Bush justice is a national disgrace
By John S. Koppel 
07/05/2007 
http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_6308408
As a longtime attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice, I can honestly say 
that I have never been as ashamed of the department and government that I serve 
as I am at this time. 

The public record now plainly demonstrates that both the DOJ and the government 
as a whole have been thoroughly politicized in a manner that is inappropriate, 
unethical and indeed unlawful. The unconscionable commutation of I. Lewis 
"Scooter" Libby's sentence, the misuse of warrantless investigative powers 
under the Patriot Act and the deplorable treatment of U.S. attorneys all point 
to an unmistakable pattern of abuse. 

In the course of its tenure since the Sept. 11 attacks, the Bush administration 
has turned the entire government (and the DOJ in particular) into a veritable 
Augean stable on issues such as civil rights, civil liberties, international 
law and basic human rights, as well as criminal prosecution and federal 
employment and contracting practices. It has systematically undermined the rule 
of law in the name of fighting terrorism, and it has sought to insulate its 
actions from legislative or judicial scrutiny and accountability by invoking 
national security at every turn, engaging in persistent fearmongering, 
routinely impugning the integrity and/or patriotism of its critics, and 
protecting its own lawbreakers. 

This is neither normal government conduct nor "politics as usual," but a 
national disgrace of a magnitude unseen since the days of Watergate - which, in 
fact, I believe it eclipses. 

In more than a quarter of a century at the DOJ, I have never before seen such 
consistent and marked disrespect on the part of the highest ranking government 
policymakers for both law and ethics. It is especially unheard of for U.S. 
attorneys to be targeted and removed on the basis of pressure and complaints 
from political figures dissatisfied with their handling of politically 
sensitive investigations and their unwillingness to "play ball." Enough 
information has already been disclosed to support the conclusion that this is 
exactly what happened here, at least in the case of former U.S. Attorney David 
C. Iglesias of New Mexico (and quite possibly in several others as well). Law 
enforcement is not supposed to be a political team sport, and prosecutorial 
independence and integrity are not "performance problems." 

In his long-awaited but uninformative testimony concerning the extraordinary 
firings of U.S. attorneys, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales did not allay 
these concerns. Indeed, he faced a no-win situation. If he testified falsely 
regarding his alleged lack of recollection and lack of involvement, he perjured 
himself and lied to both Congress and the American people. On the other hand, 
if he told the truth, he clearly has been derelict in the performance of his 
duties and is not up to the job. Either way, his fitness to serve is now in 
doubt. 

Tellingly, in his congressional testimony, D. Kyle Sampson (the junior aide to 
whom the attorney general delegated vast authority) expressed the view that the 
distinction between "performance" considerations and "political" considerations 
was "largely artificial." This attitude, however, is precisely the problem. The 
administration that Sampson served has elided the distinction between 
government performance and politics to an unparalleled extent (just as it has 
blurred the boundaries between the White House counsel's office and the 
attorney general's office). And it is no answer to say that U.S. attorneys are 
political appointees who serve at the pleasure of the president. The point that 
is lost on those who make this argument is that U.S. attorneys must not serve 
partisan purposes or advance a partisan agenda - which has nothing to do with 
requiring them to promote an administration's legitimate policy priorities. 

As usual, the administration has attempted to minimize the significance of its 
malfeasance and misfeasance, reciting its now-customary "mistakes were made" 
mantra, accepting purely abstract responsibility without consequences for its 
actions, and making hollow vows to do better. However, the DOJ Inspector 
General's Patriot Act report (which would not even have existed if the 
administration had not been forced to grudgingly accept a very modest 
legislative reporting requirement, instead of being allowed to operate in its 
preferred secrecy), the White House-DOJ e-mails, and now the Libby commutation 
merely highlight yet again the lawlessness, incompetence and dishonesty of the 
present executive branch leadership. 

They also underscore Congress' lack of wisdom in blindly trusting the 
administration, largely rubber-stamping its legislative proposals, and 
essentially abandoning the congressional oversight function for most of the 
last six years. These are, after all, the same leaders who brought us the WMD 
fiasco, the unnecessary and disastrous Iraq war, Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, 
warrantless domestic NSA surveillance, the Valerie Wilson leak, the arrest of 
Brandon Mayfield, and the Katrina response failure. The last thing they deserve 
is trust. 

The sweeping, judicially unchecked powers granted under the Patriot Act should 
neither have been created in the first place nor permanently renewed 
thereafter, and the Act - which also contributed to the ongoing contretemps 
regarding the replacement of U.S. attorneys, by changing the appointment 
process to invite political abuse - should be substantially modified, if not 
scrapped outright. And real, rather than symbolic, responsibility should be 
assigned for the manifold abuses. The public trust has been flagrantly 
violated, and meaningful accountability is long overdue. Officials who have 
brought into disrepute both the Department of Justice and the administration of 
justice as a whole should finally have to answer for it - and the misdeeds at 
issue involve not merely garden-variety misconduct, but multiple "high crimes 
and misdemeanors," including war crimes and crimes against humanity. 

I realize that this constitutionally protected statement subjects me to a 
substantial risk of unlawful reprisal from extremely ruthless people who have 
repeatedly taken such action in the past. But I am confident that I am speaking 
on behalf of countless thousands of honorable public servants, at Justice and 
elsewhere, who take their responsibilities seriously and share these views. And 
some things must be said, whatever the risk. ++ 

The views presented in this essay are not representative of the Department of 
Justice or its employees but are instead the personal views of its author. 

John S. Koppel has been a civil appellate attorney with the Department of 
Justice since 1981. 
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