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TWO LAWYERS THREATENED WITH PRISON FOR WRITING TO OBAMA
Posted on April 21st, 2009 No commentsAttorneys Clive Stafford Smith and Ahmad Ghappour face six months in prison for writing to President Obama according to an article in SF Gate,
They represent Mohamed Binyam Mohamed who was renditioned and tortured while under the control of the CIA. Eventually he ended up at Guantanamo. He was released after he sued Jeppson Dataplan, a subsidiary of Boeing, that was involved in his extraordinary rendition. (He turned down an earlier release which came with the condition that he not talk about his imprisonment.
Smith and Ghappour have represented many prisoners housed at Guantanamo including Mohamed. They drafted a letter to Obama attempting to discover the extent of Mohamed’s torture while Mohamed was at Guantanamo. The law requires attorneys who represent clients at Guantanamo to obtain the approval of the Privilege Review Team. The Privilege Review Team is a secret body whose job is to approve communications between Guantanamo prisoners and their lawyers. Smith and Ghappour submitted their letter to the Privilege Review Team. They did not expect to have any problems since Obama, of course, has a complete security clearance. But when they got the letter back the complete body of the letter was redacted.
They sent the redacted letter, along with a cover letter to Obama. The next thing they know there is a warrant out for their arrest for violating the rules of the Privilege Review Team. They could receive six months in jail.
It seems to me at a minimum the charges against Smith And Ghappour violate Mohamed’s Sixth Amendment right to competent counsel and the rights of Smith and Ghappour under to First Amendment to freedom of speech and freedom to petition.
The case reminds me of that of Lynne Stewart, the New York lawyer who represented Omar Abdel Rahman, a blind Egyptian sheik who was convicted of conspiracy to blow up the United Nations, an FBI building, two tunnels, and a bridge in New York City. She was convicted and sentenced to twenty-eight months for helping her incarcerated client convey a message to his followers. Like Smith and Ghappour her speech should be protected by the First and Sixth Amendments. It is currently up on appeal.
Both prosecutions are attempts to quiet lawyers who are raising serious issues which the government finds bothersome. The attack upon the right of counsel is an attack upon the Constitution for without the right of counsel to vigorously carry on the battle of their clients the constitutional rights are meaningless.
Ahmad Ghappour, Barack Obama, Binyam Mohamed, CIA, Clive Stafford Smith, Extraordinary rendition, First Amendment, Freedom of Speech, Freedom to Petition, Mohamed v. Jeppesen Dataplan, Privlege Review Team, Sixth Amendment, U. S. Constitution Ahmad Ghappour, Barrack Obama, Binyam Mohamed, Clive Stafford Smith, First Amendment, Freedom of Speech, Freedom to Petition, Guantanamo, Jeppson Dataplan, Lynne Stewart, Privlege Review Team, Sixth Amendment Leave a ReplyLeave a Reply




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