The New York Sun - September 3, 2003
Want to get rich? Collect a nickel from every one of the people
who has
been crying bloody murder about Attorney General Ashcroft and the Bush
administration's use of "secret evidence" against alleged terrorists
- but
who hasn't uttered a peep abut the administration's refusal to disclose
the
secret sentencing memo in the case of Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard.
Mr.
Pollard, you may recall, is the American who pleaded guilty to conspiracy
to
commit espionage on behalf of Israel. Pollard in 1987 was sentenced
to life
in prison. That was an unusually harsh punishment, coming as
it did after a
plea bargain and for acting on behalf of a nation that is, after all,
an
American ally. Judge Stephen Williams, in a 1992 dissent in an
earlier
Pollard appeal, referred to the government's breach of its plea agreement
as
"a fundamental miscarriage of justice" and likened the behavior of
government lawyers to that of the witches in "Macbeth."
Pollard and his lawyers were back in federal court yesterday (09/02/03)
in
Washington. Among the issues being argued was the right of Pollard's
lawyers, who have the appropriate "Top Secret" security clearances,
to get
access to the classified documents that the American government filed
with
the sentencing judge before Pollard was sent down the river.
The classified
documents include portions of a 46-page declaration filed by the secretary
of defense at the time of the sentencing, Caspar Weinberger.
Mr. Weinberger
publicly referred to Pollard's action as "treason," a charge that the
Constitution prohibits the government from defining as anything other
than
levying war against America or adhering to its enemies, giving them
aid and
comfort. It was a charge of which Pollard was never accused.
The American
Civil Liberties Union, to its credit, filed a friend of the court brief
siding with Pollard. On another issue before the court, on the
statute of
limitations and the habeas corpus right, at least one distinguished
liberal,
Professor Charles Ogletree of Harvard Law School, has signed a friend
of the
court brief backing Pollard, while another distinguished liberal, a
former
executive director of the NAACP, Benjamin Hooks, tried to sign on to
the
brief but was rejected by the court.
Still, one has to wonder: Where is the New York Times editorial
page and
its liberal columnists? Where are Nat Hentoff and the Village
Voice? Where
's Bob Barr? Where are David Bonior and Rep. John Conyers and
their allies
in the organized American Muslim and Arab communities?
The Nation
Magazine? The National Public Radio crowd? They've all
been writing and
buying newspaper advertisement and holding rallies and giving speeches
and
introducing legislation and otherwise raising a ruckus about the use
of
secret evidence and tribunals in counter-terrorism cases and immigration
proceedings. And doing so in cases that involve the real levying
of war
against America and adhering to its enemies.
Pollard's actions were illegal and misguided, a point even he has admitted.
But if the real issue for all these civil liberties advocates were
strictly
civil liberties, one would think they'd be eager to see Pollard granted
the
same due process rights that they are so eager to grant those who are
accused of aiding the terrorists. In the case of Pollard, however,
a
perfect example of the abuse of secret evidence is greeted with a deafening
silence. It gets to a point where people wonder why.
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