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Restoring Voting Rights: A Progressive Goal Conservatives Can Share

Stating "I believe in my heart that everybody deserves a second chance," Florida's Republican Governor Charlie Crist is hoping to announce this week that Florida will restore voting rights for most people with felony convictions who have completed their criminal sentences. Restoration is a long-overdue reform. Nationally, it is also a reform on which the left and the right increasingly agree.

Still, the relic of disenfranchisement is not entirely without defenders. In order to effect the change in Florida, Governor Crist needs the support of two other members of the four-member Board of Executive Clemency. One of those cabinet members is state Attorney General Bill McCollum, who took to the op-ed pages of the St. Petersburg Times yesterday in a misguided attempt to perpetuate the myths and half-truths propagated by supporters of the status quo. For example, in a glaring non sequitur allegedly supporting his position, he states that "more than 70 percent of arrestees test positive for drugs, and studies show that drug traffickers live lives of violence." (emphasis added).

McCollum emphasizes concerns about recidivism but he completely elides -- or simply misses -- the contradiction of his lamenting that ex-offenders "would be able to acquire a state-licensed job, whether as a household pest exterminator, residential building contractor or alarm system installer." Just as restoring the right to vote reintegrates individuals into a participatory society -- and thus helps reduce recidivism -- removing overly-broad barriers to gainful employment serves democracy and criminal justice alike.

Governor Crist's proposal accelerates a trend that already has momentum. Since 1997, sixteen states have reduced barriers to voting by people with criminal records. Leaders embracing the trend span the political spectrum. Ten years ago then-Texas Governor George W. Bush -- hardly known as soft on crime -- signed a bill into law that restored voting rights to people who completed their sentences. Likewise, the bipartisan Carter-Baker Commission on Federal Election Reform, which last fall released its report, "Building Confidence in U.S. Elections," agreed that re-enfranchisement of ex-felons is a voting-rights issue, not a punishment issue, and that states should restore voting rights to persons who have completed their sentences.

On the left, Iowa Governor Thomas Vilsack issued an Independence Day Executive Order in 2005 restoring the right to vote to tens of thousands of Iowans who had completed their sentences. And last week, the heavily Democratic Maryland legislature passed a bill restoring the right to vote to 50,000 Maryland citizens, which Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley is expected to sign into law soon.

Politicians' efforts to restore voting rights have been surpassed by the political rank-and-file. Last November a majority of Rhode Island voters approved a ballot measure amending the state constitution and restoring the right to vote to 15,000 of their fellow citizens as soon as they are released from prison--even prior to the completion of supervised release.

The United States is the only democracy in the world that disenfranchises people who have completed their criminal sentences. By comparison, in most European nations, some or all prisoners are entitled to vote. Although the practice of disenfranchisement predates the Civil War, many states enacted or modified their felony disenfranchisement laws in the Jim Crow era as a way to suppress the voting power of black citizens. Make no mistake; the laws continue to have that effect. Nationwide, 13% of black men are disenfranchised because of a felony conviction, a rate that is seven times the national average. In Florida that figure is a startling 18.8%.

It is the role of the criminal justice system, not the electoral process, to punish individuals based on the severity of their crime. The durations of criminal sentences reflect agreed-upon societal norms, and when those sentences are fully completed we should encourage participation in one of society's most constructive acts. Yet many states have complex, multi-tiered restoration schemes that predictably lead to confusion, chilling effects, intimidation, manipulation and delay. In short, recall Katherine Harris and Florida's "voter cleansing" program immediately prior to November 7, 2000--a program marked by incompetence on a Katrina-esque scale and driven by nefariously partisan purposes.

Americans overwhelmingly oppose the political chicanery and disenfranchisement such systems produce. A 2002 Harris Interactive poll found that eighty percent of Americans favor returning voting rights to citizens who have completed their sentences for felony convictions. In other words, Governor Crist is marching in lockstep with Americans--liberals and conservatives--who believe in the redemptive value of second chances.

Restoring voting rights to people who have completed their sentences is a goal that conservatives and progressives can share. And to that point, the Sunshine state may soon be a shining example.

