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Bernal, Getting past the dictatorship’s constitution

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A December 1979 experience that neither killed nor intimidated Miguel Antonio Bernal, but in addition to seriously injuring him it did harden the law professor’s attitude about the dictatorship and its constitution, under which Panama is still governed. You have to go to YouTube to see it.

Toward a new constitution

by Miguel Antonio Bernal V.

More than three years ago, the Constituent Movement YA, under the guidance of Don Cristobal Silva (RIP), released “Documento Conceptual y de Principios,” which we note today in this opinion article.

The constitutional crisis had motivated the United Citizens for the Constituent Movement (CUCO) and the Constituent Movement Now to merge our efforts, dedication and actions, to promote a Constituent Assembly as the joint main objective “motivated by the crisis of institutionality that the country is going through, which merits exploring the possibilities for an urgent transformation of the Nation based on a constituent process.”

By publishing the Documento Conceptual y de Principios — made as an initial proposal to be improved – the movement contributed to a national political debate about the need for a new Constitution through a constituent process.

However, it is mandatory to confess that little or no attention was paid to it by civil society and its various professional groups, labor unions, political parties, etc. This has not prevented the need for a constituent process. The idea has not been abandoned. At some point there’s a need to realize the maxim that “public power emanates only from the people.”

The attempt by the lovers of “change” so that nothing changes, to follow Article 314 of the imposed militaristic constitution and impose a “parallel” constitutional process, received a resounding rejection from broad sectors of the population who were not fooled by the fallacies of the gatopardists.*

Today, after the eruption of citizens onto the national stage — people tired of all the inequality, deceit, corruption, privileges, perquisites and impunity — it’s striking that those attending the “Mesa Única”(for dizziness) in Penonomé, have overlooked the need for a new constitution through a constituent process.

By eluding the fact that the matrix of our society’s problem is the imposed militarist constitution, which has served and continues to support all the actions against the public interest, they have once again set the table for the joint criminal enterprise that passes for our government, so that it can continue doing its thing: anti-national, anti-popular and anti-democratic practices.

* The term derives from an Italian novel, which has been made into several movies, about a minor Sicilian prince who, in a time of revolution, explored various schemes of cosmetic change to ensure that nothing would change for his privileged aristocratic caste.

 

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Simon, US high court mulls dissolution of native families and cultures

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girl to be kidnapped
The Indian Child Welfare Act a law that protects Native children from forced removal from their families, tribes, and culture is currently under attack. Lakota Man: “This child was being raised to be a matriarch and clan mother. But, the boarding school system took that all away. You would’ve known this — had they taught it in school.” Siksika (Blackfoot) girl and play lodge. McClintock photography, 1909.

Native families’ right to stay together at stake

by Theodora Simon — American Civil Liberties Union

Since European settlers arrived on the shores of what is now known as the United States, federal and state governments, intent on seizing Indian lands, have sought to undermine and threaten the existence of tribes through the forced separation and assimilation of Native children. By severing Native children from their families, tribes, and culture, colonizers believed they could stamp out Indigeneity and erase tribal people altogether. As with any nation, the future ceases to exist if children are prevented from carrying on the languages, traditions, and knowledge passed down from each generation to the next.

This tool of assimilation and genocide has been wielded against tribal nations and Native children repeatedly throughout history, and it is happening again now.

The Indian Child Welfare Act (IWCA) — a law that aims to protect Native children from forced removal from their families, tribes, and culture and preserve tribal sovereignty — is currently under attack and at risk of being overturned by the US Supreme Court. Congress passed ICWA in 1978 to address the nationwide crisis of state child welfare agencies tearing Native children from their families and placing them in non-Native homes, in an attempt to force Native children to assimilate and adopt white cultural norms. Before ICWA, public and private agencies were removing 25% to 35% of Native American/Alaska Native children from their homes, and 85% of those children were placed in non-Native households.

Overwhelming evidence has found that being removed from homes and disconnected from culture, tradition, and identity profoundly harms Native children. The Indian Child Welfare Act requires state courts to make active efforts to keep Native families together and to prioritize the placement of Native children within their families and within tribal communities — where their cultural identities will be understood and celebrated.

