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Jailed US nuclear scientist granted bail as government case
unravels
By Patrick Martin
26 August 2000
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A federal judge has granted bail to Wen Ho Lee, the Asian-American
nuclear physicist who has been held in solitary confinement for
eight months. Lee is the target of a government and media witch
hunt on charges of espionage at the Los Alamos, New Mexico weapons
laboratory.
US District Judge James A. Parker, who had denied two previous
bail applications, reversed himself August 24 and ordered a hearing
for Tuesday, August 29, at which the terms of Lee's release will
be spelled out. He acted after a three-day bail hearing that featured
the testimony of Robert Messemer, formerly the lead FBI agent
in the case, which punctured the government's case against the
Taiwanese-American scientist.
Lee will be held under virtual house arrest, with only his
wife permitted to share his confinement, and visits from friends
and relatives closely monitored. Bond will be set at $1 million,
which supporters have already raised by mortgaging their homes.
Despite these conditions, his release was greeted with enthusiasm
by his family, lawyers and supporters, since Judge Parker effectively
rejected the central thrust of the government's case, the claim
that Lee had stolen nuclear weapons information so dangerous that
he was a threat to humanity.
At one point in the bail hearing, the lead prosecutor, Deputy
US Attorney George Stambolitis, warned apocalyptically that Lee's
actions were of a caliber where hundreds of millions of
people could be killed. Prosecutors and Department of Energy
officials have insisted that Lee be held in solitary confinement,
shackled during his infrequent exercise periods, and cut off from
contact with relatives and friends. They demanded that he not
be permitted to speak with visitors in Chinesethe language
he and his wife use in their homeclaiming that even a single
unsupervised sentence could be the vehicle for transmitting vital
nuclear secrets.
Defense attorneys convinced Judge Parker to reverse his previous
denial of bail by demonstrating that the FBI and government prosecutors
had grossly distorted the facts of the case at the two earlier
bail hearings. The high point of their exposure was the testimony
of Messemer, who had been the principal FBI witness at the first
hearing.
Messemer admitted that at last December's bail hearing he had
made three major misstatementsin reality gross
lies which would have subjected anyone but an FBI agent to perjury
charges.
* He told the December hearing that Wen Ho Lee had lied to
a fellow scientist when borrowing a computer to download data
onto portable computer tapes. Messemer testified in the previous
bail hearing that Lee had told the scientist he was copying a
resume. The other scientist has contradicted this version of events,
and Messemer now concedes that Lee never used the word resume,
but rather told his colleague that he was downloading data. In
his ruling in December denying bail, Judge Parker cited this charge
of deceptiveness on Lee's part as very troubling.
* Messemer claimed at the initial hearing that Lee had not
disclosed a meeting with Chinese scientists during a trip to Beijing
in 1986, which had been approved by the Los Alamos lab. Lee's
lawyers produced a document showing that Lee had reported the
meeting fully to lab securitya document that Messemer claimed
never to have seen.
* Messemer testified in December that an FBI search of Lee's
home had uncovered letters written to six overseas nuclear institutes
applying for jobs. But Messemer conceded this week that while
drafts of the letters had been found on Lee's home computer, there
was no indication he had ever sent them, or that any of the overseas
institutes had received them. This undermines the latest prosecution
theory of the case. Lacking any evidence of intent to commit espionage,
the prosecution now claims that Lee copied data to assist in obtaining
a new weapons-related job in a foreign country.
Messemer made another admission that exposes high-level lying
about the case by Clinton administration officials. When Wen Ho
Lee was fired in March 1999 after press reports of alleged spying
at Los Alamos, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson told reporters
that the scientist had failed a lie detector test. But Messemer
testified that Lee had passed a polygraph exam administered by
Wackenhut Corporation, a security contractor at the weapons lab.
Under questioning by defense lawyer Mark Holscher, Messemer
said he was aware that Lee had scored among the highest possible
scores for credibility on the test when he denied passing secrets,
denied contacting anyone for the purpose of espionage and denied
intending to harm the United States.
The FBI agent also gave a picture of the brutal intimidation
of Lee during an intensive interrogation on March 7, 1999. On
that day FBI agents warned the Taiwanese-American scientist that
he had failed his lie detector test, which was not true. They
threatened that he could be given the death penalty for stealing
nuclear secrets, repeatedly citing the execution of Julius and
Ethel Rosenberg, Communist Party supporters sent to the electric
chair in 1953 after a frame-up trial as atom spies.
Until that day, Messemer said, Lee had voluntarily met with the
FBI on 20 occasions, without requesting a lawyer. Since then he
has refused to meet with government agents.
Other testimony at the bail hearing further undermined the
government's allegations. While FBI and Energy Department officials
have described the 800 megabytes of data downloaded by Lee as
the crown jewels of the US nuclear weapons program,
several expert witnesses, including John Richter, a Los Alamos
weapons designer, and Harold Agnew, former director of the lab,
derided these claims, saying that the information was widely published
and easily available. They said the extravagant claims of the
prosecution were meant to intimidate the judge into first rejecting
Lee's bail application, and then continuing to deny bail. They
noted, moreover, that the information in question was not even
classified as secret at the time that Lee downloaded it onto tapes.
The outcome of the bail hearing was such a political blow to
the government campaign that much of the American media has been
compelled to urge Lee's immediate release, including such major
daily newspapers as the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles
Times and the New York Times. The editorial Friday
in the New York Times is particularly hypocritical, since
it makes no mention of the leading role that newspaper played
in engineering the Los Alamos spy scare.
Federal authorities began the investigation into possible atomic
spying by the Peoples Republic of China after a CIA source in
China claimed to have uncovered evidence that China was in possession
of design secrets for the W-88 warhead, a miniaturized nuclear
weapon that is one of the most advanced in the US arsenal. The
CIA and FBI later concluded that the source was, in fact, a Chinese
intelligence double agent engaged in a sting operation, and that
there was no evidence of actual espionage.
Republican congressional sources leaked reports of this abortive
investigation to the Times, which published a lurid front-page
report on March 6, 1999, alleging that the greatest security failure
in modern US history had taken place at Los Alamos. The Times
described an unnamed Chinese-American scientist at Los Alamos
as the principal suspect, and claimed that he had failed a lie
detector testa smear against Wen Ho Lee.
As in the impeachment campaignwhich had just ended in
failure the month before, with Clinton's acquittal in the Senatethe
Times made itself the conduit for a politically motivated
attack by extreme-right elements in Congress seeking to destabilize
the Clinton administration. The only difference in this case is
that the Clinton administration adopted a different tacticone
that was obviously impossible with impeachment. It sought to preempt
the anti-Chinese witch-hunting by the congressional Republicans
by embracing the right-wing spy scare as its own.
As a result of this cynical gang-up between the congressional
Republicans, the Clinton White House, and the corporate-controlled
media, an innocent man has been targeted for two years of persecution,
including eight months of solitary confinement under brutal conditions.
See Also:
Amnesty International protests shackling
of jailed US scientist
[19 August 2000]
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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