Wednesday, May 12, 2004

The prisoner videos

In the Senate hearings, Chairman Warner said a couple of times that they were still deciding whether to make the videos and other "much worse" photographs available to the public, and Scott McClellan repeatedly told reporters in press briefings that that would be up to the Pentagon.

In a Billmon commenter thread last night, there was talk of the impact of the timing of these videos coming out on the November election. I questioned whether they might not come out before November, due to the fact that there were now official trials set. (And brought it up on an earlier post here.) I speculated that an attorney for anyone involved might well claim any remaining photographs and videos as evidence and wondered if that wouldn't lock them away from public scrutiny until after all trials were complete. Only one person had any comment on that, and it was "no way - those photos will come out, and soon."

Well, this evening I heard a blurb on BBC News that, in fact, they won't be made public, according to a Pentagon announcement. And the reason was exactly the one I suggested - trial prejudice.