Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
Amanda Frost, Guest Posting on the New DOJ State Secrets Policy:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_20-2009_09_26.shtml#1253845698


   (Note: I am delighted to put up this guest post by my Washington
   College of Law, American University colleague [1]Amanda Frost, on the
   new DOJ policy on the state secrets doctrine. Amanda has done
   important academic writing in this area, including this [2]2007
   Fordham Law Review article, as well as [3]other areas related to
   federal courts, including this provocative recent piece in the
   Virginia Law Review, [4]Overvaluing Uniformity. Amanda, thanks and
   welcome!)

   As Jonathan and Orin have already noted, the Department of Justice
   issued a new policy regarding use of the state secrets privilege on
   Wednesday. [5]In a memo, Attorney General Holder declared that the
   privilege should be reserved for cases in which the privilege is
   �necessary to protect information� that �could reasonably be expected
   to cause significant harm to the national defense or foreign
   relations��a narrower standard than used in the past. Most important,
   the new policy establishes several additional layers of government
   review before the privilege can be asserted, culminating in the
   required pre-approval of the Attorney General himself. Holder also
   promises to report regularly to Congress regarding use of the
   privilege.

   The new policy should be welcomed not only by critics of the
   privilege, but also by its fans. As the Obama Administration surely
   realized, the privilege was in danger of being limited by both the
   courts and Congress, since at least some members of both branches had
   lost faith in the executive�s ability to assert the privilege in good
   faith.

   Ever since the Supreme Court first recognized the privilege in its
   1953 decision in [6]Reynolds v. United States, the lower courts have
   mostly deferred to executive claims of privilege, and Congress has
   chosen not to regulate or limits its use. Recently, however, the
   executive�s increasing reliance on the privilege as grounds for
   outright dismissal of cases challenging the legality of its conduct
   inspired the other two branches to push back. In the past few years, a
   few lower courts have denied claims of privilege on the ground that
   the government exaggerated the risks to national security of
   disclosure, and even speculated that the executive is too
   self-interested to be completely trusted with its use.

   For example, in Mohamed v. Jeppesen Dataplan, Inc., the [7]Ninth
   Circuit commented that the executive might assert the privilege to
   avoid �embarrassment� rather than preserve state secrets, and thus
   refused to defer to the executive�s claimed need for secrecy in a case
   challenging the legality of extraordinary rendition. Congress is also
   seeking to take back control of the privilege. A bill entitled [8]The
   State Secrets Protection Act, currently pending in the House, would
   limit and guide executive assertions of the privilege.

   By voluntarily checking its own assertion of the privilege, the
   Administration may have slowed the momentum by these other two
   branches to establish greater restrictions on executive use of the
   privilege. For those, like myself, who are concerned about the
   privilege�s abuse in the hands of any executive, the new policy is a
   mixed blessing. Yes, I am happy to see the Administration voluntarily
   establish constraints on its use of the privilege, but I am hesitant
   to leave the privilege completely to the executive�s discretion.
   Ironically, then, the very policy shift that limits the privilege
   today may be the one that prevents courts and Congress from limiting
   abuse of the privilege in the future.

References

   1. http://www.wcl.american.edu/faculty/frost/
   2. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=978808
   3. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=392853
   4. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1104469
   5. 
http://legaltimes.typepad.com/files/ag-memo-re-state-secrets-dated-09-22-09.pdf
   6. http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/US/345/345.US.1.21.html
   7. http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2009/04/27/0815693.pdf
   8. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-984

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