At the time, that seemed to cover all detainees in U.S. custody. But Abu 
Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the terrorism suspects whose 
interrogations were videotaped and then destroyed, weren't at Guantanamo 
Bay. They were prisoners that existed off the books _ and apparently beyond the 
scope of the court's order.
Attorneys say that might not matter. David H. Remes, a lawyer for Yemeni 
citizen Mahmoad Abdah and others, asked Kennedy this week to schedule a hearing 
on the issue. Kennedy gave the government until Friday to respond.
Though Remes acknowledged the tapes might not be covered by Kennedy's 
order, he said, "It is still unlawful for the government to destroy 
evidence, and it had every reason to believe that these interrogation records 
would be relevant to pending litigation concerning our client."
In legal documents filed in January 2005, Assistant Attorney General Peter D. 
Keisler assured Kennedy that government officials were "well aware of 
their obligation not to destroy evidence that may be relevant in pending 
litigation."
For just that reason, officials inside and outside of the CIA advised against 
destroying the interrogation tapes, according to a former senior intelligence 
official involved in the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity because it 
is under investigation.
Exactly who signed off on the decision is unclear, but CIA director Michael 
Hayden told the agency in an e-mail this week that internal reviewers found the 
tapes were not relevant to any court case.
Remes said that decision raises questions about whether other evidence was 
destroyed. Abu Zubaydah's interrogation helped lead investigators to 
alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Remes said Abu Zubaydah may 
also have been questioned about other detainees. Such evidence might have been 
relevant in their court cases.
"It's logical to infer that the documents were destroyed in order to 
obstruct any inquiry into the means by which statements were obtained," 
Remes said.
He stopped short, however, of accusing the government of obstruction. 
That's just one of the legal issues that could come up in court. A judge 
could also raise questions about contempt of court or spoliation, a legal term 
for the destruction of evidence in "pending or reasonably foreseeable 
litigation."
The American Civil Liberties Union filed court documents Wednesday, claiming 
the destruction of the tapes violated a judge's order in a Freedom of 
Information Act lawsuit. The group cited a 2004 order by U.S. District Judge 
Alvin K. Hellerstein, who told the CIA to produce or identify all records 
pertaining to the treatment of detainees in custody.
The tapes were also destroyed at a time when attorneys for al-Qaida conspirator 
Zacarias Moussaoui were seeking interrogation videos that might help show their 
client wasn't a part of the 9/11 attacks.
In May 2005, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ordered the government to 
disclose whether interrogations were recorded. The government objected. In a 
modified order on Nov. 3, 2005, the judge asked whether the government 
"has video or audio tapes" of specific interrogations. Eleven days 
later, the government said it did not.
Gerald Zerkin, one of Moussaoui's lawyers in the penalty phase of his 
trial, recalled some of the defense efforts to obtain testimony from video or 
audio tapes of the interrogations of top al-Qaida detainees. "Obviously 
the important witnesses included Zubaydah, Binalshibh and KSM (Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed)... those are the guys at the head of the witness list," Zerkin 
said. He could not recall specifically which tapes he requested or the phrasing 
of his discovery requests, which he said were probably still classified.
"The CIA did not say to the court in its original filing that it had no 
terrorist tapes at all. It would be wrong to assert that," CIA spokesman 
George Little said.
Last month, the CIA admitted to Brinkema and a circuit judge that it had failed 
to hand over tapes of enemy combatant witnesses. Those interrogations were not 
part of the CIA's detention program and were not conducted or recorded by 
the agency, the agency said..
Associated Press Writers Lara Jakes Jordan, Michael J. Sniffen and Matt Barakat 
contributed to this report.
A service of the Associated Press(AP)

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