The Nation
Home > Blog: The Notion >  Lawyers Stepping Up 
BLOG | Posted 12/21/2007 @ 4:36pm

Lawyers Stepping Up

Katrina vanden Heuvel
PERMALINK SEE ALL POSTS
EMAIL THIS POST COMMENTS (235)
 SHARE ARTICLE

We are lawyers in the United States of America. As such, we have all taken an oath obligating us to defend the Constitution and the rule of law…. We believe the Bush administration has committed numerous offenses against the Constitution and may have violated federal laws…. Moreover, the administration has blatantly defied congressional subpoenas, obstructing constitutional oversight …. Thus, we call on House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers and Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy to launch hearings into the possibility that crimes have been committed by this administration in violation of the Constitution…. We call for the investigations to go where they must, including into the offices of the President and the Vice President. -- American Lawyers Defending the Constitution

Over one thousand lawyers – including former Governor Mario Cuomo and former Reagan administration official Bruce Fein – have signed onto the above statement demanding wide-ranging investigative hearings into unconstitutional and potentially criminal activity by the Bush administration.

In a conference call with reporters yesterday, Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights and winner of the 2007 Puffin/Nation Prize for Creative Citizenship, said: "The majority of lawyers in this country understand that the Bush administration has really gone off the page of constitutional rights and off the page of fundamental rights, and is willing to push the Congress to restore those rights." Ratner said he was "dismayed" that a Democratic majority has failed "to push on key illegalities… the torture program, and now the destruction of the tapes involving the torture program; the warrantless wiretapping, the denial of habeas corpus, the secret sites/rendition program, special trials, and of course what we now know is the firing of US Attorneys scandal…. The minimal that absolutely is needed to get us back on the page of law is to have serious investigative hearings that go up the chain of command and figure out who is responsible for what."

Ratner noted that even with regard to the US attorney's investigations, where Congressional committees held Harriet Miers, Josh Bolten, and Karl Rove in contempt, leadership has failed to enforce these actions by bringing the resolutions to a vote. "Just announcing that investigations will be held and subpoenas will be issued is terribly insufficient unless Congress is willing to enforce the subpoenas by issuing contempt citations," Ratner said. "Congress has a constitutional duty to oversee the activities of the executive branch and our entire system of government is threatened when Congress simply folds before an obstinate executive. Issuing contempt citations against Bolten, Miers, and Rove should be Congress's first order of business in 2008."

Marjorie Cohn, president of the National Lawyers Guild, discussed the administration's torture program violating three US-ratified treaties and the US torture statute; the illegal War in Iraq violating the US-ratified UN Charter as a war of aggression; and Attorney General Michael Mukasey's conflict of interest in overseeing investigations into the torture program and the destruction of the CIA interrogations tapes.

Also speaking with reporters was Jesselyn Raddack, a former Justice Department ethics lawyer who served as an advisor during the interrogation of John Walker Lindh (the "American Taliban"). Raddack said, "My e-mails documented my advice against interrogating Lindh without a lawyer, and concluded that the FBI committed an ethics violation when it did so anyway. Both the CIA videotapes and my e-mails were destroyed, in part, because officials were concerned that they documented controversial interrogation methods that could put agency officials in legal jeopardy…. " Raddack pointed to the Department of Justice's investigations of Enron and Arthur Anderson for obstruction of justice and destruction of evidence, and the need for the same aggressive oversight and legal proceedings in these scandals.

This is a vital effort by those charged with defending our constitution, as Ratner said, "This lawyers' letter and the growing number of signatures we'll have on it, and prominent people – it's a way of saying to Congress, ‘You need some backbone. You need to have a serious investigation, wherever it might go, on these issues that really have taken the United States out of the mainstream of human rights.' It's absolutely critical… We've opened up the door to illegality…. Unless we have accountability on those illegalities, we're going to be facing a very bleak future in which fundamental rights will not really be obeyed."

Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!

COMMENTS

And to all the rabid right-wingers here who love gettin' worked up over just about anything that smacks of reason try this one:

Death of the Dollar

It's two approx. 10 minute video clips, and they are entertaining.

Just wait 'til the trolls here see who produced them!

Posted by B_KOOL_66 12/21/2007 @ 5:11pm | ignore this person

"Congress has a constitutional duty to oversee the activities of the executive branch and our entire system of government is threatened when Congress simply folds before an obstinate executive. Issuing contempt citations against Bolten, Miers, and Rove should be Congress's first order of business in 2008."

~Michael Ratner

Who knows, maybe a real movement to defend our constitutional government may be afoot after all?

If so that would be some of the best news I've heard in a long, long time.

Thanks for the news, Katrina.

Posted by B_KOOL_66 12/21/2007 @ 5:00pm | ignore this person

Well, good for them. Glad to see the bipartisan effort to hold criminals accountable.

I wonder if this has anything to do with that fire the other day, you know, the one that just happened to be right next to Dick's office! His name just surfaces in the most unusual situations!

Posted by MATTMAN 12/21/2007 @ 5:02pm | ignore this person

By the way, Katrina, I wonder if you saw the link to a fascinating Mike Whitney piece I posted below your recent Tsar Putin post?

