On Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Justice asked a federal court to dismiss a motion demanding disclosure of information related to the government’s alleged targeted killing program. The ACLU had demanded the disclosure of a memorandum whose existence, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s reply brief [PDF], has never been confirmed or denied by the government.
The ACLU alleges that the memorandum’s existence has already been publicly disclosed, and that it contains important information related to the death of an American citizen, Anwar Al-Aulaqi. Last month, the ACLU filed a separate suit, alleging that the CIA had illegally killed Al-Aulaqi and two other American citizens (including Al-Aulaqi’s teenage son) as part of a targeted killing program. The memorandum in question is alleged to contain the legal justifications for killing Al-Aulaqi.
The Justice Department’s brief says that no government official has formally acknowledged either the existence of the memorandum, much less any government involvement in Al-Aulaqi’s killing. Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU’s Deputy Legal Director, called the claim that the targeted killing program is still a secret “unmoored from reality.”
“Ultimately this brief is important for the larger argument it makes,” Jaffer said, “and that is that the government should have the ability to kill American citizens in the broader service of counter-terrorism, without disclosing to the public even that they’ve done so.”
“Senior officials have talked about the program both on the record and off the record, and taken credit,” he said. “They claim that the program is legal. If they can make those claims to the media, there’s no reason they can’t answer a request under the Freedom of Information Act.”









