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  • Illustration: Blaming Bush by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

    KNIGHT: Stuck on Bush

    The campaign to criminalize America's response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks continues apace. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is calling on the Justice Department to investigate George W. Bush over his just-released memoir, "Decision Points," in which the former president says he ordered al Qaeda suspects waterboarded in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks.

  • Rodriguez

    CIA agents cleared of wrongdoing in tapes destruction

    A special prosecutor cleared the CIA's former top clandestine officer and others Tuesday of any charges for destroying agency videotapes showing waterboarding of terror suspects, but allowed an investigation to proceed into whether the harsh questioning went beyond legal boundaries.

  • ROD LAMKEY JR./THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A TSA officer views the image of a person with a cell phone using a controversial full body scanner Wednesday at the TSA Systems Integration Facility in Arlington, Va. Airports will install 150 more scanners after an attempted attack on a flight bound for Detroit on Christmas Day.

    EDITORIAL: The left vs. Obama on privacy

    As a presidential candidate, Barack Obama pledged to "strengthen privacy protections for the digital age," but the American Civil Liberties Union on Sept. 8 blasted out an e-mail questioning President Obama's commitment. "But now, the Obama administration is proposing its own changes to [the Electronic Communications Privacy Act] aimed at weakening - not strengthening - your personal privacy," ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero wrote.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
President Obama signed an executive order upon taking office that sought to undo one of George W. Bush's most controversial policies. He ordered the closure of the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The step was hailed by civil liberties groups, but implementation has proved elusive as Congress has thwarted Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. from following through on the effort.

    ACLU slams Obama's security policies

    Obama was excoriated for continuing the Bush administration's strictest national security policies, including indefinite detention, military commissions and a "targeted kill" program that authorizes the government to take out suspected terrorists anywhere.

  • **FILE**Getty Images "We found no instances in which an FBI agent participated in clear detainee abuse of the kind that some military interrogators used," Inspector General Glenn A. Fine says.

    FBI agents opt out of harsh interrogations

    An FBI agent assigned in 2002 to help obtain intelligence from a top al Qaeda operative challenged the interrogation techniques used on the terrorism suspect by the CIA, taking what a government report yesterday described as his "strong concerns" to senior officials in the bureau's counterterrorism division.

  • FBI agents opt out of harsh interrogations

    An FBI agent assigned in 2002 to help obtain intelligence from a top al Qaeda operative challenged the interrogation techniques used on the terrorism suspect by the CIA, taking what a government report yesterday described as his "strong concerns" to senior officials in the bureau's counterterrorism division.

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