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ACLU Is Launching A Campaign To Convince President Obama To Pardon Edward Snowden (fusion.net) 343

Coinciding with the launch of Oliver Stone's movie Snowden in select theaters this week, a coalition of civil rights groups are launching a campaign to convince President Obama to pardon NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. Fusion reports: The effort, which is organized by the ACLU, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, will gather signatures from regular people and endorsements from celebrities. Snowden will speak by video link from Moscow at a press conference on Wednesday morning in New York, and an initial list of "prominent legal scholars, policy experts, human rights leaders, technologists and former government officials" in support of the cause will be released, according to a statement from the campaign. A presidential pardon would mean that Snowden could come home from Moscow, where he's lived for the past three years, without the fear of being prosecuted. He currently faces federal charges of violating the Espionage Act and stealing government property, even though his disclosures led to reform of the wiretapping program by Congress. Many Snowden supporters are hoping the movie Snowden, which opens in U.S. theaters on Friday, will spur support for a pardon. "I think the value of the movie is that it's lsikely to reach millions of people who have not been paying close attention to Snowden or to the debate about surveillance and privacy," Snowden's layer at the ACLU, Ben Wizner, told Fusion. "Those people will emerge from the movie more educated about surveillance and with more positive attitudes toward Snowden."
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ACLU Is Launching A Campaign To Convince President Obama To Pardon Edward Snowden

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  • Snowden's layer at the ACLU, Ben Wizner, told Fusion. "Those people will emerge from the movie more education about surveillance and with more positive attitudes toward Snowden."

    wow.. would that mean "more educated about surveillance" .. shame that lawyer wasn't more educated in grammar!

  • If Snowden has done things since leaving the US, they are still subject to other actions.

    Besides, since we frequently remotely execute even American citizens in other countries for lesser actions, pardoning Snowden might make him easier to target when we do break international law to execute him.

  • by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Monday September 12, 2016 @06:44PM (#52875183)

    As someone who is displeased with how Snowden went about this, I'm not opposed to the idea of a pardon. However I don't believe a carte blanche pardon is appropriate, or sets good precedence.

    What I'd like to see is Snowden return to the US of his own volition to stand trial. And then, once the trial is complete, a pardon can be issued if necessary. Even if what Snowden did was ultimately a good thing, I believe there still needs to be repercussions for it - that he needs to take responsibility for his actions. A trial to firmly establish the facts of the case and whether he did anything against the law, even if it can only end in not-guilty or a presidential pardon, is something I think would be a reasonable compromise.

    • You are either for drawing and quartering him or for complete pardon. No in between here folks.

    • by steveg ( 55825 )

      Not as long as he's still being charged under the Espionage Act. Under that act, he is not allowed to defend himself. That's written into the law.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Pseudonym ( 62607 ) on Monday September 12, 2016 @09:12PM (#52876073)

      What I'd like to see is Snowden return to the US of his own volition to stand trial.

      Stand trial for what, though?

      One of Snowden's complaints (and the chief reason, according to him, that he has not returned to the US to stand trial) is that he has been charged on two counts under the Espionage Act, which prevents him from defending himself in open court. Presumably you, too, would prefer that he was allowed to make a public interest defense?

      • One of Snowden's complaints (and the chief reason, according to him, that he has not returned to the US to stand trial) is that he has been charged on two counts under the Espionage Act, which prevents him from defending himself in open court. Presumably you, too, would prefer that he was allowed to make a public interest defense?

        My preference is to follow the letter of the law. If that includes charges under the Espionage Act, then so be it.

        A pardon is the executive - the leader of the people - granting yo

        • My preference is to follow the letter of the law.

          Assuming the law is not an ass, that's also my preference.

      • Presumably you, too, would prefer that he was allowed to make a public interest defense?

        Which isn't made more likely by allowing cameras in the courtroom. I'm don't think he should get to grandstand as a substitute for a defense.

        • I'm don't think he should get to grandstand as a substitute for a defense.

          Yeah, I'm not in favour of allowing cameras in the courtroom either, but then, I don't live in a country where that happens.

          Oh, and FWIW, I don't think politicians should get to grandstand as a substitute for a prosecution, but they do it anyway, just on a bigger scale.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There would need to be guarantees that he wouldn't be tortured like Chelsea Manning, and would be able to have his trial in open court.

