For Immediate Release- March 22,
2006
Contact for
Commentary: Professor William Weaver, wweaver@nswbc.org
, (915.525.0483(M); 505.216.9853(H))
Federal Judge in Libby Trial
Deliberately Hides Financial Background
Possible Violation of
Federal Law Charged by FBI Whistleblower
Today,
Sibel Edmonds, Former FBI Language Specialist and a whistleblower, filed a
motion in D.C. Federal Court asking for recusal of Judge Reggie Walton from her
pending case filed under the Federal Tort Claim Act. Walton is also currently
hearing the perjury case involving I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, the former chief
of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, who is suspected of leaking the name of
former CIA undercover operative Valerie Plame Wilson to the media.
Edmonds
motion for recusal is based on Judge Walton’s pursuit of secrecy in his
required yearly financial disclosure by redacting his entire disclosure
statement, his deference to secrecy in his rulings on Edmonds’ previous claims
where he was the presiding judge, and the unusual operations of the case
assignment system concerning Edmonds’ cases. For the recusal motion filed by
Edmonds Click
Here
The
redaction of Judge Reggie Walton’s entire Financial Disclosure Statement
appears to be in violation of the Ethics in Government Act. The Ethics in
Government Act requires that Federal Judges file a yearly financial disclosure
statement with the U.S. Judicial Conference as a check on conflicts of
interest. A disclosure may be redacted only to the extent necessary to protect
the individual who filed the report and for as long as the danger to such
individual exists. The Financial Disclosure Statement filed by Judge Reggie
Walton in 2003 redacts all information except for the date of the filing and
Walton’s name. This is highly unusual.
According to a recent GAO Report,
less than one percent of judges on average request complete redaction of their
financial disclosure each year. For Judge Reggie Walton’s 2003 Financial
Disclosure, Click Here.
For the request letter sent to the U.S. Judicial Conference on March 6, 2006,
asking for the release of Judge Walton’s unredacted financial disclosure
statement Click Here.
In July
2004, Judge Reggie Walton disposed of Edmonds’ First Amendment case on the
basis of the government’s assertion of State Secrets Privilege. On the same day
as the decision, Judge Walton quashed a subpoena for Edmonds’ deposition by
attorneys representing over 1,000 family members who lost love ones during the
terrorist attacks on 9/11. In limiting the deposition in the case,
Burnett et al. v. Al Baraka Investment & Development Corp., Judge Walton
prevented the 9/11 attorneys from asking a majority of the proposed questions
related to the attacks. These included
even the most mundane questions, such as:
• When
& where were you born?
• Where
did you go to school?
• What
languages do you speak?
• What
did you focus your studies on in school?
• In
what capacity have you been employed by the United States Government?
The
convoluted route the Edmonds’ case has taken to Judge Reggie Walton’s courtroom
appears suspicious and creates the perception that the system has been
manipulated. Edmonds’ First Amendment case, filed in July 2002, was assigned to
Judge James Robertson who recently resigned from the FISA Court in protest of
warrantless NSA eavesdropping. In February 2003, Edmonds’ case was removed from
Judge Robertson and reassigned to Judge Walton with no explanation provided.
Edmonds filed a motion to request the case to be transferred from Judge Walton,
and be assigned to Judge Ellen Huvelle who had been presiding over Edmonds’
related FOIA case since July 2002. The court granted Edmonds’ request and
transferred her case to Judge Huvelle. However, two days later, Edmonds’ case
was removed from Judge Huvelle and reassigned to Judge Walton with no further
information or reason provided. On July 6, 2004, Judge Walton granted the
government’s motion to dismiss based on the assertion of the State Secrets
Privilege.
In March
2005, Edmonds filed in D.C. Federal Court a separate claim under the Federal
Tort Claims Act, and the case was randomly assigned to Judge James Robertson.
However, five days later, Edmonds’ claim was removed from Judge Robertson and
reassigned to Judge Reggie Walton. This set of facts reveals apparent
violations of local rules governing the assignment of cases.
Sibel Edmonds
worked as a language specialist for the FBI’s Washington Field Office. During
her work with the bureau, she discovered and reported serious acts of security
breaches, cover-ups, and intentional blocking of intelligence that had national
security implications. After she reported these acts to FBI management, she was
retaliated against by the FBI and ultimately fired in March 2002. Since that
time, court proceedings on her issues have been blocked by the assertion of
“State Secret Privilege” and the
Congress of the United States has been gagged and prevented from any discussion
of her case through retroactive re-classification by the Department of Justice.
In January
2005, the Justice Department's Inspector General vindicated Edmonds’ claims
when it declared that many of her charges "were supported by other witnesses and documents, and that her allegations were, in fact, the
most significant factor in the FBI's decision to terminate her services."
Judge
Reggie Walton was nominated to his position as a United States District Court
of Columbia Judge in October 2001 by President George W. Bush. He served as President
George H. W. Bush’s Associate Director of the Office of National Drug Control
Policy in the Executive Office of the President and as President Bush’s Senior
White House advisor for Crime.