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Amnesty International protests shackling of jailed US scientist
By Patrick Martin
19 August 2000
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The human rights organization Amnesty International has written
to the US Department of Justice protesting the conditions under
which nuclear physicist Wen Ho Lee has been held since he was
placed in pretrial detention last December. These conditions are
a violation of UN rules for the treatment of prisoners that have
been accepted by the US government.
Lee, who faces charges of unauthorized removal of classified
information from the nuclear weapons laboratory at Los Alamos,
has been held in solitary confinement since he was jailed in December,
confined to his cell for 23 hours a day. During infrequent exercise
periodsonly once or twice a weekthe 59-year-old scientist
has been shackled at the wrists, waist and ankles.
The August 4 letter from Amnesty to Attorney General Janet
Reno called for the shackling to be ended immediately. These
conditions are unnecessarily punitive and contravene international
human rights standards, said Curt Goering, Senior Deputy
Executive Director of Amnesty International USA. The use
of shackles is extremely disturbing and is grossly inappropriate
in the circumstances.
The letter was released August 16, the day of a bail hearing
for Wen Ho Lee held in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Attorneys for
the jailed scientist are seeking his release on bond as well as
a relaxation of the physical circumstances of his imprisonment,
which are unprecedented for a prisoner of his age and background,
who is not charged with a crime of violence.
Evidence presented at the bail hearing has been extremely damaging
to the government case against Lee. Press reports and statements
by Clinton administration officials have branded Lee a spy for
the Peoples Republic of China, but prosecutors have been forced
to concede that there is no evidence of espionage. Instead they
claim that Lee downloaded classified data to assist in a possible
search for a job after a series of cutbacks at US nuclear facilities
led him to fear he would be laid off.
A former nuclear weapons designer and intelligence official
at Los Alamos, John Richter, who worked at the lab from 1959 to
1997, testified that the computer codes which Lee downloaded would
be of little or no value to any foreign country. He estimated
that 99 percent of the information had already made public in
one form or another. If Lee had transferred the copied material
to another country, I don't believe that it would have any
deleterious affect at all, Richter declared.
At a separate pre-trial hearing August 15, lawyers for the
imprisoned scientist presented copies of statements by federal
agents acknowledging that Lee had been targeted for investigation
because of his ancestryhe is a Taiwanese-American who emigrated
to the United States as a young man. Defense attorney Mark Holscher
characterized the government's actions in the case as racial
profiling, and he asked US District Judge James Parker to
turn over Energy Department and FBI reports on the case.
Lee is the only person ever charged under the Atomic Energy
Act with offenses carrying a life sentence in prison, other than
espionage. His defense has won growing support in the Asian-American
community and among his fellow scientists. At the bail hearing,
the federal courtroom was filled with Lee's supporters, all wearing
buttons defending him, a very unusual sight in a high-profile
espionage case.
Assistant US Attorney Laura Fashing acknowledged that the FBI,
based on its experience in counterintelligence, considers
Chinese-Americans more likely to be contacted by Chinese government
agents seeking classified information. The trial is presently
set to begin on November 6.
See Also:
Judge denies bail to jailed
US scientist Wen Ho Lee
[6 January 2000]
US indicts Taiwanese-American
target of nuclear espionage furor
[18 December 1999]
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