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The documents are copies of files destroyed in 2007 under a previous order that led to protests from lawmakers and legal experts, who said the government had undermined the prosecution in the smuggling case. The copies were found in prosecutors' archives in December 2008. Less sensitive documents, such as those dealing with uranium enrichment, were ordered kept under high security at the Federal Justice Department. The government said investigators, prosecutors, courts and the Tinner family's lawyers would be able to view them under tight restrictions, but the documents would be destroyed at the end of legal proceedings. A report this week by a Washington-based think tank found the Swiss authorities, the CIA and the Tinners were all responsible for failing to limit the spread of nuclear weapon technology and know-how. The Institute for Science and International Security's report particularly pointed blame at Swiss justice and U.S. intelligence officials for their failure to cooperate. It also says the Tinners persuaded businesses to make parts for machines without knowing their true purpose. Mueller said the shredding of files had complicated an already complex case and made it harder to piece together a complete picture of the Tinners' alleged involvement in the Khan ring. Switzerland's highest criminal court has criticized the government for opting to destroy further evidence and said it was disappointed not to be informed earlier. Complicating the case further are claims by Urs Tinner that he supplied the CIA with information that led to the breakup of Khan's network. In a recent documentary, Tinner told Swiss TV he tipped off U.S. intelligence about a delivery of centrifuge parts meant for Libya. The shipment was seized at the Italian port of Taranto in 2003, forcing Libya to admit and eventually renounce its efforts to acquire nuclear weapons. Former Swiss Justice Minister Christoph Blocher said the government decided to destroy the original documents after he refused in 2007 an American request to hand over thousands of the files. Urs Tinner was released in December 2008 after almost five years in investigative detention and has yet to be charged. A Swiss parliamentary panel has investigated the government-ordered shredding of thousands of files of evidence in the case The Khan network was disrupted when Western intelligence agencies intercepted the centrifuge parts meant for Libya's nuclear weapons program.
[Associated
Press;
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