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Sep 11th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 1:02pm

Cross-Post

Sorry I haven't been posting more. Have been busy with other stuff (but check out this post on the ACLU blog). Also, thanks so much to Naomi Klein, the inimitable author of No Logo and the forthcoming The Shock Doctrine, for linking to findhabeas! Big ups to the Canadians.

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Sep 7th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 12:10pm

Mr. Addington Gets Called Out

When the historians get their mitts on the Bush presidency, the one essential book that probably will never be written is a biography of David Addington, Vice President Cheney's former top lawyer and current chief of staff (the replacement, of course, for Scooter). Of all of the executive supremacy guys, Mr. Addington is the most prodigious, the most zealous, and the most unsung. By all accounts, his efforts to aggrandize power for the executive at the expense of the courts and the Congress have been more intense and more offensive than even those of John Yoo, Mr. Addington's mole, if you will, in the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel (the internal legal "think tank" at the DOJ). (And let us not forget President Bush and ex-Attorney General Gonzales who enabled Mr. Addington's walk on the wild side of civil liberties erosion.) And when that book never gets written, someone needs to devote an entire chapter to the ideological friction between Addington and Jack Goldsmith, Harvard Law professor, conservative academic luminary, former head of the OLC and a political ally of James Comey. Though this is not new news, Goldsmith's new book is a must read for anyone studying the ideological interplay over civil liberties and the separation of powers among conservative lawyers in the early Bush administration. Goldsmith writes:
"As I absorbed the opinions, I concluded that some were deeply flawed: sloppily reasoned, overbroad, and incautious in asserting extraordinary constitutional authorities on behalf of the President," Goldsmith writes, referring to Justice Department memoranda issued in the two years following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. "I was astonished, and immensely worried, to discover that some of our most important counterterrorism policies rested on severely damaged legal foundations."
And this:
"After 9/11, they and other top officials in the administration dealt with FISA the way they dealt with other laws they didn't like: they blew through them in secret based on flimsy legal opinions that they guarded closely so no one could question the legal basis for the operations," Goldsmith wrote, referring to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which governs spying by U.S. agencies within the United States.
He also describes Addington as the chief legal architect of the "Terrorist Surveillance Program," the warrantless NSA snooping that bypassed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. The Goldsmith Addington revelations are kind of old news, but let me point out three ultra-salient points that have yet to make the coverage. First, Mr. Addington works for the vice president, proving once again that Mr. Cheney's office has been a corrosive epicenter for counter-civil liberties policies in the Bush administration. That either shows lack of leadership on Mr. Bush's part, or a more insidious desire in the Oval Office to cut constitutional corners in the name of "restoring" (scare quotes) executive power post Watergate. Either option sucks. Second, Jack Goldsmith is no civil liberties white knight. For the legally inclined among you, I suggest taking a gander at his 2003 article in the Harvard Law Review: Curtis A. Bradley & Jack Goldsmith, Congressional Authorization and the Use of Force, 118 HARV. L. REV. 2047, 2107 (2005). His construction of the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force, or AUMF, against al Qaeda and its helpmates is awfully broad. Third, perhaps the most obnoxious thing in this whole sordid mess is the fact that Addington used his legal chops to subvert longstanding federal legal institutions. As a lawyer, and especially as a government lawyer, Mr. Addington had an ethical obligation to follow the laws and the Constitution, not to "push and push and push until some larger force makes us stop," as Goldsmith quotes him. It's one thing to zealously represent your client; it's something completely other to attempt to bend or break the law in order to allow your client to engage in criminality. What Mr. Addington did, according to Goldsmith, could easily fit the bill. Finally, fourth, just take a look at the guy. Why is it that all of these ideologues look like ex-hippies? Wait, don't answer that. And, hey, for any historian out there in the ether: hear my plea. The Addington bio. Do it.

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Sep 2nd, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 2:41pm

Absolute Must Read

Linda Greenhouse virtuosity: a great synopsis of the habeas restoration landscape as we wait with baited breath for Congress to come back from their August recess (no pun intended). Key grafs, buried at the end of the story:
The recently filed briefs argue strenuously that the tribunals and their review process fall far short by, among other shortcomings, failing to give detainees access to the evidence needed to rebut the government's charges. A brief filed by retired senior military officers calls the process "little more than a facade" that violates basic principles of military law. Perhaps the most striking of all the briefs is the one filed by Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania. The withdrawal of habeas corpus, he tells the justices, "is anathema to fundamental liberty interests," and the combatant status review tribunal process is so deeply flawed that it "demands robust habeas review." Specter was chairman of the Judiciary Committee when the Military Commissions Act was passed. He was, in fact, one of the 65 senators who voted for it.

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Sep 2nd, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 2:39pm

Dropeth the Other Shoe?

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 31st, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 06:42am

Why Worry?

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 30th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 5:26pm

The Politicization Pitfall

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 30th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 5:24pm

A Reprimand

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 29th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 12:17pm

A Green Wall of Silence?

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 29th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 07:00am

Say It Again, Brother!

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

Aug 29th, 2007
Posted by Gabe Rottman, ACLU Blogger at 06:30am

More Possibles for AG

Tags: Close Guantanamo, detention, findhabeas, national security project

 

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