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Big brother's qualifications...



Administration picks disgraced judge for Homeland Security
By Michael J. Sniffen and Leslie Miller, Associated Press  |  July 28, 2004
WASHINGTON (AP) A key overseer of the Bush administration's unsuccessful
efforts to create a more comprehensive screening process for airline
passengers resigned in disgrace four years ago from the New Hampshire
Supreme Court to avoid prosecution over his conduct on the bench.

W. Stephen Thayer III, who left New Hampshire's high court in 2000 under a
deal with prosecutors, is now serving as deputy chief of the Transportation
Security Administration's Office of National Risk Assessment.
Thayer resurrected his public career with a stint at a conservative
political group in Washington before landing the job last summer where he
oversees the administration's Computer-Assisted Passenger Prescreening
System. The project encountered such technical difficulty and so much
resistance from privacy advocates that it was sent back to the drawing board
earlier this month.
The project, which was known as CAPPS II, was to develop software to bar any
passenger from getting on an airplane if a computer analysis of unidentified
government terrorist watchlists and private commercial electronic records
judged him or her to be a security threat. The project has been sharply
criticized by congressional auditors.
The administration's selection of Thayer made with no fanfare last summer
has raised some eyebrows.
''To appoint someone who had to resign in public disgrace in lieu of being
indicted is incredibly offensive,'' said Charles Lewis, executive director
the Center for Public Integrity, a private ethics watchdog. CAPPS II has
been ''one of the most sensitive projects in the U.S. government,'' because
''we are talking about data-mining the records of millions of Americans. The
people in charge have got to be beyond reproach in every way.''
Thayer declined to be interviewed.
But TSA spokesman Mark Hatfield said Thayer was qualified for the job
because he helped the American Conservative Union organize a task force with
other conservative and liberal groups, including the American Civil
Liberties Union, to lobby on the government's handling of citizens' personal
information, including CAPPS II.
''That was as direct involvement in that field as you can get,'' Hatfield
said.
Hatfield said the New Hampshire controversy was reviewed by those who
appointed Thayer and posed no bar to his getting the federal job because no
charges were filed and no action was taken against him by the state judicial
conduct committee or the bar association.
''He faced the allegations for a significant time and significant cost and
at some point he chose to withdraw from the battle as it was in the best
interests of himself and his family,'' Hatfield said.
Months behind schedule, the two-year-old CAPPS II was sharply criticized in
February by the Government Accountability Office, the auditing arm of
Congress, for failing to fully address seven of eight targets for accuracy,
privacy and security.
Concerned that the program would invade privacy and leave air travelers with
no way of correcting its errors, Congress has prohibited the program's
deployment until those benchmarks are met. Earlier this month,
Transportation Security Administration chief David Stone told Congress the
program is being ''reshaped and repackaged.''
Thayer's fast-moving legal career U.S. attorney at 35, state supreme court
justice at 40 came to an abrupt halt March 31, 2000, when he resigned from
the state's highest court in a deal with New Hampshire Attorney General
Philip McLaughlin.
In return for Thayer's resignation, McLaughlin agreed to drop plans to
indict him. In a public report, McLaughlin criticized Thayer for
participating in deliberations on a case he was recused from. He also said
he would have sought felony or misdemeanor charges against Thayer for
allegedly trying to influence the choice of a judge to hear his wife's
appeal of their divorce and threatening fellow justices if they allowed his
conduct to be reported to judicial oversight groups.
McLaughlin's report said Supreme Court Justice John T. Broderick quoted
Thayer as saying if his conduct were reported to oversight groups ''I'm
done. It's over for me .... We all do it. We can either hang together on
this or hang separately.'' Chief Justice David Brock said Thayer told him,
''I'm not going to hang alone.''
Thayer insisted at the time, ''I committed no criminal act.'' But McLaughlin
had decided to seek the criminal indictment when Thayer volunteered to
resign.
Two years after the episode, McLaughlin wrote Thayer in December 2002 and
cited Thayer's reputation for scholarship and fairness as a judge. He added
that during the investigation, Thayer acted ''in a most professional,
forthright and honest manner.'' But McLaughlin did not back off his
findings, noting his report ''will be a matter of public record forever.''
In a rare public appearance last fall, Thayer did not supply a biography
like other witnesses who testified before a Pentagon advisory committee on
privacy and computerized data-mining.
When asked about his qualifications to supervise CAPPS II, Thayer said then
he had been executive director of a nonprofit group that reviewed privacy
rights in post-Sept. 11 legislation and was a lawyer and former U.S.
attorney. He made no mention of his 14 years on New Hampshire's highest
court.
On May 26, 2000, while trying to get his alimony and child support reduced
from almost $36,000 a year to $6,000 a year, he told a New Hampshire court
he had had trouble finding work after his Supreme Court resignation.
''Large law firms are not into risk. They do not want my name associated
with them so long as we have this kind of publicity in New Hampshire,'' he
said, according to the Portsmouth, N.H., Herald



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