big brother: December 2007 Archives
AUSTRALIA'S security establishment, having been weighed in the balance and found wanting, now wants to place its heavy hand on one side of the balance, to tilt it in its favour. That is the conclusion Australians would be entitled to draw from yesterday's Herald report that the head of the federal Attorney-General's Department has complained to the NSW Judicial Commission about Justice Michael Adams's verdict in the case of Izhar ul-Haque. As we have already stated, the decision of Justice Adams of the NSW Supreme Court in the ul-Haque case showed the legal system operating as intended. His judgment revealed that Australian Security Intelligence Organisation was using the charges against Mr ul-Haque as a threat to induce him to become their spy. Justice Adams was rightly scathing about the illegality of the ASIO agents' behaviour during Mr ul-Haque's arrest and interrogation. It appears that His Honour's decision, and the clarity of his views, forcefully expressed, about their cavalier approach to due process, have perturbed the security establishment - not just ASIO but also the Federal Police and, it appears, senior bureaucrats in the Attorney-General's Department, which oversees both agencies.
They appear, though, not to be worried, as they should be, by content of the judge's criticisms, but by the fact that he dared to make them at all. Instead of insisting Australia's security agencies observe the law, the head of the Attorney-General's Department, Robert Cornall, is seeking to punish the judge who pointed out how they had broken it. Is this an attempt to cow the judiciary, in security-related cases, into toeing the line and suspending the rules in the interest of national security? It would not be surprising if it were. The Commissioner of the Federal Police, Mick Keelty, has already suggested courts need to change their attitude to evidence if crimes, particularly acts of terrorism, are to be prevented - rather than punished after they have happened.
Adams J is the judge who previously held that two ASIO agents had unlawfully kidnapped and falsely imprisoned a young Sydney medical student who was suspected of terrorism offences.
This comes after the head of ASIO publicly defended the behavior of the officers involved 'by saying the agency has had to adapt to new laws after September 11.' Stuff and nonsense. Adams J held that the ASIO officers knew what they were doing was illegal and they did it anyway.
I'm not surprised that O'Sullivan is defending the jackbooted thugs he employs, but I am surprised that he hasn't come up with some more plausible excuses. Playing the 9/11 card is just weak.
97% of the people on the list were American citizens. The arrests were to be proclaimed by then-president Truman to be necessary to 'protect the country against treason, espionage and sabotage.'
Hoover obviously wasn't a big fan of the bill of rights.