Crime | Guantanamo Bay Probe Launched After Gitmo Lawyers Bare Secret CIA Pics By Mat Probasco Posted Aug 21, 2009 1:19 AM CDT Copied Chinese ethnic Uighur Guantanamo detainees, who are cleared for release but with no country to go to, show a protest note to visiting members of the media. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley, Pool) The Justice Department is seeking to determine if military defense attorneys for Guantanamo Bay detainees broke the law protecting classified material by showing prisoners photographs of covert CIA officers and contractors, reports the Washington Post. Three lawyers apparently used the photographs in an attempt to identify potential participants in abuses at secret US-run prisons worldwide. The photos, taken by the ACLU and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers' John Adams Project, included shots snapped without the subjects' knowledge, sometimes outside their homes. ACLU officials deny wrongdoing, saying the Justice Department's investigation is an intimidation tactic. The photos, and government investigation, reveal how aggressively both sides are attacking the debate over alleged prisoner abuses. Read These Next Gene Simmons says Congress has to fix the radio business model. The Amazon-USPS partnership could soon be coming to a close. Looks like we have a date for the Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce nuptials. Pamela Anderson would rather not be known as Pamela Anderson. Report an error