NATIONAL
January 4, 2008 | By Richard B. Schmitt and Greg Miller, Times Staff Writers
More than two years before the CIA destroyed interrogation videotapes, top officials were urged to preserve them by a senior lawmaker who warned that disposing of the recordings would "reflect badly on the agency." The warning came in a February 2003 letter from Rep. Jane Harman of Venice, then the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee.
NATIONAL
January 17, 2008 | By Greg Miller, Times Staff Writer
A senior House Republican said information gathered by the House Intelligence Committee indicated that a high-ranking CIA official ordered the destruction of videotapes depicting agency interrogation sessions even though he was directed not to do so. The remark by Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) contradicts previous accounts that suggested that Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., the CIA official who ordered the tapes destroyed, was never instructed to preserve them.
NATIONAL
January 25, 2008 | From the Associated Press
A federal judge said Thursday that CIA interrogation videotapes may have been relevant to a case he's presiding over, and he gave the Bush administration three weeks to explain why they were destroyed in 2005 and say whether other evidence was destroyed. Several judges are considering wading into the dispute over the videos, but U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts was the first to demand a written report on the matter.
WORLD
February 1, 2008 | From the Associated Press
Denmark will investigate claims that the CIA secretly used an airport on the Nordic country's remote Arctic territory of Greenland to transport prisoners in the Bush administration's war on terrorism, the Danish prime minister said Thursday. Denmark began investigating reports in 2005 that the CIA had quietly touched down on its territory as part of the agency's "extraordinary rendition" program.
NATIONAL
February 2, 2008 | By Greg Miller, Times Staff Writer
The CIA's internal investigative branch will be subjected to a series of new checks and controls designed to give targets of in-house probes greater ability to defend themselves, CIA Director Michael V. Hayden said in a statement to the agency's employees. Among the changes is the creation of two positions to oversee the work of the CIA's inspector general, including a "quality control officer" charged with monitoring the inspector's handling of evidence and testimony.
NATIONAL
February 6, 2008 | By Greg Miller, Times Staff Writer
CIA Director Michael V. Hayden said publicly for the first time Tuesday that his agency had used the harsh interrogation technique known as waterboarding on three Al Qaeda suspects, and he testified that depriving the agency of coercive methods would "increase the danger to America."
NATIONAL
February 7, 2008 | By Richard B. Schmitt, Times Staff Writer
Justice Department attorneys apparently have known since early 2006 that the CIA destroyed videotaped interrogations of a key terror suspect, federal court documents unsealed Wednesday showed. The disclosure that at least two prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office in Alexandria, Va., were apparently aware of the agency's actions raises new questions about a matter now under investigation by a special Justice Department prosecutor.
NATIONAL
February 14, 2008 | By Greg Miller, Times Staff Writer
In a sharp rebuke to the White House, the Senate passed legislation Wednesday that would impose sweeping new restrictions on interrogation methods used by the CIA and ban a widely condemned technique known as waterboarding, in which a prisoner is made to feel he is drowning. President Bush is expected to veto the bill, which would outlaw an array of coercive interrogation tactics that U.S. allies have denounced but the administration has said are crucial to prevent terrorist attacks.
ENTERTAINMENT
February 21, 2008 | By Josh Getlin, Times Staff Writer
The deal Paul Haggis and Michael Nozik with Hwy61 Films, based at Paramount, option Joseph Weisberg's "An Ordinary Spy," a novel about the realities of day-to-day work in the CIA, and the emotional damage participants can wreak on each other. The players Haggis ("Crash" and "Million Dollar Baby") and Nozik ("Syriana" and "Love in the Time of Cholera") producing; Stephen Nathan to write the screenplay. Weisberg, a former CIA agent, is represented on literary rights by David McCormick with the McCormick & Williams literary agency and on film rights by Creative Artists Agency.
WORLD
February 22, 2008 | By Kim Murphy, Times Staff Writer
The British government acknowledged Thursday that it had been misled when it pledged to Parliament that British territory had never been used for controversial CIA flights transporting terrorism suspects, after the U.S. revealed that two such flights occurred in 2002. The revelations sparked an outcry in Parliament, which had long voiced suspicions that the much-criticized and highly secretive rendition flights had refueled in British territories.