Tags: Democracy, Voting After Criminal Conviction

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Supreme Court Rewards Administration’s Delay and Obfuscation Strategy on Guantanamo

*Cross-posted from The Huffington Post

The Supreme Court this morning said that it would not review the case of the Guantánamo detainees. Three Justices (Souter, Breyer, and Ginsburg) voted to grant the detainees a hearing. But you need four votes for a case to be heard (and five votes to win). Justices Kennedy and Stevens issued a statement saying there was no reason to set aside traditional rules that require "the exhaustion of available remedies as a precondition to accepting jurisdiction over applications for the writ of habeas corpus." What this means is that the detainees--many of whom have been detained for more than five years without any form of independent review--have been denied an opportunity to expeditiously vindicate their constitutional rights.

Generally, when the Court decides not to hear a case, this has little consequence. That is not the case here. The Court's decision not to hear this case is a major blow to human rights values. It leaves on the books a wretchedly bad (and intellectually dishonest) opinion from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and rewards the Administration's deeply nefarious strategy of delay and obfuscation around Guantánamo.

Readers who haven't been following the rather complex chain of litigation around Guantánamo may find some background helpful. The first group of Guantánamo detainees arrived in Cuba in January 2002. Some had been picked up off the battlefield in Afghanistan, but many others had been handed in by Afghan or Pakistan allies, keen for the $5000 bounty offered by the United States. None of them had been screened through the battlefield hearings required by the laws of war and the Geneva Conventions.

The Center for Constitutional Rights and a small group of private lawyers filed habeas suits on the detainees' behalf, arguing that they had a right to challenge the factual and legal basis of their detention in federal court. The government, perhaps aware that many of its detention decisions could not be defended, threw up a series of barriers, arguing principally that Guantánamo lay outside the jurisdiction of the federal courts. In 2004, the Supreme Court rejected this argument, and it looked like the detainees would get their day in court.

But the Government hadn't emptied its quiver. In short order, it managed to finagle the passage of first the Detainee Treatment Act and then the Military Commission Act, both of which purported to strip the federal courts of power to hear the cases. In February this year, the Court of Appeals in Washington DC held that the Military Commissions Act had indeed done so. In an opinion that rested on a distorted and partial view of history, the D.C. Circuit held that the Guantánamo detainees had no constitutional rights. Hence, it dismissed their five-year-old case.

That was the decision that the Supreme Court could have taken for review. But didn't. The result? The detainees can have recourse to a narrow and arguably insufficient channel of review left open by the Detainee Treatment Act: But they must start from scratch with no guarantee that the channel of review available will be meaningful--or a sham.

(The question of how future challenges will proceed is complex. The government successfully argued that review be confined to an appellate court, which lacks the power to find facts and depends on the Army for building a record. The best case scenario might be that the Court of Appeals requires the military to restructure their fact-finding procedures. But this is a long shot).

This is bitter news. It is deeply unfair and inflicts grave harms today on the detainees. Five years after their first detention, many of the detainees, I am told, are at the end of their psychological tethers. There have been multiple suicide attempts. Given the endless and the uncertainty of their confinement, this is hardly surprising. Detention without end, often for no reason at all, is a kind of torture (even if it doesn't meet the strict legal definition of that term).

I'm happy to field questions about the decision.

Tags: Justice, Liberty & National Security, Detention & Habeas Corpus, Domestic Counterterrorism

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Subpoenas and the Exercise of “Executive Privilege”

*Cross-posted from The Huffington Post

We all stand on the shoulders of giants. And few giants loom larger in the study of "executive prerogatives" than Arthur Schlesinger Jr., that great American historian--and that great American--who recently and sadly passed away.

Let's pause and ponder for a moment what Schlesinger has to say about this notion of "executive privilege" in his magnum opus The Imperial Presidency, and what this means for the subpoenas just authorized (but not issued) today by the Senate Judiciary Committee against Karl Rove and other presidential advisors.

According to Schlesinger--and I am unaware of anyone who has proved him wrong--the term "executive privilege" can be dated to precisely 1958, when a new Attorney General William P. Rogers used the term for the first time in American history. As Schlesinger explains at pp. 156-59 of the Mariner Books edition: "What had been for a century and a half sporadic executive practice employed in very unusual circumstances was now in a brief decade hypostatized into sacred constitutional principle."

