Monthly Archives: June 2004

Govern from Strength if You Can

Mark Schmitt, the Decembrist (a blog I like a lot) has advice for John Kerry about Negotiating With the Republicans, which amounts to, 'be a centrist, divide the Republican party'.

Brad DeLong, thinking like a smart White House staffer, thinks it is Good Advice. I beg to differ: it may be good January 2005 advice but it is rotten June 2004 advice.

I suspect that Brad's political reflexes were fixed by his service in the Clinton administration. Clinton never governed like he had a mandate (arguably, because he didn't have much of one the first time). He triangulated. He fogged about. He appointed Republicans as judges, and many Democrats who might as well have been Republicans. But that's a rotten way to govern if you have a choice when the other side uses a different play book. And Presidents early in their terms often do have a choice—even if they don't have a majority in either or both houses—so long as they can persuade Congress that they have a mandate, or create political conditions such that Congresspeople are unwilling to cross the President (think about why so many Democrats voted for Bush tax cuts).

Clinton exposed the mushiness of his political spine and his inability to use what political capital he had in the first days of his Presidency when he backed down on gay rights in the military. The signal to Congress was clear—if the guys who have a legal duty to salute and obey their commander in chief could roll the guy, there was no reason at all to give him an inch. He reaped the reward in the health care debate (OK, there were other good reasons [can you say “IRA”?] why it died, too). Clinton rarely if ever punished his enemies in Congress. He wasn't good enough at rewarding his friends, either. But that doesn't have to be the script for Kerry.

Suppose Kerry wins by a landslide — it could happen. Suppose he runs a campaign which is about restoring honor and decency to the White House, about repudiation of torture, sleaze, special interests, and, say, his limited health care plan. There's no reason to compromise on whatever he makes his signature issues. Certainly there's no reason to surrender preemptively now, before the votes are counted. Plenty of time for compromises later.

That said, if there issues where Kerry genuinely has a wedge in the Republican party, such as deficit reduction, by all means campaign on it and use it. But don't give up stuff we care about—until January at the earliest.

Posted in Politics: US | 5 Comments

Hiibel Loses 5-4 On Narrowest Grounds

Hiibel lost today, 5-4, but on narrower grounds than you'd guess from reading the case summary which says baldly that he lost on both 4th and 5th Amendment grounds. It's pretty much a disaster on the 4th, but the 5th is only a part disaster. Most importantly, the Court punted on the issue of whether the 5th Amendment would apply if the suspect really had something to hide. Justice Kennedy's majority opinion says that since Hiibel had not only nothing to hide but no reason to think he did, he can't take the 5th.

Of course there's a catch-22 there: if you can only assert the 5th when you are guilty, or near guilty, or reasonably fearful you are guilty, that suggests the cops ought to be investigating you, which pretty much undermines the privilege.

But at least the issue survives, however mangled, for another day.

The dissents are here and here.

One down, six to go….

Update: I forgot to mention that although the media will say the case states that “police can require IDs” what it actually states is that legislatures can require suspects to tell police their names (not 'show ID'—the majority states that the statute at issue is satisfied by an oral statement) when the police have a reasonable suspicion that a crime has been committed, the person is relevant, and are investigating it. The distinction will undoubtedly be lost on the ground, and erased by subsequent cases, but it's there for now.

Posted in ID Cards and Identification | 2 Comments

Supreme Court To Decide Major Cases Soon

As is commonly the case, the Supreme Court has left most of its major decisions for the end of the term. This year, however there are a greater number of important cases, with more major consequences, than usual. Some will likely be decided today or tomorrow.

There are seven cases I'm watching with particular interest.

Freedom and Republican Government

1. Cheney v. U.S. District Court has to do with the Congress's powers to force disclosure by the Executive, in this case who attended Vice President's Cheney's secret meetings with oil executives in which they mapped out US energy policy. A finding for the Executive would advance the Royalist vision of the executive; a finding for Congress would preserve the status quo, or maybe eliminate some doubt about whether Congress really has the authority it has claimed for at least a generation. There are also many ways to split the baby. [Decided 6/24]

2. Ashcroft v. ACLU is a First Amendment challenge to the Child Online Protection Act. There's some justice on both sides, but were the court to rule that web publishers must require their readers to prove their age before being allowing them to view any web pages that might infringe the vague “harmful to minors” standard, it would transform the Internet into gated communities…or drive web sites abroad. Again, there are ways the court could punt, too, and I wouldn't be shocked by yet another remand in this torturous case. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court has a tendency to lose patience at some point with cases that bounce up and down and try to decide them. That could be ugly.

3. I've written previously about Hiibel v. 6th Judicial Dist. Court of Nevada, calling it a case to watch. I'm watching this one with particular interest, since it will have so much impact on any potential US law on national ID cards. [Decided 6/21]

The biggest cases, however, have to do with four wars: the War on Drugs, the War on Terror, the War in Afghanistan and the War in Iraq.

Of these cases, three will help define how decent a country we are. But one, the most important of all, will decide whether or not we are still a free country. Sound melodramatic? I wish it were.

Decency

4. If the US invades a foreign country, kidnaps a foreign national, drags him back to the US to try him on charges of aiding the murder of a US DEA agent, but it's all a ghastly mistake and he's acquitted for lack of evidence, can he sue for damages and false imprisonment? If the relevant statute applies to domestic conduct only, do we look to where the kidnaping happened (Mexico) or where it was planned (Washington) as the relevant place for deciding if the statute applies? Those are some of the questions in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain and U.S. v. Alvarez-Machain. Another is the Royalist claim that Congress lacks the authority to make rules restricting the Executive Branch's kidnaping of foreigners abroad on the theory that this would infringe the President's foreign affairs powers, and harm the War on Terrorism.

5. Rasul v. Bush and Al Odah v. U.S put the decency and Presidential power issues in starker terms, as they challenge the claim that our government can create an anything-goes zone in Guantanamo Bay, free from any judicial interference or review—even a writ of habeas corpus—a writ which can only be suspended in wartime, and which has not been suspended since the Civil War. An underlying issue is the extent to which the US Navy station in Guantanamo is inside or outside US jurisdiction given that Cuba retains formal sovereignty—but not other power or control whatsoever so long as the US uses the territory for a naval base. Prior relevant posts on these cases in my Guantanamo section, especially these:

6. Then there's the odd case of Hamdi v. Rumsfeld. Hamdi is a US citizen captured in Afghanistan, some disputed distance from if not actually on the field of battle. Our government labeled him an “enemy combatant,” said he had neither the rights of a US citizen nor of a POW, and has him on ice in solitary, in a military prison. It has not charged him with a crime, and claims no duty to do so. Here there's no question about jurisdiction for the a writ of habeas corpus since Hamdi is now in the US. What's at issue is whether the government's uncorroborated statement that Hamdi was “affiliated with a Taliban military unit and received weapons training” (note: not even 'took up arms against the US'!) is unquestionable and final, or if Hamdi gets a day in court. Again, the case raises question about the extent of executive power in “wartime”—especially since the War on Terror is a “war” that likely has no ending point.

The Big One

I think all the cases above matter a great deal. A bad decision in any of them — and given this court one has to expect some bad decisions in some of them — will make this country less free, less self-governing, or less decent. But none of these would be fatal to our democracy. The harms Hiibel might do could be undone by legislation; Hamdi perhaps less so, but at least the untrammeled hunting license it would create would only apply to US citizens abroad in, one hopes, battlefield or near-battlefield conditions. But Padilla is different.

7. I don't think the public really understands how much is at stake in Rumsfeld v. Padilla. I've written about it many times, but only recently worked out that the issue is even graver than I previously understood.

The basic question in Padilla is very simple: can the federal government grab a citizen off the street and hold them in a military prison without charging them with a crime, without giving them a hearing or a trial, without access to lawyers, family, friends. And, can it do it indefinitely. If the answer is yes it can, then our citizenship is devalued to nothing better than that of the citizens of Argentina during their military dictatorship, a period in which thousands disappeared into military jails, many never to emerge.

Does that sound over-wrought, given there's only one person so far, and he hasn't by all accounts, been tortured (other than being confined in solitary with no prospect of emerging) or killed? I don't think so for two reasons.

First, we don't call them “precedents” for nothing. If we set the precedent that people can be grabbed off the street, next time Ashcroft, or some future Ashcroft, or some horrible cross between Nixon, John Adams and Burr, won't bother going through the civilian justice system at all (which is how Padilla's case got attention — he was first held as an ordinary criminal, and it was only when the government realized it didn't have the evidence to try him that they decided to reclassify him as an enemy of the state illegal combatant, and put him in the brig). Next time, whenever that is, the victim will just vanish.

That's bad enough. But I don't think I understood how much was a stake until I read the Torture Memos. Those memos claim the right to legally inflict hideous intentional pain — what I and most people would call torture — on enemy combatants. That's right—on people whom this administration considers equivalent to Padilla. So the US government is not only asserting the right to Disappear people, but to torture them in secret as well.

It seems government lawyers have been having cold feet about the likelihood that the Supreme Court will endorse this argument. (Law clerks blabbing? Lawyers realizing how evil their arguments are? Cynics thinking the Justices will be influenced by the Iraq torture headlines?) And well they should, as it is despicable. It deserves to lose 9-0, although no one I know is bold enough to predict that will actually happen, myself included. Yet any vote in favor of the government's arguments is a vote for authoritarian government at best, and a blow to our freedom greater than anything even all the other cases above together could manage.

Were Padilla to lose, it would blow a hole in the Constitution, one that would take a constitutional amendment to fix. I am confident the Supreme Court will not take us there, but if I'm wrong about that, it's the start of a long, long fight.