This November, the US Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Brackeen v. Haaland, a case that challenges the constitutionality of ICWA. If the Supreme Court rules ICWA unconstitutional, it could have devastating consequences for Native children, families and tribes while simultaneously putting the existence of tribes in jeopardy. That’s why the ACLU and the ACLUs of Northern California, Alaska, Arizona, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Washington filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court today urging the court to uphold the constitutionality of ICWA.

ICWA aims to address the forced separation of Native children and families and represents a small step toward acknowledging the centuries of genocidal violence that underpin this case. Beginning in the early 1800s, the architects of the Federal Indian Boarding School Program designed the program to erase the Indigenous identities of Native people. The government snatched children as young as four years old from their families and sent them to militarized boarding school institutions designed to destroy their Native identities and culture, often hundreds of miles away from their tribal homelands.

Any markers of their Indigeneity — language, clothing, traditional hairstyles, and even their names — were prohibited in these institutions. Indian boarding schools were not simply places where Native youth were stripped of their culture: Many children died at these schools from outright neglect, malnutrition, untreated illness, and as a result of physical violence carried out against them.

While boarding schools were largely shuttered by the mid-1900s, the philosophy lived on: Native children were better off living with white families, even at the expense of their mental, physical, and spiritual well-being.

In 1958, the Bureau of Indian Affairs created the Indian Adoption Project. The project’s explicit goal was to assimilate Native children into white culture through adoption and the intentional destruction of Indigenous family units and tribal communities. During this era and continuing today, practices rooted in ethnocentric stereotypes operating under the guise of “child protection” resulted in the baseless separation of thousands of Native children from their families and homelands.

It is incomprehensibly heinous that — in order to build the country we all live in today — federal and state governments targeted Native children, robbing those children, their families, their communities, and their tribal nations of everything it meant to be Indigenous.

Brackeen v. Haaland is the largest threat to Native children, families, and tribes before the Supreme Court in our lifetimes. If ICWA is overturned, states would once again be allowed to tear Native children from their families, tribes, and culture while simultaneously threatening tribes’ very existence. The legal arguments made by the plaintiffs challenging ICWA in Brackeen undermine key tenets of federal Indian law, and threaten many other laws upholding tribal sovereignty.

Tribal sovereignty is the right of tribes — 574 currently recognized by the federal government—to make and be governed by their own laws. This sovereignty is inherent, as Native Nations existed long before the creation of the United States. Hundreds of treaties have guaranteed tribal nations the right to self-govern. Through these treaties, Native Nations gave up their right to millions of acres of land that would become the United States in exchange for promises to tribes, including the guarantee that lands “reserved” for tribes would be governed by the tribes in perpetuity. The outcome of Brackeen v. Haaland could put centuries-long legal precedent upholding tribal sovereignty — including tribes’ right and ability to preserve their unique cultural identities, raise their own children and govern themselves — in jeopardy.

Native families have a right to stay together, to care for their children, and to preserve tribal culture by ensuring access to their cultural identity, language, and heritage. The Supreme Court must protect this right and uphold the constitutionality of the Indian Child Welfare Act.

Theodora Simon — Tedde Simon (Navajo) is an Advocate for the Racial & Economic Justice Program at the ACLU of Northern California. She leads the ACLU of Northern California’s work centering Indigenous voices and worldviews in multiple issue areas — including educational equity, voting rights, and environmental justice — and strives to build deep, mutual and meaningful relationships with tribal and indigenous leaders throughout Northern California.