What light does Schlesinger's wisdom cast on today's subpoenas and the looming Congressional battle over information, especially concerning what went on within the White House?

Notice that Schlesinger does not say that it was unknown for presidents to keep information from Congress, or to claim that they could information from Congress. Presidents from George Washington have claimed the power to do so. Their claims have, however, rarely been tested in a court of law. Rather, as several commentators have noted, they are played out in the court of political contest between the branches.

In fact, presidents' power to keep information from Congress is more uncertain than the President's supporters claim. There are few definitive judicial opinions on the matter. And, for the most part, courts have bent over backward to avoid any definite solution to the conflict. In the most recent high-profile case, the challenge to the Vice President's secretive "energy taskforce" (remember when that was the most scandalous thing about this Administration ?!), the Supreme Court expressly declined the Government's invitation to dismiss out of hand the effort to cast sunlight on the task force. Certainly, the Court showed great deference to the Administration, but there was no suggestion that courts have no role in determining the balance of secrecy--or that the say-so of the President or a close colleague is sufficient to end the story.

But the judicial opinions that do exist are fairly clear on a couple of points.

First, presidents can invoke a presumption that some documents can be kept secret, and this presumption is especially strong in case involving advice being given to the President. This is the principle the President relied on in his speech this week.

Second, even when these documents involve communications from the president himself (or perhaps one day, herself), this privilege dissipates when the need on the other side of the ledger is sufficiently great. And there is no requirement of an absolute privilege short of allegations of criminality. (To the contrary, the Supreme Court in 2004 eschewed such an absolute rule in favor of the executive branch, explicitly declining to dismiss a civil suit against Cheney for information).

What does this mean for any subpoenas that may be issued by Leahy, or, for that matter Conyers?

For a start, it is far from clear here that there has been no criminal conduct here, as explained by Marty Lederman here. Certainly, there is sufficient to justify the kind of careful probing both Conyers and Leahy suggest. Whether there is enough to warrant appointment of a Special Prosecutor is a separate and harder question.

Even if there were no suspicion of possible criminal conduct, there is still reason to query whether the protection of advice to the President really does justify an absolute privilege against Congress.

Without question, we want executive branch advisors to be candid. But we also want executive branch advisors to remain within the law. And we want everyone on the federal payroll to feel some loyalty not only to the Administration of the day, but to the vision and values of the U.S. Constitution.

It is, moreover, simply not the case that a presidential advisor has be assured that his or her counsel will never come to light. No one can absolutely control the documentation that they provide while working in the federal government. Criminal investigations can result in the disclosure of presidential communications. And as the Supreme Court held in 1977, even former Presidents do not yield an unfettered veto over what happens to their non-personal papers. That means that advisors in fact must - and indeed should - operate according to the principle that their words might one day filter into the public domain.

In fact, the President's justification of executive privilege--which is the standard justification that the executive branch has given for fifty years--is surprisingly weak. Perhaps, in other words, we ought to be recalling Schlesinger's advice, and asking whether we indeed need this "sacred constitutional principle," or whether we are better of with more ad hoc and finely tuned devices to manage the flow of information between the President and Congress.

Incidentally, in the "is-it-funny or scary" category, I note that President Bush in his address commented that U.S. attorneys are "decent people. They serve at our pleasure." Having just finished a book arguing that this Administration has unhealthy inclinations toward the less savory habits of the British royals, I'm tickled to see Mr. Bush confirm his monarchical identity.

Now all we need are some corgis.

Tags: Justice, Liberty & National Security, Checks & Balances

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Barnyard Animals and Redistricting Reform

*Cross-posted from ReformNY 

Back in high school, my father coached my AAU basketball team- a hodgepodge of players who were just good enough to get invited to tournaments, where we would then get manhandled by teams with actual talent. We had very little size, but we played solid, scrappy defense. Unfortunately, we didn't get a lot of rebounds. This incensed my dad, whose primary coaching tool was screaming "BOX!" (as in "box out") as loudly as possible, whenever a shot would go up.

