"On
request by a Judge, the Presiding Judge, after consulting with other
Judges of the Court, may direct that an Opinion be published. Before
publication, the Opinion must be reviewed by the
Executive Branch and redacted, as necessary, to ensure that properly
classified information is appropriately protected pursuant to Executive
Order 12958 as amended by Executive Order 13292 (or its successor)."
Under proposed Rule 62, the Executive Branch review requirement is now optional:
"The Judge who authored an order, opinion, or other decision may sua sponte
or on motion by a party request that it be published. Upon such
request, the Presiding Judge, after consulting with other Judges of the
Court, may direct that an order, opinion or other decision be
published. Before publication, the Court may, as appropriate, direct the Executive Branch to review
the order, opinion, or other decision and redact it as necessary to
ensure that classified information is appropriately protected pursuant
to Executive Order 13526 (or its successor)."
Just yesterday, the 9th circuit court of appeals preserved the executive branch's ability to assert the State Secrets Privilege in cases where national security could be jeopardized by even the discovery phase of a trial. The only consideration that mattered to the court is whether the information's release could actually damage national security. The court gave lip service to the idea that the executive and judicial branches were jointly and independently capable of making that decision, but it acknowledged that, for all intents and purposes, the executive branch would be very rarely second guessed. That makes the SSP absolute.