 

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¿Wappin? A night of concerts / Una noche de conciertos

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The mold doesn’t grow on the gold
El moho no crece en el oro

Melissa Aldana Quartet at The Pocantico Center — Live 2021
https://youtu.be/T8EKeZCtPPc

The Velvet Underground & Nico — Full Album 1967
https://youtu.be/uxA3jPaftok

Bob Marley The Wailers Full Concert — Santa Barbara 1979
https://youtu.be/mgIM8yaF6es

Carlos Vives — Festival de Viña del Mar 2018
https://youtu.be/Hv63pmUQKKA

Prince — Purple Rain
https://youtu.be/81jraQDTJJk

Big Brother And The Holding Company — Cheap Thrills full album
https://youtu.be/8tvNbxvVGEU

 

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Small pharmacies band together to be their own importer

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pharmacists note
“Mr. President,
Executive Decree #17 of August 10, 2022 prejudices the small pharmacies of the Republic of Panama, for the benefit of the big chains.

You’re destroying us.”

A Twitter note from protesting pharmacists, who shut their doors on Monday and Tuesday to make their point – and were more or less heard.

Small business moves to implement their new freedom by collective purchasing

by Eric Jackson

On August 17 the Cabinet Council sent legislation ending the importers’ exclusive distributorships for medications to the National Assembly, but in the meantime President Cortizo signed some executive orders beginning to implement the move.

Pharmacies will be allowed to import medicines without mandatory wholesalers. In Panama, where “popular capitalism” is a very big deal — some one-half of economically active people work in the informal sector, generally by themselves or in tiny micro-enterprise partnerships — the freedom of small businesses from controlling behavior by large ones is bound to garner a lot of public support.

There were only five importers allowed, some of them informally but more or less banded together as a cartel. While their defenders in the mass media and their online trolls haven’t let up with the arguments, they’re fairly quiet now. Before the president made his move, the big importers were demanding a negotiation process that included themselves, international pharmaceutical companies and the nation’s pharmacists (or at least the ones they would describe as qualified). The Catholic Church made it plain that they would mediate no such exercise, and Nito proceeded without one.

In the proposed legislation, “pharmacies” are defined as:

Establishments dedicated mainly to the preparation and retail sale of prescriptions, patent medicines, botanical drugs, chemical products, perfumes, cosmetics, and the activities of pharmacies in the countries with the greatest economic progress.

Mrs. Galindo De Obarrio, one of the big three importers and president of the Chamber of Commerce, won’t get to argue semantics. But if she warned in La Estrella that there is a danger of counterfeit, often not even generic, medications, the government let it be known that there would be steps to avoid this major international fraud problem and those steps would not include letting the present group of importers serve as the chokepoint.

Did we hear that on the world scale Big Pharma won’t deal with purchasers in small lots? That has been a common practice, but how insistent the drug manufacturers might actually be, we may not see. that’s because the National Union of Pharmacy Propietors — UNPROFA — which claims to represent about 70% of pharmacies, has announced that it will band the small outlets together to create a collective purchasing organization that filters out the frauds and buys as inexpensively as possible in bulk.

The legislature, and once they have acted the executive via its regulatory decrees, will take some commanding roles in how the new joint purchasing arrangement would have to operate. The Health Registry will take on an enhanced role in protecting against bogus or unapproved medications, and the Consumer Protection and Defense of Competition Authority will be overseeing the implementation of price controls. Consumer advocates are generally applauding the president’s move, but also calling for the safeguards that appear to be coming.

It may come to be, however, that the existing bureaucracy’s job will be simpler rather than more complex, as in dealing with one purchasing cooperative instead of five importing companies. One major question remaining to be answered, and it may be not only a matter of political will but also of contract law, is whether the current suppliers will continue their relationships with the Social Security Fund and Ministry of Health pharmacies. There had been a long effort to destroy the public pharmacies and make everyone buy privately. Will those who had posed as capitalism’s hardest-core defenders shift to defending the public sector if that’s where there only cut of the action remains? To be seen.

First things first, says UNPROFA leader Orlando Pérez in La Prensa. The small pharmacies are taking inventories of the price-controlled medicines they have in stock and for which they have paid cartel prices. They will be looking for some relief in the transition to the new system.