One day, after a particularly disappointing game, he told us the story of some barnyard animals who avoided all of the tasks necessary to prepare a meal for themselves, yet they still wanted to partake in the feast. The protagonist, Henny Penny, would ask them all "Who will pick the grain?" or "Who will knead the dough?", and animals like Lucy Goosey and Turkey Lurkey would summarily reply, "Not I!" Henny Penny was left to do all of the work, but, predictably, the other animals were more than happy to dig in once it was time to eat. The goal of the story was to point out our team's reluctance to do the grunt work that needed to be done (i.e, rebounding), even though all of us wanted to reap the rewards of victory.

Enter Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton. Her guest column on redistricting in the Ithaca Journal illustrates how Henny Penny and Turkey Lurkey are sometimes the same creature. The beginning of her piece is in the Henny Penny mold, presenting some important considerations and questions for redistricting reform, including compliance with Voting Rights Act, respecting communities of interest, etc.

But these considerations begin to sound more like excuses that undermine reform as the article goes on. For instance, Lifton wonders aloud whether we could find non-partisans "who would be willing to take on the complex task" of redrawing the boundaries for New York's Congressional and state legislative districts, even though 2.3 million New Yorkers are not registered to any political party. And she struggles to understand how an independent commission might be structured (as if one must be adopted out of whole cloth) ignoring the fact that such commissions already exist elsewhere. In short, it's as if she's premptively saying "Not I!", a la Turkey Lurkey.

In fairness, I have no trouble with being cautious on redistricting reform; we should be wary of recreating the current structure that keeps the power to draw district lines, in essence, with the legislature. Similarly, we must ensure that minority communities get a fair shake. However, those who are facilitating the discussion should, at the very least, present redistricting reform as an issue with obstacles and substantial benefits, not simply highlighting the negatives. Had Henny Penny pitched the work as back-breaking labor to produce a meal that was "pedestrian" or "lacking inspiration", the story wouldn't make any sense. Who's going to give up a day of frolicking on the farm for that?

The Brennan Center salutes any and all who support meaningful and effective redistricting reform, including Assemblywoman Lipton. But we hope said supporters are converting more of our state's Turkey Lurkeys into Henny Pennys, and not the other way around.

Tags: Democracy, NY Reform, Redistricting

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The Cover-Up Continues

*Cross-posted from The Huffington Post

The United States this week released the transcript of the military hearing for self-proclaimed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. Initial accounts in the New York Times and Washington Post described the "confession of a top leader" and detailed Mr. Mohammed's participation in a laundry list of terrorist plots. Yet, the confession of Mr. Mohammed (or "KSM" as he is better known) comes as no surprise. He has long claimed a leadership role in al Qaeda and in the 9/11 attacks, as the 9/11 Commission documented. The real story is not what KSM said but how much the administration is fighting to keep secret.

Although he has been in U.S. custody for four years, KSM is one of Guantánamo's newest detainees. In September 2006, he and thirteen, other "high-value" terrorist suspects were transferred from secret CIA prisons or "black sites" to Guantánamo. These CIA prisons were established to implement various "enhanced interrogation techniques," the post-9/11 euphemism for torture, and to preclude any possibility that a court would review the actions of Executive branch officials. As Ron Suskind recounts in The One Percent Doctrine, interrogators subjected to KSM to water-boarding, a technique that simulates drowning, and threatened to rape and kill his family. Other "enhanced interrogation techniques" included "cold cell," where prisoners are left to stand naked in a cell kept near 50 degrees while they are doused with cold water, and "long time standing," where prisoners are forced to stand, handcuffed and with their feet shackled to an eye bolt in the floor for more than 40 hours.

The transfer of the 14 "high level" suspects to Guantánamo was prompted by the Supreme Court's June 2006 decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. Until Hamdan, the administration maintained that detainees were all "unlawful combatants" in a global "war on terror," and thus fell outside any legal protections. In Hamdan, the Supreme Court rejected that position, ruling that al Qaeda members and other that suspected terrorists are protected at least by Common Article 3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions. This provision establishes a baseline of protections for all detainees, prohibiting torture, cruel treatment and other abuse. And, the federal War Crimes Act made officials criminally liable for breaches of Common Article 3. Faced with a rejection of the legal building-block of its CIA "black sites," as well as the potential liability of government interrogators, the President announced in a televised speech to the Nation that he was transferring the remaining secret prisoners to Guantánamo. He then engineered passage of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which amended the War Crimes Act to help shield CIA and other officials from prosecution for past abuses while stripping the federal courts of habeas review over the cases of detainees held as "enemy combatants" at Guantánamo and elsewhere.

