ACLU And EFF File To Intervene In Internet Free Speech Lawsuit
For Immediate Release: February 27, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO - The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of
Northern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) last night
filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit that led a federal district judge to
order the domain name Wikileaks.org shut down. The motion is on behalf of
organizations and individuals that have accessed and used documents on the
Wikileaks.org website in their work and want to continue to be able to do
so.
“The court’s order shuts down and locks up the domain name
Wikileaks.org permanently, effectively interfering with the public’s ability to
access the materials on the website as easily as possible,” said Aden Fine,
senior staff attorney with the ACLU First Amendment Working Group. “The public
has a right to receive information and ideas, especially ones concerning the
public interest. This injunction ignores that vital First Amendment
principle.”
The Wikileaks website was established to allow participants
to anonymously disclose documents of public interest, including materials
discussing such issues of national importance as U.S. Army operations at
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, human rights abuses in China, and political corruption in
Kenya. Earlier this month, Judge Jeffrey White of the Northern District of
California ordered domain registrar Dynadot, LLC to shut down the domain name
Wikileaks.org based on allegations that a former employee of Swiss Bank Julius
Baer posted documents on the website that highlighted the bank’s dealings in the
Cayman Islands.
The permanent injunction has the effect of blocking
access to all of the content contained on the website accessed through the
domain name Wikileaks.org, even though the overwhelming majority of those
documents and materials are unrelated to the Bank Julius Baer complaint and
concern matters of significant public interest.
"The Supreme Court has
warned against 'burning down the house to roast the pig,'" said Steve Mayer, a
partner with Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin who is working on
the case. "But that is what has happened in this case, with the result that our
clients, and others like them, are being denied their right to receive ideas and
information. Without that right, freedom suffers."
In November
2007, a manual documenting U.S. Army operations at the Guantánamo Bay prison was
posted on the Wikileaks website; the government had resisted releasing the
manual in response to a 2003 Freedom of Information Act request filed by the
ACLU. The manual includes details about limiting Red Cross access to prisoners
and instructions for using dogs to intimidate prisoners, raising concerns about
the treatment and psychological manipulation of prisoners at
Guantánamo.
“Journalists, academics, and the general public have a
legitimate interest in accessing the materials found on Wikileaks in order to
inform their work and participate in public debate,” said Ann Brick, staff
attorney with the ACLU of Northern California. “Blocking access to the entire
site in response to a few documents posted there completely disregards the
public’s right to know. It’s unconstitutional and un-American.”
The ACLU and EFF are seeking to intervene on behalf of themselves;
the Project on Government Oversight, which works to investigate systemic waste,
fraud, and abuse in all federal agencies; and Jordan McCorkle, a student at the
University of Texas who uses the website on a regular basis.
In addition
to Fine and Brick, attorneys on the case are Steven L. Mayer, Christopher Kao
and Shaudy Danaye-Elmi of the San Francisco law firm of Howard, Rice,
Nemerovski, Canady, Falk & Rabkin, and Cindy A. Cohn, Matthew J. Zimmerman
and Kurt Opsahl of EFF.