 

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Un megalodón podría comer presas enteras del tamaño de orcas

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El megalodón, el tiburón más grande que ha existido. Es famoso por sus dientes del tamaño de una mano humana. Sin embargo, hay poca evidencia fósil de todo su cuerpo. Investigadores internacionales en colaboración con la Universidad de Zúrich UZH utilizaron un espécimen excepcionalmente preservado para crear un modelo en 3D de su cuerpo completo. Sus resultados sugieren que el megalodón podría consumir presas enteras del tamaño de las orcas actuales y luego vagar por los mares sin más alimento durante dos meses.

Nuevo modelo 3D muestra que un megalodón
podría comer presas enteras del tamaño de orcas

por STRI

El megalodón (Otodus megalodon) reconstruido medía 16 metros de largo y pesaba más de 61 toneladas. Se estimó que podía nadar a alrededor de 1.4 metros por segundo, requerir más de 98,000 kilo calorías diarias y tener un volumen estomacal de casi 10,000 litros. Estos resultados sugieren que el megalodón podía viajar largas distancias y era capaz de comerse presas enteras de hasta 8 metros de largo. Este es el tamaño de las orcas modernas, el principal depredador oceánico de la actualidad. Tal capacidad de comer depredadores de semejante tamaño coloca al megalodón en un nivel trófico más alto que los depredadores que están en el tope de la cadena alimenticia moderna.

Una columna vertebral bien preservada permite la reconstrucción

Estos son los resultados de un estudio internacional realizado en colaboración entre la Universidad de Zúrich, la Universidad de Swansea, y STRI, entre otras. La investigación solo fue posible gracias al modelado 3D de un espécimen de megalodón (Otodus megalodon) que se descubrió en la década de 1860. Contra todo pronóstico, una parte considerable de su columna vertebral quedó en el registro fósil después de que la criatura muriera en los océanos del Mioceno de Bélgica a la edad de 46 años, hace unos 18 millones de años.

“Los dientes de tiburón son fósiles comunes debido a su composición dura que les permite preservarse bien”, comentó el autor principal Jack Cooper, estudiante de doctorado en la Universidad de Swansea. “Sin embargo, sus esqueletos están hechos de cartílago, por lo que rara vez se fosilizan. La columna vertebral del megalodón del Real Instituto Belga de Ciencias Naturales es, por lo tanto, un fósil único en su tipo”.

De una sola vértebra a la masa de todo el cuerpo

El equipo de investigación, que incluye investigadores de Suiza, Reino Unido, EE. UU., Australia y Sudáfrica, primero midió y escaneó cada vértebra antes de reconstruir toda la columna. Luego adjuntaron la columna a un scans 3D de una dentadura de un megalodón de los Estados Unidos. Completaron el modelo agregando “carne” alrededor del esqueleto utilizando un scan en 3D del cuerpo de un gran tiburón blanco de Sur África.

“La masa corporal es uno de los rasgos más importantes de cualquier animal. Para los que está ya extintos, podemos estimar la masa corporal con métodos modernos de modelado digital en 3D y luego establecer la relación entre la masa y otras propiedades biológicas, como la velocidad y el uso de energía”, comentó el coautor John Hutchinson, profesor del Colegio Real de Veterinaria en el Reino Unido.

Un súper depredador transoceánico

La alta demanda energética del megalodón se habría satisfecho alimentándose de la grasa rica en calorías de las ballenas, en la que se han encontrado previamente marcas de mordeduras de megalodón en el registro fósil. Un modelo óptimo de alimentación de posibles encuentros con presas descubrió que comer una sola ballena de 8 metros podría haber permitido al tiburón nadar miles de millas a través de los océanos sin volver a comer durante dos meses. “Estos resultados sugieren que este tiburón gigante era un superdepredador transoceánico”, comentó Catalina Pimiento, profesora de la Universidad de Zúrich, investigadora asociada en el Instituto Smithsonian de Investigaciones Tropicales (STRI) y autora principal del estudio. “La extinción de este icónico tiburón gigante probablemente afectó el transporte global de nutrientes y liberó a los grandes cetáceos de una fuerte presión depredadora”.

El modelo completo ahora se puede utilizar como base para futuras reconstrucciones e investigaciones adicionales. Las nuevas inferencias biológicas extraídas de este estudio representan un salto en nuestro conocimiento de este superdepredador singular y ayudan a comprender mejor la función ecológica que desempeñan las especies de megafauna en los ecosistemas marinos y las consecuencias a gran escala de su extinción.

