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2nd Circuit upholds subway searches
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Sun, 08/13/2006 - 15:21.
One year after the hysteria that followed the London bombings, we are treated to yet another terrorist scare emanating from the UK, with the alleged plot to blow up airliners mid-flight by mixing combustible liquids, supposedly discovered in the nick of time. While that dominates the headlines (much more so, note, than the real terrorist carnage in Mumbai, which generated barely a media flicker compared to the significantly less deadly London attacks), buried in the inner pages of even the New York papers comes another turn of the screw they started tightening a year ago. From the New York Daily News, Aug. 12:
Activist critics of the NY Civil Liberties Union note that their attorney Christopher Dunn declined to cross-examine NYPD deputy Commission for Intelligence David Cohen, a 30-year CIA veteran whose testimony was considered the lynchpin of the case. (New York Times, Nov. 1, 2005) Now more than ever, see The Citizen's Guide to Refusing New York Subway Searches See our last posts on fear in the subways and fear in New York City generally. Also note that, while we withhold judgement on the recent UK busts, these spectacularized "terrorism" cases have been getting increasingly specious. |
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On the subject of "specious"...
This Aug. 11 New York Times editorial is something of a relief: