Opinio Juris Want to Prosecute the Lawyers? Cite Ministries — Not the Justice Case.
Not an area of law that I have studied, but Heller is an expert.
Opinio Juris Want to Prosecute the Lawyers? Cite Ministries — Not the Justice Case.
Not an area of law that I have studied, but Heller is an expert.
An important part of the war crimes defense strategy employed by US torturers has been to plead advice of counsel. This modern version of the 'just following orders' defense has had two strands. Both are unraveling.
As regards the front-line officials who actually laid hands (or insects, as the case may be) on detainees and tortured them, the somewhat plausible claim has been that they were not lawyers, that they were entitled to rely on opinions of the OLC, and that it would be wrong to punish them for trusting the Justice Department.
There are two problems with this argument:
There is less controversy about the higher-ups, the folks who wrote the (shoddy) opinions and gave the (criminal) orders. They don't get to plead advice of counsel. We see the outlines of a different plea in today's news — an ignorance defense. Ignorance of history, that is. That isn't going to work. It isn't going to work because the legal opinions are an internal failure: they are shoddy work, unconvincing, lacking all craft. This was obvious to anyone with any legal training. (See, for example, my instant analysis of one of these reports at Apologia Pro Tormento: Analyzing the First 56 Pages of the Walker Working Group Report (aka the Torture Memo), back in June 2004.)
It also isn't going to work because, it now emerges, the recipient of those CYA memos evinced guilty knowledge. Until now we'd been led to believe that the people in the highest reaches of the White House, the Defense Department, the Justice Department were either stupid enough (Gonzales) or venal enough (Rumsfeld) or crazy enough (Cheney) to believe (or make themselves believe) that the sheaf of torture memos represented a genuine, or at least plausible, legal analysis, a conclusion buttressed by Bush administration groupthink enforced by the systematic exclusion of anyone who might raise a dissenting voice.
Well, turns out it wasn't quite that simple. In Foreign Policy Philip Zelikow, counselor at the Department of State from 2005-07, writes that he offered a cautionary account — and it was suppressed:
I first gained access to the OLC memos and learned details about CIA's program for high-value detainees shortly after the set of opinions were issued in May 2005. I did so as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's policy representative to the NSC Deputies Committee on these and other intelligence/terrorism issues.
…
At the time, in 2005, I circulated an opposing view of the legal reasoning. My bureaucratic position, as counselor to the secretary of state, didn't entitle me to offer a legal opinion. But I felt obliged to put an alternative view in front of my colleagues at other agencies, warning them that other lawyers (and judges) might find the OLC views unsustainable. My colleagues were entitled to ignore my views. They did more than that: The White House attempted to collect and destroy all copies of my memo. I expect that one or two are still at least in the State Department's archives.
If the White House had truly believed its legal position was secure, it would not have sought to suppress a dissenting voice. It would be interesting to know who saw the Zelikow memo, and who exactly sought to suppress it. This attempt to flush the truth down a memory hole will not look good should the perpetrator ever find himself or herself in front of a Spanish war crimes tribunal.
Incidentally, for those who harbored the irrational hope that US torture policies at the CIA, Abu Grahib, and Guantanamo were not in fact centrally directed and highly connected, have a look at the Senate Armed Services Committee's latest report on torture which connects all the dots back to the White House and to Rumsfeld.
Emptywheel » Khalid Sheikh Mohammed Was Waterboarded 183 Times in One Month.
I cannot get my mind around how anyone can seriously argue that this isn't certain to happen again unless some people are tried and convicted for these acts of torture.
And, may I add, I'm pretty sick of the NYT's pussyfooting around the word “torture” when it rights writes about this. [Spell check issue, or subconscious editorializing about NYT's politics?]
A far-right, Barack Obama-hating Baptist preacher had a bad encounter with the Border Patrol and made a video about it: Baptist pastor beaten & tazed by Border patrol – 11 stitches.
Maybe the guys who who beat and tased him were operating under advice of counsel? (But seriously, I bet it's only a matter of time before Fox or someone says this is proof that Obama is Hitler or something.)
Don't use this as a model with how to deal with a traffic stop: If law enforcement tell you you're under arrest — which must have happened at some point, although when isn't clear — one should get out of the car if told to. Or even if told to before arrest. Sue them later. (It's ok to ask if one is required to do so or if one is free to go. But if the officer says you're required to comply, do so — and get their name.)
And, even absent arrest, if there's probable cause for a search — like a dog alert — then law enforcement have the right under current law to search the car. Problem here is that there's a fairly credible allegation that the 'dog alert' may have been a fake. As the law stands, however, that doesn't give one a right to resist arrest. It sure sounds like it would have been wiser to get out of the car one the police showed up, at the latest. But it also sounds like despite the Pastor's charming belief that the 4th amendment applied, or would have protected him even if it did, there were several unjustified acts that could serve well for claims of police brutality.
Why do the “Border Patrol” get to set up checkpoints 75 miles from the border? Because in United States vs. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 543 (1976), the Supreme Court said they could go up to 100 miles from the border. Which includes pretty the entire state of Florida, since most of it is within 100 miles of the coast!
It's not just a Florida problem. Here's the ACLU:
Much of U.S. population affected
- Many Americans and Washington policymakers believe that this is a problem confined to the San Diego-Tijuana border or the dusty sands of Arizona or Texas, but these powers stretch far inland across the United States.
- To calculate what proportion of the U.S. population is affected by these powers, the ACLU created a map and spreadsheet showing the population and population centers that lie within 100 miles of any “external boundary” of the United States.
- The population estimates were calculated by examining the most recent US census numbers for all counties within 100 miles of these borders. Using numbers from the Population Distribution Branch of the US Census Bureau, we were able to estimate both the total number and a state-by-state population breakdown. The custom map was created with help from a map expert at World Sites Atlas.
- What we found is that fully TWO-THIRDS of the United States’ population lives within this Constitution-free or Constitution-lite Zone. That’s 197.4 million people who live within 100 miles of the US land and coastal borders.
- Nine of the top 10 largest metropolitan areas as determined by the 2000 census, fall within the Constitution-free Zone. (The only exception is #9, Dallas-Fort Worth.) Some states are considered to lie completely within the zone: Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont.
The ACLU has obtained four critical OLC torture memos as a result of a FOIA request. [link corrected, sorry about that]
Glen Greenwald has some key excerpts.
They are simply disgusting.
President Obama's statement accompanying the release states, “this is a time for reflection, not retribution.”
He's right.
Retribution should not begin until you've finished throwing up.
There's been a lot about this liberal Republican administration's economic and imperial policy that I have found hard to swallow, but credit where credit is due, they didn't promise to be any different, and in one important respect an important Democratic promise is being kept: CIA shuts down its secret prisons.
The US has stopped running its global network of secret prisons, CIA director Leon Panetta has announced.
“CIA no longer operates detention facilities or black sites,” Mr Panetta said in a letter to staff. Remaining sites would be decommissioned, he said.
The “black sites” were used to detain terrorism suspects, some of whom were subjected to interrogation methods described by many as torture.
Please don't tell me that the no-longer-very-secret secret prisons are going to be replaced by really secret prisons.