The rest of us haven't been “read in on” the classified
details either. But we know that torture and inhuman treatment is Bush
policy in spite of the fact it's illegal. The 2005 Department of
Justice memos recently leaked to the New York Times say the government
is engaging in water boarding, head slapping and exposing people to
frigid temperatures, the International Committee of the Red Cross said
the treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody is tantamount to torture,
and the U.N. Human Rights Commission concluded that force feeding
Guantánamo prisoners amounts to torture. We also know that Bush spied
on Americans without warrants in spite of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) because he and Gonzales admitted it. And we
know what water boarding is.
Some of Mukasey’s testimony
before the Senate Judiciary Committee should have raised red flags in
the minds of Democratic Senators. Mukasey refused to reject the notion
that the President can constitutionally violate FISA. He misread the
Supreme Court's recent decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, which clearly
rejected Bush's claim that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions
doesn't protect al-Qaeda prisoners. Common Article 3 prohibits torture
and cruel or inhuman treatment of all prisoners. In fact, the Hamdan
Court referred to possible liability under the U.S. War Crimes Act for
those who violate Common Article 3. And when asked about contempt
charges against witnesses who refuse to respond to congressional
subpoenas, Mukasey said he would refuse to follow the statute that
requires a U.S. attorney to refer contempt citations to a grand jury.
Nonetheless, Mukasey appears to be a shoo-in, with the Senate
proceedings resembling a charade. One month before Mukasey was tapped
by Bush for AG, the former federal judge penned an op-ed in the Wall
Street Journal complaining about too much due process in terrorism
prosecutions and advocating special courts where the Constitution
wouldn't get in the way of catching the bad guys.
Mukasey's
excessive zeal for Bush's war on terror was evident right after 9/11.
In an October 2, 2001 hearing in his court, then-Judge Mukasey
dismissed attorney Randall Hamud's claim that his client, 21-year-old
Jordanian Osama Awadallah, had been physically beaten while in custody
and had the marks to prove it. Mukasey retorted, "As far as the claim
he was beaten, I will tell you he looks fine to me." The judge then
refused to direct that Awadallah be examined by a doctor, and ordered
that he be held indefinitely. The marks were under Awadallah's
clothing. He was one of the more than 1,000 men of Arab descent rounded
up after 9/11, and later exonerated. Many suffered similar abuse while
in U.S. custody. Ronald Kuby was a defense attorney in the 1995 Omar
Abdel Rahman case, over which Mukasey presided. Mukasey "was violating
the rights of Arabs before it was popular," Kuby said. "It was very
much like trying a case with two prosecutors, one of whom was wearing a
black robe."
After librarians complained about the USA Patriot
Act's provision that required them to tell the government what books we
read, Mukasey mocked them in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. He described
civil liberties concerns as "recreational hysteria."
Although
former Judge Mukasey ruled Jose Padilla had the right to consult with
counsel, he held that the President has the power to detain U.S.
citizens caught on U.S. soil without charging them with a crime. When
Sen. Dianne Feinstein questioned him, Mukasey incorrectly cited Hamdi
v. Rumsfeld to support his position. Hamdi, unlike Padilla, was
captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan, and the high court held
that even Hamdi was entitled to some basic due process. In response to
Feinstein's question about whether Congress has the right to set
boundaries on military action under Article I of the Constitution,
Mukasey demurred, arguing his "learning curve" was "steep."
Mukasey ducked the question of whether he would advise the President to
allow unlawful enemy combatants habeas corpus rights at Guantánamo Bay.
"I would not advise the President to grant rights beyond those that
they already have," he told Sen. Lindsey Graham. In spite of the
Military Commissions Act, which purports to deny these people statutory
habeas rights, the Supreme Court will likely decide this term that they
still have the constitutional right to habeas corpus.
At the
committee hearing on Wednesday, Mukasey was introduced by his dear
friend and law school buddy Joe Lieberman. No one is fanning the flames
of war against Iran more than Lieberman. Bush/Cheney likely see Mukasey
as a reliable ally who will help "legitimize" their impending illegal
attack on Iran.
When Bush nominated Mukasey for attorney
general, he declared Mukasey would "ensure that our law enforcement and
intelligence officers have the tools they need to protect the United
States and our citizens." Mukasey, who refused to call water boarding
torture, will likely support that "tool" in the war on terror. Mukasey
told senators in advance of his hearing that he supports enhanced
interrogation techniques, according to Newsweek's Michael Isikoff.
Michael Mukasey cannot be counted on to independently investigate the
crimes of the White House. Elizabeth Holtzman, a former congresswoman
who served on the House Judiciary Committee during the Nixon
impeachment, advocated in a recent op-ed in the Progressive that the
Senate should confirm Muksey only if he pledges to appoint a special
prosecutor to investigate the Bush administration. That's what the
Democratically-controlled Congress did in 1973 after Nixon nominated
Elliot Richardson for attorney general. Richardson agreed, he was
confirmed, and then appointed Archibald Cox as special prosecutor.
Cox's investigations and summary dismissal resulted in the issuance of
articles of impeachment against Nixon in the House Judiciary Committee
followed by Nixon's resignation. It would be wonderful to have a
Congress that once again stood up to the President when he breaks the
law.
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of
Law and the President of the National Lawyers Guild. She is the author
of Cowboy Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang Has Defied the Law. Her
articles are archived at http://www.marjoriecohn.com/.