ACLU Says Congress Should Demand Four Part Pledge Before Confirming Bush Attorney General Nominee (9/17/2007)
(Updated 9/17/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org or media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON, DC - The American Civil Liberties Union urges the Senate to extract a pledge from attorney general nominee Michael B. Mukasey, or any nominee, unless he or she pledges under oath to meet the four demands listed below. "After enduring almost three years of a broken Justice Department under an
attorney general with one of the worst civil liberties records in our nation’s
history, Congress must ensure that the next attorney general faithfully perform
his or her oath to uphold the Constitution," said Anthony D. Romero, Executive
Director of the ACLU. "Before confirming anyone for attorney general, it is
imperative that the Senate receive a pledge under oath that the nominee’s first
allegiance will be to the rule of law and the Constitution, not to a president
or a political party."
In particular, the ACLU said the Senate should not confirm Michael
Mukasey, or any nominee, unless the nominee promises under oath to take the
following four steps within the first thirty days in office:
- Turn over to the Judiciary Committee all documents in the Justice
Department's possession concerning the authorization to monitor any phone call
in the United States without a warrant, and concerning the use of national
security letters to obtain documents anywhere in America.
- Turn over to the Judiciary Committee all documents in the Justice
Department's possession authorizing the use of any interrogation or detention
practices that are not authorized by the Army Field Manual on Interrogations, as
well as any documents interpreting or analyzing any legal prohibitions on
torture or cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment.
- Appoint an outside special counsel for the investigation and, if
appropriate, prosecution of any person who violated federal laws protecting
detainees against torture and abuse, or who violated federal laws against
wiretapping within the United States without a warrant.
- Create a blue-ribbon committee of civil rights advisors to focus on
restoring the Civil Rights Division to its historic role as the nation's premier
and nonpartisan civil rights enforcement agency.
Christopher Anders, Senior Legislative Counsel of the Washington Legislative
Office of the ACLU said, "After two and a half years of dodging and hiding the
ball by Attorney General Gonzales on core civil liberties and civil rights
duties of the attorney general, the Senate cannot afford to accept anything less
than a pledge – under oath – from the nominee that he will complete this four
part attorney general's to-do list within 30 days of confirmation. The Senate
shouldn’t accept empty promises but only a specific pledge under oath to clean
up the mess left by Gonzales."
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