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45 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 668 (2013-2014)
CIPA Creep: The Classified Information Procedures Act and Its Drift into Civil National Security Litigation

handle is hein.journals/colhr45 and id is 683 raw text is: CIPA CREEP:
THE CLASSIFIED INFORMATION
PROCEDURES ACT AND ITS DRIFT INTO
CIVIL NATIONAL SECURITY LITIGATION
Ian MacDougall
This Note documents an incipient trend in the courts and
Congress, which I call CIPA creep, and investigates its implications
for civil national security litigation. CIPA-the Classified Information
Procedures Act-governs the use of classified information in federal
criminal cases. No comparable statute exists in the civil context, where
the judge-made state secrets privilege determines whether litigants
may use sensitive government information. The prevailing scholarly
and popular accounts hold that this privilege, in the tense post-9/11
security environment, transformed from a narrow evidentiary rule into
a non-justiciability doctrine that cedes to executive branch officials the
power to win dismissal of meritorious claims by asserting that
litigation might implicate state secrets. CIPA creep is a reaction to
that trend. Specifically, it describes efforts, by members of Congress
and some federal judges, to import CIPA into the civil context to
facilitate the litigation of cases that might otherwise face dismissal on
a broad interpretation of the state secrets privilege. This Note collects,
traces, and explicates those efforts.
I. INTRODUCTION                         .............................................669
II. SECRET EVIDENCE, PUBLIC TRIALS      ..................... ......673
A. Graymail Legislation: CIPA's Fraught Origins......      .....674
*    J.D. Candidate 2014, Columbia Law School. Thanks to Professor Robert
Ferguson and Samantha Fox for comments on drafts and to Professor Philip
Bobbitt, Professor Jamal Greene, the Hon. Debra Livingston, and Aijun Jaikumar
for helpful conversations. Special thanks to Beatrice Franklin for incisive edits
and to the Columbia Human Rights Law Review staff for additional editorial
assistance. Any errors or infelicities are mine and mine alone. Professor David
Pozen shepherded this Note from its earliest incarnation to its final stages. He
has been both an indispensable guide and, with respect to this Note and beyond,
an invaluable mentor. To him most of all, I owe a deep debt of gratitude.

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