  • by aberglas ( 991072 ) on Monday September 12, 2016 @07:24PM (#52875475)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    I count 57. Bigger number for Bush, and other presidents.

    Number of ever people pardoned that embarrassed a government: 0.
    (Possible exception during the revolution, when the rebels became the government.)

    Obama is deeply conservative. Hell will freeze over before he would pardon Snowden.

    And let us not forget CIA director George Tenet was given a Presidential Medal of Freedom for lying about "Weapons of Mass Destruction" in Iraq. Resulted in many thousands of dead. Never challenged by Obama. Because Tenet worked for the system. Snowden worked against the system.

  • I don't really care about more surveillance if it means people's lives will be saved. I've concluded the people who have the most to lose from increased surveillance are drug users, pedophiles and those paranoid of the government. I'm willing to be inconvenienced if it saves someone else's life.

    Yeah, I get the typical standard response of wrapping oneself in the 13-starred early American flag wearing a 3 pointed hat, and shouting, "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary S

    • 1-You are willing to lose your basic human rights for the convenience of the government. If the government had caught or killed any terrorists because of the spying they would be bragging about it to end the complaints. 2-The government is a bigger threat to the American people than the terrorists are (more people killed, more abducted, more theft, more illegal drugs imported etc), so letting the government have more power without even asking for it (legislative process) makes you less safe.
    • by UpnAtom ( 551727 )

      I don't really care about more surveillance if it means people's lives will be saved.

      Apparently, it can't, else at least one govt would have provided evidence of that. But I'm also guessing you'd ban cars, guns and junk food, as they kill around 10,000x as many people as terrorists.

      I've concluded the people who have the most to lose from increased surveillance are drug users, pedophiles and those paranoid of the government.

      It's also repeatedly demonstrated throughout the world that whistleblowers, journalists and the public they protect will be worse off.

      If there is a compelling national security interest to tap my phone or monitor my communications - I won't like it (obviously) but I'm okay with it.

      a) You'd never know you were under surveillance so you'd never get to challenge it.
      b) Are you dumb enough to take the govt's word for it or should a judge get to make that decisio

    • by Leuf ( 918654 )

      "I'm not giving up any freedom. I'm still covered by the Constitution."

      When the Constitution can be set aside whenever it suits the government then no, you aren't still covered. They've already shredded the 4th. They would like to take away the 2nd based on your name being placed, without any due process,on a secret list that you aren't allowed to know you are on.

      It's fine to be in favor of changing your Constitutional rights. But they have to do it the right way, by actually amending them rather than ju

  • by buss_error ( 142273 ) on Monday September 12, 2016 @07:29PM (#52875515) Homepage Journal
    ...That's not gonna happen. (A pardon).

    Tons of people blow their stack over Snowden's leaks. They are misguided and wrong in my opinion. What I've seen does not detail or risk named people (I may have missed something) but does bright line where our own government is breaking the law, and not just a little bit.

    Look, crazy people will be able to harm us, no question. It's not giving away our own liberty and justice in the process of trying to stop them that makes the difference between an oppressive, unjust government and one that we say we want.

  • emerge from the movie more education

    All right. Who proofread that little gem?

  • Snowden released documents about the activities of the NSA under President Obama. I seriously doubt the President was happy about that.
  • by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 ) on Monday September 12, 2016 @11:05PM (#52876527) Homepage

    Perhaps if Trump wins the presidency, Obama will use his last day in office to pardon Snowden -- simply to create a vocal domestic critic of spying during Trump's presidency in the hope of weakening his domestic spying powers. Not probable, but possible. If Clinton wins, it seems very unlikely he'd unleash a critic on her on his way out the door unless there's more animosity between them than is apparent. If Johnson or Stein wins, of course, then Obama doesn't need to do it because they will.

  • He was calling him a "hacker" in the beginning, either trying to cover it up or just flat out being ignorant about the facts. Either way, it looks bad for Obama to even talk about him ever again.
  • Snowden himself isn't begging your pardon, he just wants a fair trial; "fair" in the sense that he can use a "public interest" defense (whistleblower) instead of having it automatically disqualified. This is something Congress could (and should) allow.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/sno... [yahoo.com]

    As I see it, Clinton (with her email server) and Snowden are either both innocent or both guilty of disclosures. Maybe Obama could pardon Clinton on his way out, for any non-crimes she may or may not have accidentally committed

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