Here it is again: Putin Agonistes: Missile Defense will not be Deployed

excerpt:

But Putin is a realist and he knows that the US will not leave Eurasia without a fight. He's read the US National Security Strategy and he understands the ideological foundation for America's "unipolar" world model. The NSS is an unambiguous declaration of war against any nation that claims the right to to control its own resources or defend its own sovereignty against US interests. The NSS implies that nations' are required to open their markets to western multinationals and follow directives from Washington or accept a place on Bush's "enemies list". There's no middle ground. You are with us or with the terrorists. The NSS also entitles the United States to unilaterally wage aggressive warfare against any state or group that is perceived to be a potential threat to Washington's imperial ambitions. These so-called "preemptive" wars are carried out under the rubric of the "war on terror" which provides the justification for torture, abduction, ethnic cleansing and massive civilian casualties.

US National Security Strategy articulates in black and white what many critics had been saying for years; the United States owns the world and everyone else is just a guest.

Putin knows that there's no way to reconcile this doctrine with his own aspirations for an independent Russia but, so far, a clash has been averted.

He also knows that Bush is flanked by a band of fanatics and militarists who plan to weaken Russia, install an American stooge (like Georgia and Afghanistan) and divide the country into four regions. This strategy is clearly presented in forward-planning documents that have been drawn up in Washington think tanks that chart the course for US world domination. Brzezinski is quite candid about this in his article in Foreign Affairs:

"Given (Russia's) size and diversity, a decentralized political system and free-market economics would be most likely to unleash the creative potential of the Russian people and Russia's vast natural resources. A loosely confederated Russia -- composed of a European Russia, a Siberian Republic, and a Far Eastern Republic -- would also find it easier to cultivate closer economic relations with its neighbors. Each of the confederated entitles would be able to tap its local creative potential, stifled for centuries by Moscow's heavy bureaucratic hand. In turn, a decentralized Russia would be less susceptible to imperial mobilization." (Zbigniew Brzezinski,"A Geostrategy for Eurasia")

Posted by B_KOOL_66 12/21/2007 @ 5:05pm | ignore this person

For the rest of us who hear 1000 lawyers suing the govt makes us even more leary of looney libs...goddamed ACLU types..

I wonder who will pay for all those billable hours.....

If these lawyers lose their suits, and they will,...they should be made to PAY FOR THE COURTS AND THE PEOPLES TIME THEY WILL BE WASTING.

Posted by JOMAMMA 12/21/2007 @ 5:07pm | ignore this person

Posted by B_KOOL_66 12/21/2007 @ 5:11pm

Thanks for the link, but I can't follow it from work so I'll have to get to it later.

Posted by MATTMAN 12/21/2007 @ 5:48pm | ignore this person

Posted by JOMAMMA 12/21/2007 @ 5:07pm

Guess you missed that some of these guys are prominent republican lawyers.

Posted by MATTMAN 12/21/2007 @ 5:49pm | ignore this person

Why is it taking (amongst others) a former Reagan Administration official (yes, THAT Reagan) to force a Democratic-led Congress to take action on these issues?

Posted by ZERO 12/21/2007 @ 5:55pm | ignore this person

Jomomma: Bruce Fein bio here - http://www.americanfreedomagenda.org/About/feinbio.htm

PS he's been with both the American Enterprise Institute as well as the Heritage Foundation and currently writes for the Washington Times.

Not exactly a looney liberal ACLU type.

Posted by ZERO 12/21/2007 @ 5:57pm | ignore this person

Thanks for the link, but I can't follow it from work so I'll have to get to it later.

~MATTMAN @ 5:48pm

No problema, senor Matt.

Posted by B_KOOL_66 12/21/2007 @ 5:59pm | ignore this person

Read all of the comments and post a reply.

OLDER << Hoppy's Black Shirt, Lucy's Redness, and George's Magic Hour

NEWER >> The FBI Plan to Round Up 12,000 - in 1950

notion
Rapid reaction to breaking news and unfiltered takes on politics, ethics and culture from Nation editors and contributors.

The Notion Is...

Ari Berman (posts | bio)

Matthew Blake (posts | bio)

Max Blumenthal (posts | bio)

Lakshmi Chaudhry (posts | bio)

Joan Connell (posts | bio)

Marc Cooper (posts | bio)

Tom Engelhardt (posts | bio)

Liza Featherstone (posts | bio)

Laura Flanders (posts | bio)

Max Fraser (posts | bio)

William Greider (posts | bio)

Christopher Hayes (posts | bio)

Katrina vanden Heuvel (posts | bio)

Karen Houppert (posts | bio)

Richard Kim (posts | bio)

Ari Melber (posts | bio)

Bob Moser (posts | bio)

John Nichols (posts | bio)

Katha Pollitt (posts | bio)

Jon Wiener (posts | bio)

Gary Younge (posts | bio)

EmailNation

Enter your email address for free email advisories.

ARCHIVES

March 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

BLOGROLL

Arts & Letters Daily

BitchPhD

Daily Kos

Deja Vu/Lapham's Quarterly

Echidne of the Snakes

Feministing

Huffington Post

Open Democracy

Romenesko

Sirota.com

Talking Points Memo

Truthdig

RSS FEEDS

RSS is a format for distributing news headlines on the Web, via special "newsreader" software.

Top Stories
Most E-Mailed
Take Action
All Blogs
The Notion
Add to My Yahoo!

MOBILE | ABOUT & CONTACT | JOBS | MEDIA KIT | PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS OF USE

Copyright © 2008 The Nation