Ilustración de un Megadolón, cortesía de J. J. Giraldo.

Referencia: Jack A. Cooper et al. The extinct shark Otodus megalodon was a transoceanic super-predator: Inferences from 3D modelling. Science advances, 17 August 2022, Doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abm9424

 

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Las pequeñas farmacias reabren

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Cabinet
Las pequeñas farmacias ganaron su huelga. Aquí, el Consejo de Gabinete aprueba una medida que se enviará a la Asamblea Nacional que permitirá que las farmacias eviten a los importadores exclusivos y reabastezcan sus estantes comprando directamente de fuentes internacionales. Hay pasos más complejos en este baile y todavía habrá controles de precios para docenas de medicamentos, pero estas pequeñas empresas están libres de un apretón de años y tomarán esa victoria y volverán a trabajar. Foto de la Presidencia.
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Iglesia continuará estas conversaciones y no moderará la próxima ronda

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Ulloa et al
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Nito slaps down the medicine importers

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Nito
President Laurentino “Nito” Cortizo Cohen, with Health Minister Dr. Luis Francisco Sucre Mejía by his side, launches one punch at the medicine supply chain as we have known it for the past several years. Here he signs an executive order repealing a 2019 lame duck decree by the Panameñista administration of Juan Carlos Varela, which in turn set the regulations for the 2001 basic law of medicines (a product of another Panameñista administration, that of Mireya Moscoso). He says he will present legislation to the National Assembly to replace that law as well. Photo by the Presidencia.

With details pending, Nito will break up exclusive medicine distributorships

by Eric Jackson

President Cortizo has signed a decree that begins the end of the medicine import oligopoly that has Panamanians paying several times the prices for medicines that our neighbors pay. As the president put it:

I have signed a decree that allows the opening of the drug market, so that other agents can import medicines under the protection of the health registry. This measure should translate into cheaper prices for quality, effective medicines for Panamanians.

His first move sweeps away the regulations implementing 2001 and 1963 laws that restricted who can import medicines. It’s not that everything will be unregulated, and details are yet to be announced. The signing ceremony came with a vague promise that under certain conditions people will be able to bring in medicines for themselves, which Customs had been confiscating of late. The main promises, however,  are that bona fide pharmacies will be able to import medicines that are approved by the health registry for themselves, bypassing the importers who have held exclusive distributorships in Panama; and that properly regulated medicine labs will also be allowed to import the materials they would need to produce medicines here.

There are, however, two more steps to get from here to there.

First, Cortizo said that he will present a new basic law of medicines to replace the current one.

Second, when the legislative process is done and a new law is in place, the health ministry and/or the president would have to decree new regulations to implement the new law.

The moves came amid a strike by small pharmacies and a lockout by some of the large ones that are closely aligned with the importers. The big outlets tended to be open but not selling the 170 medicines to be subject to price controls. The smaller establishments tended to close their doors. That 30 percent price cut on the selection of medicines was decreed on August 10, to take effect on August 15. On the latter day, there was widespread resistance by the pharmacies.

The move to allow pharmacies to bypass the present importers splits the coalition that Chamber of Commerce president Marcela Galindo De Obarrio was trying to forge between the three major importers — of which she is CEO of one — and the small pharmacy businesses. The government had announced that there would be price controls, the importers said that foreign manufacturers, Panamanian small businesses and perhaps the government would have to bear the entire burden, but that they would not reduce prices themselves. A Penonome protest march meant to unite the pharmacies and the importers fizzled — only those who worked for the importers or the pharmacies they control showed up.

Does the battle now continue in the legislature and the courts? Both have historically been amenable to bribery and other undue influences, so there might be some threads of hope to maintain the current system. In this situation, however, there are business interests on both sides and much of the public sees the importers as intransigent, annoying and too expensive for Panama to afford. Plus, to pull off a legislative or legal victory in the wake of Cortizo’s stand, the importers would have to split the PRD in the legislature or get the courts to do something deeply unpopular and with little basis in Panama’s constitutional law.