Posted in Civil Liberties, Guantanamo, Law: Constitutional Law | 5 Comments

Intelligence Value of Guantanamo Detainees “Repeatedly Exaggerated”

Now that the Supreme Court is getting ready to rule any day now on a case in which a key part of the US case is the incredible military value of the Guantánamo Detainees, what do we learn…what we suspected…U.S. Said to Overstate Value of Guantánamo Detainees:

… an examination by The New York Times has found that government and military officials have repeatedly exaggerated both the danger the detainees posed and the intelligence they have provided. …

The problems of collecting information about the detainees have also hampered their screening for possible release. As a result, some of the men are being held apparently as much for what officials do not know about them as for what they do.

Continue reading

Posted in Guantanamo | Comments Off on Intelligence Value of Guantanamo Detainees “Repeatedly Exaggerated”

The Bush DC Circuit Nominee Who Neglected to Renew His License to Practice Law

I happen to think the bar exam is a little silly. I happen to think that the division of the Union into 54 or more jurisdictions that keep out lawyers from elsewhere is anti-competitive. I also understand the rules we have are formalities I better take seriously or I am in trouble, and make sure to renew my NY and DC bar memberships as soon as the notices come in — just to make sure I don't misplace them.

Looks like DC Circuit nominee Thomas B. Griffith didn't get that last part, leading the Washington Post to report that Judicial Nominee Practiced Law Without License in Utah.

Fundamentally, this is just careless. But it's the sort of carelessness in a lawyer, given our existing rules, that rises to pretty serious negligence. It suggests corner-cutting, or an attitude of being above the rules, or just general disorganization … any of which I think is sufficient reason to reject even an otherwise qualified nominee. Furthermore, practicing law without a license is usually a fairly serious offense in most states. In this case, though, there may be a dispute about the extent to which Mr. Griffith actually engaged in authorized practice or instead managed to cover himself with local counsel.

Unauthorized practice is a subject near and dear to my heart, as I practiced international law for three years in the London office of a US firm, without an English law degree and without being either a solicitor or barrister. Unlike the US, the UK allows that — the offense there is holding yourself out as something you are not. But even so, to the great amusement of my English colleagues, I refused to sign any letters that contained opinions on English law, even if I had done all the research and drafted them. My English supervisors signed them, laughing all the while at my American formalism and punctilio.

Of course, Republicans, who preached so much about the need for exacting regard for state formalies during the recount period in the last Presidential election, will undoubtedly be the first to take a similar approach, and to say that this nomination should not go forward.

(And I have a bridge to sell you.)

Posted in Law: Ethics | 1 Comment

The Marines Knew How to Do It Right

One thing I hear a fair amount1 is people saying that since the Iraqis/Arabs/whatevers are so inhuman to “us”, it's ok, indeed both just and desirable, for “us” to do “whatever it takes” or “give them what they deserve”. I take that to mean that because there are some vicious Islamic terrorist groups out there, and because some Arab governments repress their own peoples, it follows that the citizen-soldiers of our democracy should regress to bestiality either for retribution or deterrence. Neither one of which I find either persuasive or even palatable.

Our country's history offers a better lesson, documented in a wonderful New York Times story in today's paper, Enemies in the Heat of Battle, Friends for 60 Years.

The campaign to get the Japanese out of their caves on the islands near Japan was as brutal and vicious as any in the second world war. The Japanese were considered by many to be exceptionally vicious fighters who didn't always obey the laws of war (albeit more so in other theaters, those in which they had held the upper hand). Everything being said about Iraqis or Al Qaeda today was said about the Japanese sixty years ago, and worse.

Takeo Sato, then a Japanese officer, was part of the Japanese effort to defend Saipan, captured when part of his cave fell in due to naval shelling. He became the prisoner of Marine Lt. John Rich, who ultimately befriended his captive. When fortune found a demobilized Mr. Rich in Japan a few months after the war, he went to the homes of six POWs it had been his job to question, and told their families their sons were still alive. From this sprang an improbable but enduring friendship. Now Rich and his former prisoner, both in their eighties, are revisiting Saipan with their extended families.

It's hard to imagine that we'll be reading any stories like this about Iraq in our dotage. And therein lies part of the problem…

1 [Update: Here's Trent Lott in today's NYT Magazine:

You recently created a stir when you defended the interrogation techniques at Abu Ghraib.

Most of the people in Mississippi came up to me and said: “Thank Goodness. America comes first.” Interrogation is not a Sunday-school class. You don't get information that will save American lives by withholding pancakes.

But unleashing killer dogs on naked Iraqis is not the same as withholding pancakes.

I was amazed that people reacted like that. Did the dogs bite them? Did the dogs assault them? How are you going to get people to give information that will lead to the saving of lives?

Charming. (Incidentally the answers to the questions about the dogs are yes and yes.)]

Posted in Iraq Atrocities | 4 Comments