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In reply to the discussion: Instead of prosecuting torturers, Obama prosecuted the guy who revealed the program [View all]proverbialwisdom
(4,959 posts)14. I don't know about the case beyond the highly sympathetic DEMOCRACYNOW! broadcast. Have you watched?
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/kiriakou_defenders_hope_to_commute_whistle-blowers_prison_sentence_20130123
Kiriakou Defenders Hope to Get Whistle-Blowers Prison Sentence Commuted
Posted on Jan 23, 2013
...Those who have signed the letters in support of Kiriakou are politically varied. Among them are constitutional lawyer Bruce Fein, consumer advocate Ralph Nader, former Public Citizen president Joan Claybrook, former senior official from the departments of State, Defense and National Security Council Morton Halperin, CNN senior political analyst David Gergen and retired CIA officer Raymond McGovern. Others include 10 former CIA agents and five professors from Liberty University in Virginia.
Kiriakou Defenders Hope to Get Whistle-Blowers Prison Sentence Commuted
Posted on Jan 23, 2013
...Those who have signed the letters in support of Kiriakou are politically varied. Among them are constitutional lawyer Bruce Fein, consumer advocate Ralph Nader, former Public Citizen president Joan Claybrook, former senior official from the departments of State, Defense and National Security Council Morton Halperin, CNN senior political analyst David Gergen and retired CIA officer Raymond McGovern. Others include 10 former CIA agents and five professors from Liberty University in Virginia.
https://blog.nader.org/2013/01/15/ralph-nader-and-colleagues-call-on-obama-to-pardon-john-kiriakou/
[center]Ralph Nader and Colleagues Call on Obama to Pardon John Kiriakou[/center]
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, DC
20500
Dear President Obama:
We the undersigned are writing to urge that you pardon former CIA officer John Kiriakou. Motivated as a father devoted to his children, Mr. Kiriakou recently pleaded guilty to one count of violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1981 to avoid the governments threat of long-term devastation of his cherished family.
He pleaded guilty to the crime of providing the name of a former colleague to an author who was writing a book and searching for former CIA officers to interview, an act which seems much less censorable than Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitages disclosure of the CIAs Valerie Plame to reporter Robert Novak with impunity. Mr. Kiriakous disclosure never was made publicly available, and occasioned no harm to the United States. Indeed, it assisted in ending waterboarding, the crime of torture as you and your Attorney General have acknowledged. In contrast, Mr. Armitages disclosure was shared to the world by Mr. Novak, and reportedly placed in danger persons who had associated with Ms. Plame. The reporter of Mr. Kiriakous information unilaterally shared the name with the American Civil Liberties Union.
We believe that commutation is appropriate in this case for a number of reasons:
Mr. President, do not allow your legacy to be one where only the accurate whistleblower goes to prison.
We urge you to take action in this matter. Please do not let this injustice stand. Commute John Kiriakous sentence.
Respectfully,
Bruce Fein
Ralph Nader
Joan Claybrook
[center]Ralph Nader and Colleagues Call on Obama to Pardon John Kiriakou[/center]
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, DC
20500
Dear President Obama:
We the undersigned are writing to urge that you pardon former CIA officer John Kiriakou. Motivated as a father devoted to his children, Mr. Kiriakou recently pleaded guilty to one count of violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1981 to avoid the governments threat of long-term devastation of his cherished family.
He pleaded guilty to the crime of providing the name of a former colleague to an author who was writing a book and searching for former CIA officers to interview, an act which seems much less censorable than Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitages disclosure of the CIAs Valerie Plame to reporter Robert Novak with impunity. Mr. Kiriakous disclosure never was made publicly available, and occasioned no harm to the United States. Indeed, it assisted in ending waterboarding, the crime of torture as you and your Attorney General have acknowledged. In contrast, Mr. Armitages disclosure was shared to the world by Mr. Novak, and reportedly placed in danger persons who had associated with Ms. Plame. The reporter of Mr. Kiriakous information unilaterally shared the name with the American Civil Liberties Union.
We believe that commutation is appropriate in this case for a number of reasons:
First, Mr. Kiriakou is a highly decorated, fourteen-year CIA counterterrorism veteran who has spent his entire adult life in public service, including two years as a senior aide to Senator John Kerry. He was the leader of the team that captured an al-Qaeda leader Abu Zubaydah in Faisalabad, Pakistan in 2002. He is the recipient of twelve CIA Exceptional Performance Awards, the Sustained Superior Performance Award, the Meritorious Honor Award with Medal, and the Counterterrorism Service Medal.
Second, Mr. Kiriakou is an anti-torture whistleblower who spoke out against torture because he believed it violated his oath to the Constitution. He never tortured anyone, yet he is the only individual to be prosecuted in relation to the torture program of the past decade. The interrogators who tortured prisoners, the officials who gave the orders, the attorneys who authored the torture memos, and the CIA officers who destroyed the interrogation tapes have not been held professionally accountable, much less charged with crimes.
Third, there is precedent for leniency. In 2007, I. Lewis Scooter Libby was granted a commutation after being found guilty of four felony counts obstruction of justice, making a false statement, and two counts of perjury related to the Valerie Plame affair. Mr. Libby did not spend one day in prison. Similarly, in 2001 President Clinton pardoned Samuel L. Morison, the only person ever convicted of espionage for leaking classified information to the press.
Mr. President, do not allow your legacy to be one where only the accurate whistleblower goes to prison.
We urge you to take action in this matter. Please do not let this injustice stand. Commute John Kiriakous sentence.
Respectfully,
Bruce Fein
Ralph Nader
Joan Claybrook
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Instead of prosecuting torturers, Obama prosecuted the guy who revealed the program [View all]
grahamhgreen
Dec 2014
OP
This is absolute bullshit. John Kiriakou wasn't jailed for exposing the program, he didn't even know
okaawhatever
Dec 2014
#2
Please provide your source on the claim that he outed a covert CIA officer. nt
el_bryanto
Dec 2014
#8
Give me a friggin' break. Kiriakou wasn't a whistleblower. When he disclosed the waterboarding,
okaawhatever
Dec 2014
#11
I don't know about the case beyond the highly sympathetic DEMOCRACYNOW! broadcast. Have you watched?
proverbialwisdom
Dec 2014
#14