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Panama’s much criticized and often ignored 1972 constitution specifically authorizes price controls and public sector interventions for the goods and services of “first necessity.” This country has a long history of price controls, even prior to the present constitution.
 

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Ocasio-Cortéz, There is power in a union

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There is power in a union

by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortéz

The American Postal Workers Union (APWU) invited me to speak at their biennial convention yesterday.

I honestly was GEEKING out over being invited. Not many people may know this, but the Postal Workers Union is pretty badass.

This union was founded and has roots in the largest wildcat strike in American history. A wildcat strike is a strike undertaken by unionized workers without union leadership’s authorization.

The Postal Workers Union formed in 1971 after exploited postal workers, suffering from low wages and poor conditions, went on strike. It was technically illegal, but more than 200,000 workers got involved. The public so deeply supported the workers that the Nixon administration couldn’t retaliate without risking further backlash. After eight days, the workers won: Congress approved their demands and the American Postal Workers Union was formed.

APWU is still revolutionary today. The Postal Workers Union was one of the earliest unions to come out in support of Medicare for All, raising the minimum wage, expanding voting rights, and more.

They are also essential to our society and our democracy. US Postal Workers saved the 2020 election by processing an unprecedented amount of mail-in ballots during a global pandemic and under very hostile conditions – all before COVID vaccines were available!

 

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Ferguson & Durkin: You don’t have to be an actual spy…

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Butina
The popular culture loves a spy thriller, and lazy or unethical journalists will sometimes provide one that does not actually exist. So Maria Butina, the Russian grad student who hung around at National Rifle Association events, was sometimes portrayed as such, but foxier and more pleasant than Natasha Fatale. So far as was shown, she was a sales rep for Russian gun manufacturers and did not register as a foreign agent as she was required to do. So, a plea bargain to a conspiracy charge and deportation. Not even an Espionage Act charge, but that still didn’t stop some from misrepresenting her as a spy. ICE photo of her deportation.

You don’t have to be a spy to violate the Espionage Act
(and other facts about the law Trump may have broken)

by Joseph Ferguson, Loyola University Chicago and Thomas A. Durkin, Loyola University Chicago

The federal court-authorized search of former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate has brought renewed attention to the obscure but infamous law known as the Espionage Act of 1917. A section of the law was listed as one of three potential violations under Justice Department investigation.

The Espionage Act has historically been employed most often by law-and-order conservatives. But the biggest uptick in its use occurred during the Obama administration, which used it as the hammer of choice for national security leakers and whistleblowers. Regardless of whom it is used to prosecute, it unfailingly prompts consternation and outrage.

We are both attorneys who specialize in and teach national security law. While navigating the sound and fury over the Trump search, here are a few things to note about the Espionage Act.

The Espionage Act seldom pertains to espionage

When you hear “espionage,” you may think spies and international intrigue. One portion of the act – 18 USC. section 794 – does relate to spying for foreign governments, for which the maximum sentence is life imprisonment.

That aspect of the law is best exemplified by the convictions of Jonathan Pollard in 1987, for spying for and providing top-secret classified information to Israel; former Central Intelligence Agency officer Aldrich Ames in 1994, for being a double agent for the Russian KGB; and, in 2002, former FBI agent Robert Hanssen, who was caught selling US secrets to the Soviet Union and Russia over a span of more than 20 years. All three received life sentences.

But spy cases are rare. More typically, as in the Trump investigation, the act applies to the unauthorized gathering, possessing or transmitting of certain sensitive government information.

Transmitting can mean moving materials from an authorized to an unauthorized location – many types of sensitive government information must be maintained in secure facilities. It can also apply to refusing a government demand for its return. All of these prohibited activities fall under the separate and more commonly applied section of the act – 18 USC. section 793.

