The Rule Of Law

by hilzoy

Via a diary at dKos, ABC has this story:

“Leaked emails from two former prosecutors claim the military commissions set up to try detainees at Guantanamo Bay are rigged, fraudulent, and thin on evidence against the accused. Two emails, which have been obtained by the ABC, were sent to supervisors in the Office of Military Commissions in March of last year – three months before Australian detainee David Hicks was charged and five months before his trial began.

The first email is from prosecutor Major Robert Preston to his supervisor. Maj Preston writes that the process is perpetrating a fraud on the American people, and that the cases being pursued are marginal.

“I consider the insistence on pressing ahead with cases that would be marginal even if properly prepared to be a severe threat to the reputation of the military justice system and even a fraud on the American people,” Maj Preston wrote. “Surely they don’t expect that this fairly half-arsed effort is all that we have been able to put together after all this time.”

Maj Preston says he cannot continue to work on a process he considers morally, ethically and professionally intolerable. “I lie awake worrying about this every night,” he wrote. “I find it almost impossible to focus on my part of mission. After all, writing a motion saying that the process will be full and fair when you don’t really believe it is kind of hard, particularly when you want to call yourself an officer and lawyer.” Maj Preston was transferred out of the Office of Military Commissions less than a month later.

The second email is written by another prosecutor, Captain John Carr, who also ended up leaving the department. Capt Carr says the commissions appear to be rigged.

“When I volunteered to assist with this process and was assigned to this office, I expected there would at least be a minimal effort to establish a fair process and diligently prepare cases against significant accused,” he wrote. “Instead, I find a half-hearted and disorganised effort by a skeleton group of relatively inexperienced attorneys to prosecute fairly low-level accused in a process that appears to be rigged.”

Capt Carr says that the prosecutors have been told by the chief prosecutor that the panel sitting in judgment on the cases would be handpicked to ensure convictions. “You have repeatedly said to the office that the military panel will be handpicked and will not acquit these detainees and that we only needed to worry about building a record for the review panel,” he said.” (…)

But the Pentagon’s Brigadier General Thomas Hemingway, who is a legal advisor to the military commissions, says an investigation has found the comments are based on miscommunication, misunderstanding and personality conflicts. He says changes have been made in the prosecutors’ office.

“I think what we did is work on some restructuring in the office, there was some changes in the way cases were processed, but we found no evidence of any criminal misconduct, we found no evidence of any ethical violations,” he said.

Why am I not surprised?

20 thoughts on “The Rule Of Law”

  1. Ah, hilzoy, such understatement.
    In the preface to Molly Ivins’ and Lou DuBose’s most recent book, Bushwhacked, they wrote:

    Our biggest problem with the Bush administration is that for us it’s déjà vu all over again. We spent six years watching the man as governor of Texas, the basis for our 1999 book, Shrub. We were tempted to begin this book by observing, “If y’all had’ve read the first book, we wouldn’t’ve had to write this one.” Cooler heads prevailed.

    How many examples do we need? Extraordinary rendition, the (lack of) response to abuses, Valerie Plame, Terri Schiavo, and now the military commissions. Can anyone pretend to be surprised any longer? Perhaps CharleyCarp or one of our other lawyer friends can tell us whether this constitutes a “pattern and practice”?

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  2. The Courts tell Bush and friends to follow the law, so they respond by rigging the system. This is one aspect of a widespread pattern to simply refuse to provide any process even if the courts order it. Why not since in their world, the President can have detainees tortured if he feels like it.
    Freedom is on the March. We are spreading democracy.
    Vomitous hypocrisy.

