Interesting fact about the soon-to-be-declassified report from the Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility on the propriety of the Bush-era torture advocates at the department: while the office has gone out of its way to accommodate John Yoo, Jay Bybee and Steven Bradbury, an rule-of-law whistleblower who nearly had her career destroyed by OPR never got remotely the same courtesy.
As Daphne Eviatar’s been writing, OPR has been rather solicitous of the Bush administration lawyers who provided legal cover for the CIA’s "enhanced interrogation" program. They got to see the draft, comment on it, and then the office took their perspectives into account. That’s in keeping with standard practice to permit OPR targets a right of due response, the department explained. "In the past," wrote Assistant Attorney General Ronald Welch to Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) on May 4, "former Department officials who were subjects of OPR investigations typically have been permitted to appeal adverse OPR rulings to the Deputy Attorney General’s Office." In keeping with that spirit, Welch continued, former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, his deputy and the OPR chief agreed to "afford the subjects the chance to respond to the report prior to any release." Such a move, they reasoned, was "fair and reasonably correlates with the process usually applicable to OPR investigations relating to former employees."
Tell it to Jesselyn Radack. Radack was an early casualty of the Bush Justice Department. In 2001, as a department lawyer in the Professional Responsibility Advisory Office, she advised the FBI that it couldn’t interrogate John Walker Lindh, the so-called American Taliban captured in Afghanistan, without affording him counsel. It happened anyway. Here’s what happened next, according to Jane Mayer in the March 10, 2003 New Yorker:
[Radack] received a “blistering” performance review. It never mentioned her advice in the Lindh matter, but it severely questioned her legal judgment. She was advised to get a new job; otherwise, the performance review would be placed in her permanent file. Radack, who had received a merit bonus the year before, quickly found a job with a private law firm.
Worse, Radack learned that the department made an incomplete filing to the judge in the Lindh case, who had requested the department’s full record of internal discussions on the interrogations. Radack’s attempts to correct the record by providing the judge with the complete discussion ended up getting printed in Newsweek. Then Radack learned, as she recounted this morning in a Daily Kos diary, that OPR had opened a case file on her.
Far from allowing her a chance to contribute to OPR’s investigation, the office didn’t even solicit her perspective before sending a letter to the Maryland Bar informing it of "possible professional misconduct" on Radack’s behalf. "[W]e take allegations of misconduct by Department personnel very seriously," OPR Acting Counsel Judith Wish wrote to the Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland in a letter the commission received on November 5, 2003 that Radack forwarded to me. But OPR hadn’t even reached a conclusion about Radack before going after her license to practice law. "Once our investigation… is complete… we will share the results of our investigation with you should you request you do so," Wish wrote. Radack forwarded the letter to me this afternoon. Responded Radack’s lawyer on November 25, 2003 in a letter to wish, "We find your admission that OPR has yet to conduct any interviews into these allegations startling."
Radack says she never got the chance to contribute to OPR’s investigation or appeal its ruling. She was suspended from practicing with her law firm until, eventually, the Maryland Bar Association cleared her name. All this for trying to ensure the Justice Department didn’t mislead a judge about the ways in which it handled the due-process rights of a U.S. citizen. Meanwhile, the attorney general personally interceded with OPR to ensure that there would be few penalties for lawyers who provided legal cover for the CIA to engage in practices that the U.S. had previously prosecuted individuals for committing.
Here’s how Radack summed up the double standard in her dKos diary:
The bottom line is that I am the only Justice Department attorney to be referred to bar disciplinary authorities for advice I gave in a torture case—and my advice was to permit a U.S. citizen his rights.
If OPR wants to live up to its lofty mission of ensuring "that Department of Justice attorneys perform their duties in accordance with the high professional standards expected of the Nation’s principal law enforcement agency," it can start with itself.
Crossposted to The Streak.
Login Here


19 Comments
Spotlight


Support this site!
Subscribe to the newsletter
Advertise on Firedoglake
Send
us your tips
Make us your homepage
About ATTACKERMAN
RSS/XML Feed
Could someone suggest to Senator Whitehouse that he invite Jesselyn Radack to comment on OPR procedures?