A man in a military uniform is escorted onto a vehicle by a man in a dark shirt and khakis.Chelsea Manning, in uniform, after being sentenced on Aug. 21, 2013, to 35 years in prison after
being found guilty of several counts under the Espionage Act.
Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images

A violation does not require an intention to aid a foreign power

Willful unauthorized possession of information that, if obtained by a foreign government, might harm US interests is generally enough to trigger a possible sentence of 10 years.

Current claims by Trump supporters of the seemingly innocuous nature of the conduct at issue – simply possessing sensitive government documents – miss the point. The driver of the Department of Justice’s concern under Section 793 is the sensitive content and the connection to national defense information, known as “NDI.”

One of the most famous Espionage Act cases, known as “Wikileaks,” in which Julian Assange was indicted for obtaining and publishing secret military and diplomatic documents in 2010, is not about leaks to help foreign governments. It concerned the unauthorized soliciting, obtaining, possessing and publishing of sensitive information that might be of help to a foreign nation if disclosed.

Two recent senior Democratic administration officials – Sandy Berger, national security adviser during the Clinton administration, and David Petraeus, CIA director under during the Obama administration – each pleaded guilty to misdemeanors under the threat of Espionage Act prosecution.

Berger took home a classified document – in his sock – at the end of his tenure. Petraeus shared classified information with an unauthorized person for reasons having nothing to do with a foreign government.

The act is not just about classified information

Some of the documents the FBI sought and found in the Trump search were designated “top secret” or “top secret-sensitive compartmented information.”

Both classifications tip far to the serious end of the sensitivity spectrum.

Top secret-sensitive compartmented information is reserved for information that would truly be damaging to the US if it fell into foreign hands.

One theory floated by Trump defenders is that by simply handling the materials as president, Trump could have effectively declassified them. It actually doesn’t work that way – presidential declassification requires an override of Executive Order 13526, must be in writing, and must have occurred while Trump was still president – not after. If they had been declassified, they should have been marked as such.

And even assuming the documents were declassified, which does not appear to be the case, Trump is still in the criminal soup. The Espionage Act applies to all national defense information, or NDI, of which classified materials are only a portion. This kind of information includes a vast array of sensitive information including military, energy, scientific, technological, infrastructure and national disaster risks. By law and regulation, NDI materials may not be publicly released and must be handled as sensitive.

A number of court documents, with the one on top saying prominently 'Search and seizure warrant' in bold type and all capital letters.A judge unsealed a search warrant that shows that the FBI is investigating Donald Trump for a possible violation of the Espionage Act.  AP Photo/Jon Elswick

The public can’t judge a case based on classified information

Cases involving classified information or NDI are nearly impossible to referee from the cheap seats.

None of us will get to see the documents at issue, nor should we. Why?

Because they are classified.

Even if we did, we would not be able to make an informed judgment of their significance because what they relate to is likely itself classified – we’d be making judgments in a void.

And even if a judge in an Espionage Act case had access to all the information needed to evaluate the nature and risks of the materials, it wouldn’t matter. The fact that documents are classified or otherwise regulated as sensitive defense information is all that matters.

Historically, Espionage Act cases have been occasionally political and almost always politicized. Enacted at the beginning of US involvement in World War I in 1917, the act was largely designed to make interference with the draft illegal and prevent Americans from supporting the enemy.

But it was immediately used to target immigrants, labor organizers and left-leaning radicals. It was a tool of Cold War anti-communist politicians like Sen. Joe McCarthy in the 1940s and 1950s. The case of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, executed for passing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union, is the most prominent prosecution of that era.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the act was used against peace activists, including Pentagon Paper whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg. Since Sept. 11, 2001, officials have used the act against whistleblowers like Edward Snowden. Because of this history, the act is often assailed for chilling First Amendment political speech and activities.

The Espionage Act is serious and politically loaded business. Its breadth, the potential grave national security risks involved and the lengthy potential prison term have long sparked political conflict. These cases are controversial and complicated in ways that counsel patience and caution before reaching conclusions.The Conversation

Joseph Ferguson, Co-Director, National Security and Civil Rights Program, Loyola University Chicago and Thomas A. Durkin, Distinguished Practitioner in Residence, Loyola University Chicago

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

 

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