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  3. Thomas More once advised Thomas Cranmer, “You must ever tell the King what he can do, only what he should do.” Meaning, don’t remind the King that his power is absolute.
    Cranmer didn’t follow More’s advice. What was he thinking? Maybe he enjoyed setting loose the whirlwind to see what would happen. Maybe he thought he could be the bow to Henry’s arrow, using all that power for himself. Maybe he just got vicarious satisfaction from seeing absolute power exercised – on other people, always on other people, never thinking it would ever be directed against him.
    He was wrong about that, too.
    What I fear is that we can’t unknow what we know. The genie is out of the bottle: a President and his Administration and his Party can violate every norm of American values and law; and they can not only get away with it, but be rewarded – with re-election, with fawning worship, with rock-star screams of adulation.
    This is something we may always have suspected, but hoped never to see realized. We thought our institutions, our carefully-wrought system of checks and balances, would prevent it. We never expected to see the system dismantled so effortlessly, and have our noses rubbed into our failure to preserve it.
    Bush’s falling approval numbers don’t comfort me at all. I have no idea what his Administration will come up with next. I honestly don’t know whether, having attained as absolute and unfettered a regime as they’ve built, they’ll be willing to let go of it. Why would they? What’s in it for them?
    Because that seems to be the bottom line for those people: what’s in it for them?
    I don’t know how we get out of this.

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  4. they hate us for our freedoms
    Of course, we didn’t realise that when Bush used that line he was talking about himself and his administration in the third person.

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  5. “can we impeach them yet?”
    Barney Frank says wait til we start withdrawing from Iraq. As troops are in transit home, much harder for Commander Codpiece to kill a few thousand as a political diversion.
    On the other hand, with these people, I have always felt safer at home with so many well-trained torturers and door-busters safely overseas.

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  6. We “can” impeach them. We certainly have the grounds to. No just impeachment, but conviction and removal from office.
    But we won’t. Not with the GOP in charge of House and Senate.
    And even if the Dems take one or both chambers in ’06, the MSM will say that impeachment is too destabilizing, musn’t a have a Constitutional Crisis while we’re at war, etc. etc. etc.

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  7. Capt. Awesome, Thoreau:
    ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT EUROPA. ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE.
    Now be nice, or I’ll turn you into a couple of Star Fetuses.

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  8. Oh, dear — ignore that, it was me. I had two tabs open next to each other, and pasted it in the wrong one. It was meant for here. Although out of context, it’s much, much funnier.

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  9. From the NYT article:

    In his message, Colonel Borch said he had great respect and admiration for Captain Carr and Major Preston. But their accusations, he said, were “monstrous lies.”

    Does being a Bush supporter mean constantly having to keep your doublethink in practice? If you want to have any credibility, don’t say that your critics are respectable, admirable, monstrous liars.

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  10. “If you want to have any credibility, don’t say that your critics are respectable, admirable, monstrous liars.”
    Well, I’m not so sure.
    I agree with you that being a Bush supporter now does require utter intellectual prostitution. Like that hilarious paean to genius of the Great Leader that Powerline produced the other day–you only see things like that from the lackeys of dictators, and that’s pretty much what the people still touting the Bush line amount to. They have sold their intellectual independence for a mess of pottage–they now must only think and say what Message Central allows them to think and say, even when they have to change on a day-by-day basis.
    But Borch’s comments, all by themselves, don’t strike me as a flat destroyer of credibility. I mean, I could well imagine myself saying about some people I have known for a while, that I have a general, default regard for them, but that some particular statements they made were lies. I have always had great admiration and respect for Fred or Susie or whomever, but when I hear them say xyz, it strikes me as a monstrous lie. I admire this or that other thing about them, but with respect to statement xyz, etc.
    Dunno–it just doesn’t seem so bad to me, or like a stance that is necessarily inconsistent. Also keep in mind that it may have just been a stock phrase like “with all due respect”, and we know how much that one’s worth.
    The fact is, there are plenty of other good reasons to doubt Borch’s credibility, e.g. the fact that his subordinates, who are members of the prosecution and have absolutely no reason to misrepresent things, quote him as follows: “You have repeatedly said to the office that the military panel will be handpicked and will not acquit these detainees…”
    That, all by itself, is stunning enough.

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