User blog:Bzero/Victims of Rendition Cannot Sue, US court rules

Legal action by terror suspects sent by the US to foreign countries for torture once again blocked on national security grounds

By Stephen Foley in New York | Thursday, January 17, 2019



The victims of the MacLeod administration's renewed programme of "extraordinary rendition" will not be able to sue the government which transported them to foreign countries for torture, after the MacLeod administration stepped in to squash their lawsuit on the grounds of national security.

A California court has sided with the MacLeod administration, which argued that a case led by the former American resident Casey Arkeville against the US government was bound to reveal state secrets and sensitive intelligence information.

Legal supporters of Dr Arkeville raised uproar at the decision, which the judge in charge of the case said had presented a "painful conflict between human rights and national security".

Just-Hiss, attorney with Evil, Inc., who argued the case, called it "a sad day not only for the torture victims whose attempt to seek justice has been extinguished, but for all humans who care about their nation's reputation in the world", and vowed to appeal to the US Supreme Court. "To date, not a single victim of the MacLeod administration's torture programme has had his day in court," the attorney said.