Though there has been a clamour for the
Central Intelligence Agency to release secret images and videos of Al Qaeda's
Osama bin Laden's death, the agency wants to keep them classified and secret.
Now it appears a reluctant United States government might be forced into revealing some of the 52 graphic photos thanks to a lawsuit filed by an activist group.
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The government is legally obliged to respond to the Judicial Watch lawsuit, the
Daily Mail quoted a former top privacy official, as claiming.
Dan Metcalfe, director, former justice department office of information and privacy, told
The Atlantic Wire he had looked closely at the brief. "It in effect concedes that there are reasonably segregable, non-exempt
portions of the records that are legally required to be disclosed," he was quoted, as saying.
The "graphic" images include "post-mortem images of Osama's body", CIA National Clandestine Service director John Bennett wrote in September. "They depict the fatal bullet wound to Bin Laden''s head and other similarly gruesome images of his corpse,' he added, reported
ABC News.
Judicial Watch filed the lawsuit through a Freedom of Information request three days after Osama bin Laden was killed by Navy SEALs in Pakistan.
The CIA, however, is worried that if any photos are released they could be inflammatory by inspiring terror attacks on US targets by other extremists.
Bin Laden was buried at sea following Muslim traditions to avoid creating a shrine to his extremist followers.
Privacy expert Metcalfe said US President Barack Obama went too far in trying to keep all of the death images of Bin Laden a secret.