Kessler criticized the Justice Department for filing a motion last Friday to hold the trial almost completely behind closed doors, arguing that the request “appears to have been deliberately made on short notice.” She continued, “[O]ne of the strongest pillars of our system of justice in the United States is the presumption that all judicial proceedings are open to the public whom the judiciary serves.”

The case pertains to Abu Wa’el Dhiab, a Syrian man currently who has been held at the U.S. military’s offshore prison since 2002, despite being cleared for release in 2009. Dhiab, who has been on hunger strike off and on for years to protest the conditions of his confinement, is suing the Obama administration for torturous force-feeding practices, which include: forcible removal from his cell to force-feedings by a squad of soldiers donning riot gear; painful tube insertions; and use of a painful restraint chair for the process, according to a statement from Reprieve, the UK-based legal charity representing him. Dhiab’s hearing is slated to take place next Monday and Tuesday in Washington, DC, and expert witnesses are to testify on the man’s abuse.

The government argues that the trial must be held completely behind closed doors, except for opening statements, to protect “national security.” But Dhiab’s lawyers say this argument reeks of a cover-up. “The was a brazen attempt by the Obama Administration to shut the American people out of their own courtroom,”  said Cori Crider, Reprieve director and one of Mr. Dhiab’s attorneys. “And how sad to see our Justice Department deliberately undermining one of the central pillars of our democracy: open justice.”

This is not the first time the U.S. government has sought to hide information about Dhiab’s case. The White House has fought to hide video recordings of the force-feedings of Dhiab and other men held captive at Guantanamo. Dhiab was the first of these prisoners to legally challenge the Obama administration on the videos, resulting in a partial win: Dhiab’s lawyers from Reprieve were permitted to view the tapes, but their content remains classified, effectively gagging the tapes’ viewers. Kessler has agreed with the government’s argument that these videos can remain hidden from the public, which, in the words of Guardian journalist Spencer Ackerman, means “the most graphic depictions of the force-feedings will remain hidden from view.”

Sixteen major media organizations filed suit in June calling for the public release of the videos on first amendment grounds. In a recent article, Dhiab’s wife Umm Wa’el joined in the call for disclosure of the tapes. She wrote:

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