-Caveat Lector-

The Wall Street Journal
June 26, 2001
Questions for Mr. Mueller


The Republic has just seen why the Director of the FBI is appointed to a
10-year term. Louis Freeh's era at the bureau had its share of mishaps and
errors; no director since J. Edgar Hoover has succeeded in establishing full
control of the proud and secretive institution. But Mr. Freeh was farsighted
in the world-wide fight against terrorism and courageous in withstanding
constant pressure from the Clinton White House and Justice Department on
Whitewater, the campaign finance scandal and so on. Whatever else, Mr. Freeh
has been a stand-up guy.

These qualities came to mind last week as we watched trial balloons floating
over Washington with the names of Robert S. Mueller and George Terwilliger
as Mr. Freeh's possible successor. These names set us to perusing the books
on one of our long-lasting preoccupations, the Bank of Credit & Commerce
International.

The BCCI scandal was the most important corruption story of the 20th
century. Crooked international bankers cast a world-wide web of influence.
They bought and sold politicians around the globe, ripped off depositors for
some $10 billion, laundered drug money, worked with assorted spooks and
trafficked with terrorists.

In the U.S., they illegally bought a major Washington bank, First American,
and installed Democratic Party icon Clark Clifford as its head. George H.W.
Bush headed the CIA during BCCI's early days and was President when its
wrongdoing first began to surface. Even George W. Bush bumped up against the
outer fringes of the BCCI crowd during his tenure with Harken Energy and in
his friendship with Texas entrepreneur James Bath.

BCCI holds important lessons for the future. Our dawning century is one of
international criminal gangs operating with increasing sophistication in a
shadowy world beyond the control of fragmented national authorities. The
banking and political systems are particularly vulnerable to this sort of
corruption. BCCI is a prototype for this new form of global crime. As FBI
Director, Mr. Freeh got a foothold on these problems; his successor will
find them a major preoccupation.

Both Mr. Terwilliger and Mr. Mueller were senior Justice Department
officials when BCCI got away. Mr. Terwilliger was Deputy Attorney General;
and Mr. Mueller ran the Criminal Division at Main Justice from 1990 to 1993.
When it came to making decisions about investigations and prosecutions in
the BCCI affair they were the men at the switches. Only the Attorney General
and the President had higher federal authority. Mr. Terwilliger apparently
is off the short list because confirmation would be complicated by his legal
work for Mr. Bush in the Florida election dispute.

This means the presumed front-runner is Mr. Mueller, who took personal
charge of the BCCI probe. If he is nominated, a number of questions need to
be asked. How did BCCI manage to gain entry into the U.S. banking system and
acquire First American? Did the U.S. intelligence community grease the skids
for BCCI at critical junctures? Was the Justice Department part of the
solution to the BCCI mess, or part of the problem?

When Mr. Mueller took over the Criminal Division, critics in Congress and
the media were already raising questions about Justice and BCCI. He stepped
into this breach, telling the Washington Post in July 1991 that maybe indeed
there was an "appearance of, one, foot-dragging; two, perhaps a coverup." He
denied the coverup claims, specifically rejecting a Time magazine report
that the U.S. government was seeking to obscure its role in the scandal
partly because the CIA may have collaborated with the bank's operatives.
Perhaps Justice should have been more enthusiastic and aggressive about the
case, he told the Post, but "nobody has ever accused me of lacking
aggression."

Still, the problems with Justice persisted. And the timing of some of Mr.
Mueller's moves raised eyebrows. In September 1991, Justice indicted six
BCCI figures and a reputed Colombian drug lord on racketeering charges. The
indictment was unveiled just minutes after then-Congressman Charles Schumer
issued a report sharply critical of Justice Department handling of the case.
As Peter Truell and Larry Gurwin noted in their authoritative book, "False
Profits: Inside BCCI," the indictment was merely "warmed-over information
from an investigation that had ended nearly two years before."

Mr. Mueller also engaged in a running series of battles with the Manhattan
District Attorney, Robert Morgenthau. According to news reports over the
years, Justice prosecutors were instructed not to cooperate with Mr.
Morgenthau's office, documents were withheld, and attempts were made to
block other federal agencies from cooperating. In July 1992, both Mr.
Mueller and Mr. Morgenthau simultaneously but separately indicted Mr.
Clifford and his top aide Robert Altman in the BCCI scandal, with Mr.
Morgenthau finally winning the right to try the men. Mr. Clifford was later
dropped from the case due to infirmity and Mr. Altman was eventually
acquitted. The curious and distracting fight over jurisdiction stands to be
revisited.

Janet Reno named Mr. Mueller interim U.S. Attorney for the Northern District
of California in 1998; he was confirmed for the position in 1999. He was
sent to reform an office marked by trouble, and his success or lack of it
should be closely examined. His position as FBI front-runner, we read, was
won by showing the ropes to new Attorney General John Ashcroft when he was
home alone at Justice without a confirmed staff.

With Mr. Mueller's splendid paper credentials, we initially thought he must
be a top-flight professional, whatever his misfortunes with BCCI. When we
sought out some former Justice officials and others whose views we trust, we
were surprised by negative returns, BCCI aside. While we hesitate to traffic
in anonymous slams, let it be said that informed doubt exists about not only
his independence, but his managerial competence.

On general principles, our view is that it would be a mistake to appoint as
FBI head anyone who had any role in the failed BCCI probe. Too many
important questions remain unanswered, and we clearly need another stand-up
guy after the Clinton depredations at Justice. On the evidence we can see,
Mr. Mueller would be a peculiar choice indeed.
---
"I understand the unicorn's song,
And my own is made of owls and flowers;
I have made my voice of night and time;
My shadow goes before me like a spear."
   -- from Taliesin and the Dark

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