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by CBSNews.com

John Ashcroft (AP)
WASHINGTON, June 23, 2004
(AP) A
watchdog group sued Attorney General John Ashcroft on Wednesday for
classifying previously public documents pertaining to a whistleblower's
claims of security lapses in the FBI's translator program.
Citing national security, Ashcroft recently classified documents related
to the case of Sibel Edmonds, a former linguist at the FBI. The lawsuit
charged that reclassifying materials that had previously been in the
public domain is illegal and unconstitutional.
The suit was filed in federal court by the Washington-based Project on
Government Oversight, a nonprofit group that has been following the
case.
In 2002, Edmonds told her bosses of her concerns about shoddy
translations and suggested one interpreter with a relative who works at
a foreign embassy may have compromised national security. She was fired
soon after. The bureau cited performance issues as reasons for the
dismissal.
Ashcroft told Senate Judiciary Committee members at a hearing earlier
this month that he took responsibility for the decision to classify the
Edmonds' information.
"The national interests of the United States would be seriously impaired
if information provided in one briefing to the Congress were to be made
generally available," he said.
The lawsuit said that Edmonds' case was discussed by the FBI during
unclassified Senate Judiciary Committee briefings in 2002. It said
letters urging the FBI to investigate her claims were posted on the Web
sites of Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa.
Those letters have since been removed from the Web sites.
"This is an extraordinary and dangerous abuse of power by Ashcroft to
improperly use the classification system to hide information that the
Justice Department finds embarrassing," said Danielle Brian, executive
director of the project.
The group has been investigating Edmonds' allegations and wants to post
its findings on its Web site, but is barred from doing so now because of
the reclassification, Brian said.
Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller declined to comment on the
lawsuit.
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