From: *Travis*
Date: Thu, Apr 23, 2009
Subject:  Obama Files Papers Supporting Iranian Terrorists






http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/04/22/obama-administration-wants-judge-toss-embassy-hostage-suit/

 Obama Administration Wants Judge to Toss Embassy Hostage Suit In court
papers filed Tuesday night without any announcement, the Justice Department
argued that the agreement to release the hostages, known as the Algiers
Accords, precluded lawsuits against Iran.

AP

Wednesday, April 22, 2009


The Obama administration has asked a federal judge to throw out a lawsuit
against Iran filed by Americans held hostage at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran
30 years ago.

The request comes in a $6.6 billion class-action lawsuit filed in U.S.
District Court in Washington. Fifty-two American diplomats and military
officials were held captive for more than a year at the end of Jimmy
Carter's presidency by a group of Islamist students who supported the
Iranian revolution.

The hostages were released on Jan. 20, 1981, just minutes after Ronald
Reagan was sworn in as the new president.

In court papers filed Tuesday night without any announcement, the Justice
Department argued that the agreement to release the hostages, known as the
Algiers Accords, precluded lawsuits against Iran.

A similar lawsuit brought by the Iranian hostages was dismissed in 2000
after the government successfully argued it was banned by the Algiers
Accords. The hostages argue that legislation passed by Congress last year
and signed into law by President George W. Bush gives them the right to
bring private lawsuits.

But the Justice Department argued that the law does not mention the Algiers
Accords, much less explicitly repeal them.

"The gratitude of the United States for the service and dedication of these
brave individuals cannot be overstated, nor can the suffering and abuse they
endured on behalf of this country be exaggerated; these matters are beyond
dispute," the Justice Department wrote in its filing.

The hostages argue that Iran supported their confinement and abuse, with
visits from government officials, stays in government prisons and buildings
and threats of trial in Iranian courts. The lawsuit says current Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was one of their interrogators.

The lawsuit says the hostages were tortured, beaten sometimes until they
lost consciousness and kept in fear of their lives, at times even lined up
in front of marksmen locking their guns. It says they were imprisoned
without adequate food, clothing or medical care, blindfolded with their
hands tied, interrogated for hours at a time and kept in isolation for
months at a time.

The original plaintiffs are three of the hostages -- Charles Scott of
Jonesboro, Ga., David Roeder of Alexandria, Va., and Don Sharer of
Mansfield, Texas -- and the wife and daughter of another hostage, Barry
Rosen, from New York City. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those
who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society
against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be
destroyed, and tolerance with them. … We should therefore claim, in the name
of tolerance, the right not to tolerate the intolerant.  –Sir Karl Popper



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