Since then, secrecy has dominated the treatment of KSM and the other ex-ghost detainees, just as it has pervaded the detention of the more than 700 hundred other individuals held at Guantánamo since January 2002.

To begin with, the Combatant Status Review Tribunal hearings (or "CSRTs") of these detainees are closed to the press. Ironically, the military permitted the press to attend the CSRT hearings for Guantánamo detainees in the past. One would have expected the military to want the hearings of the "biggest fish" at Guantánamo to be open to the public to demonstrate the strength of its evidence. And, it is precisely in such cases, that the public's interest to know is strongest. But, apparently, that calculus is different when evidence has been gained through torture.

In any event, opening KSM's CSRT to the press would not have solved the problems of excessive secrecy nor of the kangaroo-court nature of the CSRTs themselves where detainees have no lawyer or right to see the evidence against them. KSM's transcript is heavily redacted because his descriptions of torture and mistreatment were all deemed classified. The publicly available record thus contains no discussion of water-boarding, death threats, or other coercion.

This type of excessive secrecy is hardly unique. In another case, the government has sought to bar the detainee (Majid Khan) from discussing his interrogation at a CIA prisons with his own lawyer. Merely talking about torture, the government's argument goes, jeopardizes national security (even though the government's use of coercive interrogation tactics is no longer a secret). Avoiding embarrassment by suppressing discussion and debate about past illegality contradicts the essential principles of openness and accountability upon which a democracy depends.

Yet, there is another, more pernicious consequence to suppressing the truth. KSM explained at his CSRT hearing that he falsely implicated other detainees as a result of his abuse. These statements are corroborated by those of CIA officials who, according to Suskind, say that KSM later recanted prior statements made under duress. Notably, Mohammad al Qahtani, a Guantánamo detainee subjected to prolonged sleep deprivation, sexual and religious abuse, the use of painful stress positions, and other abuses reportedly implicated 30 other detainees during his interrogations. How many detainees are being held based upon statements made by KSM, al Qahtani, and others that were obtained by torture? If the administration has its way, we will never know because CSRT procedures deny detainees the right to see the evidence, call witnesses, or otherwise demonstrate they are being wrongly held based upon information gained by the rack and the screw.

Reliance upon evidence gained by torture violates our most basic principles. As the Supreme Court put it, imprisoning people based upon coerced statements is "offensive to a civilized system of justice." It is also inherently unreliable because we know from centuries of experience stretching back to the middle ages that prisoners make false statements to avoid extreme physical or mental pain. Indeed, that is precisely why U.S. army guidelines - ignored by this administration - prohibit coercive interrogation techniques, explaining that such techniques "induce the source to say whatever he thinks the interrogator wants to hear."

Clearly, the American public cannot expect the administration to come clean about who it is detaining and why. That is precisely the reason federal courts must retain their historic power to inquire into the facts through the Great Writ of habeas corpus. Later this month, the U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether to review a recent decision by a federal appeals court [pdf] in Washington, D.C. upholding the recent elimination of habeas corpus for Guantánamo detainees. Unless these court-stripping provisions are invalidated, and habeas corpus is preserved, America will for the first time have sanctioned imprisonment based upon torture. No nation committed to human rights and the rule of law can accept that result.

Tags: Justice, Liberty & National Security, Checks & Balances, Detention & Habeas Corpus, Domestic Counterterrorism

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Attorney Firings: What the White House Wanted to do, But Didn’t

*Cross-posted from The Huffington Post

In the coming days, commentators will be scrambling for their thesauruses to find new ways to describe the mounting criticism of Attorney General Gonzales (try "calumny" or "obloquy" for starters). But it's worth lingering on one perhaps the most illuminating aspect of today's news: What the White House wanted to, but didn't, do.

According to internal White House emails, White House Counsel Harriet Miers suggested in early 2005 that all 93 U.S. Attorneys be removed and replaced. We need to know a lot more about the scope and detail of this plan, and critically, its relation to the provision in the March 2006 Patriot Act that allowed the White House to circumvent both legislative and local controls on prosecutorial appointments.

