Judge McMahon of the SDNY has granted summary judgment to the government for the FOIA suit by the ACLU and the NY Times asking for the information about its targeted killing program


Details of Obama 'Kill List' to Remain in the Shadows, Court Rules
Federal court rejects Freedom Of Information request
- Jacob Chamberlain, staff writer

Published on Wednesday, January 2, 2013 by Common Dreams

Information surrounding the targeted killing of three American citizens by US drones in Yemen will remain secret for now, following a federal court decision to turn down a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by the ACLU.

The information, requested from the Department of Justice by the ACLU, includes a legal memorandum which allegedly gives legal and factual justification for the extrajudicial killings of U.S. citizens Anwar Al-Awlaki and Samir Khan in September 2011, and Al-Awlaki’s 16-year-old son Abdulrahman in October 2011. Anwar Al-Awlaki was placed on Obama's executive "Kill List."

“This ruling denies the public access to crucial information about the government’s extrajudicial killing of U.S. citizens and also effectively green-lights its practice of making selective and self-serving disclosures,” said Jameel Jaffer, ACLU deputy legal director. “As the judge acknowledges, the targeted killing program raises profound questions about the appropriate limits on government power in our constitutional democracy. The public has a right to know more about the circumstances in which the government believes it can lawfully kill people, including U.S. citizens, who are far from any battlefield and have never been charged with a crime.”

The ruling, made in the Southern District of New York court, also included the denial of a similar FOIA request made by the New York Times.

The ACLU plans to appeal the decision; however, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals is also considering a separate ACLU FOIA lawsuit for other information surrounding the Obama administration's targeted killing program in general, "including its legal basis, scope, and number of civilian casualties caused by drone strikes."

On the killings, the Center for Constitutional Rights explains:

On September 30, 2011, U.S. strikes killed Anwar Al-Aulaqi, along with Samir Khan and three others. Two weeks later, the U.S. launched another drone strike at an open-air restaurant in Yemen, killing Anwar Al-Aulaqi’s son, Abdulrahman, and six other civilian bystanders, including another teenager. These killings, undertaken without due process, in circumstances where lethal force was not a last resort to address a specific, concrete and imminent threat, and where the government failed to take required measures to protect bystanders, rises to a violation of the most elementary constitutional right afforded to all U.S. citizens – deprivation of life without due process of law.


Treason, Murder, and Dicta: Judge McMahon on Drone Strikes
By Robert Chesney
Wednesday, January 2, 2013 at 6:44 PM

As Raffaela posted earlier, the government has won a substantial victory in the FOIA litigation in which the Times and the ACLU sought disclosure of information about CIA drone strikes, including the legal justification underlying the use of lethal force against U.S. citizens.  What I’d like to focus on here is a remarkable section in the opinion in which Judge McMahon makes two problematic suggestions, indicta:  First, that killing Anwar al-Awlaki may have violated the Treason Clause, and second that President Obama and others in the chain of command associated with the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki may have committed murder.

Judge McMahon’s treason argument is unpersuasive.  She points out that the conduct attributed to Anwar al-Awlaki might have supported a treason charge, and then, observing that the Treason Clause is located in Article III of the Constitution and that the Founders “were as leery of accusations of treason as they were of concentrating power in the hands of any single person or institution,” she concludes that “the Founders contemplated that traitors would be dealt with by the courts of law, not by unilateral action of the Executive.”  (slip op. at 17-18) The same treason argument, of course, was put forward unsuccessfully by Justice Scalia in dissent in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld (Judge McMahon cites that dissent, as such).  Even setting aside the rejection of that theory in Hamdi, however, it simply is not clear why the possibility that a person could be tried for treason must foreclose resort to otherwise-lawful alternative measures.  Few seriously objected on treason clause grounds to the widespread use of deadly force in combat against rebellious U.S. citizens in the Civil War, for example, precisely because few seriously doubted that such uses of force were independently lawful options in the circumstances.  Indeed, Judge McMahon herself concedes, earlier, that the use of deadly force on the battlefield during the Civil War was compatible with the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause. (slip op. at 16)  For this reason I think it is a red herring to focus on the Treason Clause, as it simply begs the question whether the use of force against Anwar al-Awlaki was lawful in the first instance.  In context, it appears that Judge McMahon would probably distinguish the al-Awlaki scenario from the Civil War scenario on the ground that al-Awlaki was “not actively engaged in armed combat against the United States” (slip op. at 18), but the applicability and relevance of that distinction is itself the whole ball game and cannot simply be assumed en route to suggesting a violation of the Treason Clause.

I think the same thing is true of Judge McMahon’s suggestion (echoing Ben’s long-ago exchange with Mary Ellen O’Connell) that President Obama (and subordinates) likely committed a prosecutable murder  in violation of 18 USC 1119 by killing Anwar al-Awlaki.   Section 1119 makes it a felony for a U.S. national to kill or attempt to kill another U.S. national outside the United States). Judge McMahon points out that the “statute contains no exemption for the President…or anyone acting at his direction.”  That is true, and it is true as well that section 1119—unlike the federal murder statute, 18 USC 1111, fails to use the word “unlawful” to qualify which killings it encompasses.  Yet it nonetheless seems to me that a proper reading of 1119 would incorporate that same “unlawful” qualification (the title of 1119, after all, refers to “murder” and not just killings in general).  And in that case, we are once more confronted with the question whether the use of deadly force in the al-Awlaki scenario was lawful in the first instance, either as part of an ongoing conflict with al Qaeda (or al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in particular) or otherwise as an exercise of national self-defense.

In summary, the dicta on the underlying substantive issues advanced by Judge McMahon strikes me as unhelpful.  But perhaps this is intentional?  Her opinion makes clear her discomfort with having to render summary judgment against the Times and the ACLU on these weighty matters, and that in her view the underlying merits of the legal issues raised by the death of al-Awlaki deserve a complete and full engagement in a public setting.  Intentionally or not, one might argue that the bracing but unsatisfying treatment that Judge McMahon gives to the merits in her dicta underlines the need for such disclosure