Jesselyn Radack has written a book about her experience with the criminals in the Bush DOJ.
Canary in the Coalmine
A real eye opener.
ed note Spencer -
ensure what ? looks like something’s missing here.
The difference between bush /cheney an a nazi doctor that were given free reign to do whatever is?
I’ve never spent a minute in law school and I can see how effed up and frankly unethical that was.
and is it just coincidental the people they really fucked with are all women – Radack, Edmonds, Kwiatowski, Karpinski, Plame ?
I read Jane Mayer’s book “The Dark Side” last year when it first came out but I just pulled it out again to read it alongside all the breaking news and it’s so great to have as a resource with the daily leaks and release and updates, in addition to Her Sleuthiness Marcy. I highly recommend it! It might be out in paperback now for those of you who don’t have it….
Getting antsy for next week’s Zelikow Follies!
Just think….if McCain had won, Bybee would prolly be the nominee for the SC seat…..
Every time Obama makes a decision I find myself asking “what would McCain do?” and I shudder….I can’t believe 47% were willing to play craps when they’d only ever played checkers
No! I’d also add Merkel, Fernandez de Kirchner, and quite possibly and most horribly, Benazir. Not to mention the special teeing-off that Hilary Clinton and other prominent woman Democrats get from this crowd. And I definitely would add Condi Rice, who I’m sure served as a marker in some little hidden game of keepaway or something that they had going.
It’s one of their most obvious traits, right up there with the projection tendency: when you want to aim at something, find a female target first, and so much the better if you can find another woman to take the shot. I suspect that part of using these incidents to keep everyone in line was that a man who persisted in the same “insubordination” would then be compared at every turn to a woman —he would be feminized.
That lawyer Cheney shot in the face must have really screwed up somehow.
Richard Haass tonight on Hardball discussed his book, War of Necessity War of Choice. Yet another example of the don’t tell us the truth, tell us what we want to hear monsters that the Bush Administration were.
And then there’s another result of the search-for-testosterone posturing of the Bushies, people like Andy Rounds. We’ve just seen the beginning of that.
Bush’s legacy…the guy who always had someone else do his homework has burned down everything he touched.
Honor thy father, indeed.
Oh, gawd. What a thought!
I agree. There needs to be some high profile testimony (from Jesselyn Radack and others) about how the Bush OPR actually worked. Testimony that makes it clear that the actions go beyond professional ethics and strike at the rule of law.
But I’m waiting to see what the actual reports says (and who authored it) before I start sharpening my pitchfork.
I was hoping for better from the OPR. But I can’t say I’m surprised. These government watchdogs seldom if ever recommend criminal consequences for even the most flagrant activity. Add to that the decimation of the DOJ under Ashcroft, Gonzales, and Mukasey and the only real surprise is that they didn’t put Yoo and Bybee up for Medals of Freedom.
As for Radack, this rather proves the point. Even when they do go after someone, it is almost always the wrong person. Government watchdogs are supposed to inspire trust in government by showing that corruption and criminality will not be tolerated. But this upside-downism in what they pursue and what they excuse does the opposite.
oh sorry that was lazy writing. I meant to say that the AG interceded in that latter case.
On my previous point, TPM has this story of the DOD IG withdrawing its report on the retired military media analyst scandal. The original report (incredibly) found nothing wrong.
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpoi…..l.php#more
Thanks for bringing this into the light Spencer! I think Pat Leahy and Russ Feingold need to talk to Jesselyn Radack.
It would be shameful if Jon Yoo suffered less than she did the international courts would use this as an example of squashing dissenting opinions.
rein – free rein
So what we need is a Special Prosecutor who will investigate the allegations of war crimes and other misdemeanors/felonies and interview the various players and then prosecute those who have committed crimes and refer DOJ lawyers who knowingly participated in the harassment of others like Jesselyn Radack to their state bar associations for disciplinary hearings that may lead to their public censure, suspension or disbarment. When are we going to hold these cretins accountable for their actions, which were designed to destroy the professional standing of those who questioned or resisted their efforts at outright dissimulation and disinformation?