Whistleblower John Kiriakou Questions Why He's In Jail While Former CIA Boss Leon Panetta Is Free
from the who-did-worse? dept
We've written a few times about the ridiculous case against CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou. Kiriakou's main "crime" was revealing the CIA's waterboarding/torture program. It's difficult to argue against the idea that this was true whistleblowing. Both President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder have admitted that waterboarding was torture and that it was wrong for the US to do. On top of that, as we've been discussing a lot lately, the Senate Intelligence Committee is sitting on a devastating 6,300 page report that supposedly condemns the CIA's torture program as being far worse than previously revealed and which obtained no useful intelligence. It seems like those are the kinds of things we'd want people to blow the whistle on.Of course, despite trying to find a way to claim that Kiriakou's whistleblowing was illegal, the DOJ couldn't find any charges related to that which would stick, so it did what it's done to plenty of other whistleblowers: go in search of something else, really anything else to charge him with, and it finally came up with something. A reporter who was working on a book about the torture program asked Kiriakou if he could recommend former colleagues that he could interview. Kiriakou said no, but the reporter mentioned a former colleague's first name -- a former CIA operative who was well known to multiple journalists at the time, and Kiriakou confirmed that former colleague's last name, saying he believed he was retired. The DOJ spun this as Kiriakou revealing the name of a CIA agent, even though nothing Kiriakou did made that agent's name public (it was later revealed by others). For all of this, Kiriakou ended up taking a 30 month prison sentence as a plea deal, realizing it was better than fighting through a full trial, in which he could get many, many more years in jail.
Kiriakou hasn't been silent from jail, and he's even been punished for speaking to the press. However, it appears that this won't stop him from exercising his free speech rights. He recently penned a powerful op-ed for the LA Times asking why he's in jail, while former CIA boss and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta isn't even being investigated.
If you don't recall, a few months ago, we noted that Panetta was likely to get off scott free, despite revealing a ton of classified info, including the names of the Navy SEAL officers who shot Osama bin Laden to film maker Mark Boal, who wrote the screenplay for Zero Dark Thirty. Of course, in an effort to protect "important people" we wouldn't have even known about Panetta's revealing classified information if a report by the Pentagon's Inspector General hadn't leaked. Of course, after the leak, federal officials focused on tracking down those who leaked the report but have done absolutely nothing about Panetta who clearly leaked very sensitive information. It's a "high court" / "low court" situation where powerful people break the law in much worse ways and are left alone, while people without power are bulldozed by the system.
From under the bulldozer, Kiriakou questions how that's reasonable. He points out that part of the reason he took his plea deal was because, under the Espionage Act (as we've discussed before) all evidence of intent and purpose are inadmissible, allowing the government to paint perfectly innocent actions as nefarious. And that's clearly what they were going to do to him. And yet, these same officials say that Panetta's (much bigger) revelation of classified info was okay because it was an accident, and he didn't intend to reveal that info to a filmmaker. Kiriakou notes the double standard that now has him behind bars:
If an intent to undermine U.S. national security or if identifiable harm to U.S. interests are indeed not relevant to Espionage Act enforcement, then the White House and the Justice Department should be in full froth. Panetta should be having his private life dug in to, sifted and seized as evidence, as happened to me and six others under the Obama administration.Stories like this aren't just distressing when you consider basic concepts like fairness, proportionality and common sense. They also undermine faith in our government, and -- more importantly -- its credibility.
When the transcript of Panetta's speech and his inadvertent leak came to light in January, a CIA spokesman told the Associated Press that the agency had subsequently "overhauled its procedures for interaction with the entertainment industry." Such internal reviews are fine and good, but equality before the law is the rule in America. Your job title, your Rolodex and your political friendships are not supposed to trump accountability. Except when they do.
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Filed Under: cia, classified information, high court, john kiriakou, leon panetta, low court, retaliation, whistleblowers
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I believe you mean it's difficult to argue that this was not true whistleblowing?
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TO BE HONEST
The only time they worry and even then not worry too much is around voting time, which is not really a problem when you control the whole process and the media. Have a few other parties get reasonable support and votes and they might start worrying about what people think but i doubt that is not goign to happen any time soon.
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Can't undermine my faith in government
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Re: TO BE HONEST
This is why the government cares more about whistleblowers than it does about actual criminality. Breaking the law doesn't affect the current political climate, while embarrassing leaks can lower their chances for long-term political survival.
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Another example of my flaming optimism
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Re: Re: TO BE HONEST
The approval ratings suggest otherwise.
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Edited that sentence to make it clearer... sorry.
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Re: Re: Re: TO BE HONEST
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7tWHJfhiyo
The Alternative Vote Explained
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Y3jE3B8HsE
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When you hear the executive branch, or the legislative branch talk about changes, listen to see if anything they mention happens to be the "stick" that would be applied to the people running these agencies if they break the law. When it came to torture, the message that the Obama administration put forth was "these were things in the past, and we should just move on" It's not too late to indite and charge people from the previous administration, or those that are still in the CIA for their participation in the torture of human beings. Why aren't we doing that?
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Whistleblower John Kiriakou Questions Why He's In Jail While Former CIA Boss Leon Panetta Is Free
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At least in the UK he could have fought it
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You will have to excuse my ignorance but I didn't realize the US govt had any credibility at all, or integrity, honesty or morality for that matter.
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What can the US do?
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Sorry.
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The edit doesn't show up in the RSS feed.
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"The People" VS "We The People"
Its integrity and fairness are reserved for dealings with The People.
Eventually, the US public will realize that "The People" does not include the US public.
However, its unlikely that the US public will ever figure out just who "The People" actually are, since so few of "The People" are Americans.
But no matter. Once "The People" get Obama's new war under way, all of this stuff will be swept under the carpet anyway.
Nothing gets the American public's attention more completely than counting the dead bodies of their children and hating some foreigners.
And lets face it, the Russian Aristocracy is just as desperately in need of a new war as the US Fed is, so it'll be a "good" war for both sides.
The kind that never fails to put an end to "The People's" civilian dissent problems and allows both sides to disappear all of those who have spoken out against it.
Fascism is a business model, not a political process, and as such it is perfectly predictable.
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