Houston Chronicle

U.S. to change rules for no-fly list removal

- By Eileen Sullivan ASSOCIATED PRE SS

WASHINGTON — The Obama administra­tion is promising to change the way travelers can ask to be removed from its no-fly list of suspected terrorists banned from air travel.

The decision comes after a federal judge’s ruling that there was no meaningful way to challenge the designatio­n, a situation deemed unconstitu­tional. In response, the Justice Department said the U.S. will change the process during the next six months. As of late last summer, about 48,000 people were on the no-fly list.

The government’s policy is never to confirm or deny that a person actually is on the no-fly list, citing national security concerns. In most instances, travelers assume they are on the list because they are instructed to go through additional screening at airports or because they are told they can’t board their flights to, from or within the United States.

The no-fly list is one of the government’s most controvers­ial post- 9/11 counterter­rorism programs because of its lack of due process, long criticized because people cannot know why they were placed on the list and lack a way to fight the decision.

“It’s long past time for the government to revamp its general procedures,” said Hina Shamsi, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union.

Shamsi is among the attorneys who represent 13 plaintiffs who sued the federal government over the current policy, saying it violates their constituti­onal right to due process. Earlier this summer, a federal judge in Portland, Ore., agreed with them. The Portland case is one of five around the country challengin­g some aspect of the terror watch lists.

So far, the government is offering few details about upcoming changes. In a court filing earlier this month, it said it will “endeavor to increase transparen­cy for certain individual­s denied boarding who believe they are on the No Fly List.”

The appeals process, known as redress, was started in 2007. The government receives tens of thousands of applicatio­ns a year, according to court documents.

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