Let me explain why. Back in early 2005 [pdf], as President Bush began his second term of office, most U.S. Attorneys were already his appointees. As one email chain disclosed yesterday reveals [pdf], the White House knew that precisely 77 were Bush II appointees). To be sure, these appointees had been subject to nomination and confirmation by the Senate, as required by Article II of the Constitution. But it had been President Bush who had selected them (just as he selected Carol Lam, David C. Iglesias, Paul K. Charlton, Daniel K. Bogden, and the other recently terminated prosecutors). So why even risk the political contention and fallout of a nationwide purge?

The emails disclosed yesterday are somewhat revealing on this point. They include correspondence from Gonzales chief of staff Kyle Sampson in which he "strongly recommend[s]" the use of the Patriot Act provisions, (page 7 of this document [pdf]) because it would allow the White House to bypass "home-State Senators"--including, it's worth noting, Republicans--and vest more control in the Executive.

But why? This is what the emails say: In the Reagan and Clinton years, U.S. Attorneys were appointed, as per statute, for four years. But after their four years were up, they stayed on as "holdover" appointments until the end of the second presidential term. White House Counsel Harriet Miers wanted to change this: Page 20 of this document [pdf] says as much. That was the point at which discussion began of a more limited purge, in which certain prosecutors would be identified not, seemingly, on the basis of performance strictly understood, but on the basis of performance understood in narrowly partisan terms.

Quite properly, the "strictly partisan" bit is what has been the focus of attention. But that's not all that's of concern here.

As the emails reveal, many of the dismissed U.S. Attorneys could have been dismissed in 2005 as "holdovers." Indeed, changes in the Senate's composition between 2001 and 2005 might well have allowed a different, more political, set of prosecutors to be pushed through. Why then did nothing happen until December 2006?

Nothing happened after an obscure provision was added to the Patriot Act renewal bill in March 2006, a provision that terminated any congressional role in the replacement of U.S. Attorneys, that the White House made its move - the Patriot Act provision. But what connection does that legislative change have to the discussions between Miers, Sampson and others?

It was then-Chairman of the Senate Judicary Committee, Senator Arlen Specter who technically added the provision expanding executive power. According to Senator Specter, however, the change was requested by a Justice Department official named Brent Tollman. The push for legislative change, that is, came from within the executive branch. And Spector's chief counsel, Michael O'Neill, inserted the provision that Tollman sought into the legislation without the Senator's knowledge. (Tollman, incidentally, is presently the US Attorney for Utah. At 36, he is, I am told, one of the youngest U.S. Attorneys ever. And Joe Conason has asked pointed questions about O'Neill's background).

Hard questions certainly need to be asked about how partisan politics entered into firing and replacement of prosecutors. But in addition, we need to ask to what extent was that process interwoven with the effort to secure increased presidential power over prosecutorial replacements? This is, as I have explained elsewhere, an executive cares deeply about executive prerogatives far beyond those that law or history would support.

That Tollman is a sitting U.S. Attorney ought not to make him immune from congressional inquiry about his past responsibilities. Both Harriet Miers and Alberto Gonzales too ought properly to know how and why Tollman came to put in his request. And certainly more must be known about why O'Neill inserted this provision without his Senator's knowledge.

In all this we would do well not to lose sight of Miers' original plan: the firing of all 93 U.S. Attorneys. Note that this remains possible under the law today, with the President still having unfettered control over replacements. And even if the law were changed, a President with an aquiescent Senate could still fire and replace prosecutors for large political gain. And a blanket purge by this or a future President would, ironically, be immune from the charges of political bias that last December's firings provoked.

So the larger and harder question posed today is whether new forms of insulation from political control are needed for prosecutors (and other government lawyers, as I have explained here). This is no easy task, but at a very minimum, it demands rejection of the simplistic, and ill-conceived, notions of a "unitary executive" that this Administration has long proffered.

Tags: Justice, Liberty & National Security, Checks & Balances

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Removing Gonzales Will Not Remove Systemic Problems

*Cross-posted from The Huffington Post

After the summary defenestration of Donald Rumsfeld and the slow martyrdom of Scooter Libby, the New York Times' call yesterday for the President to fire his Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales, no longer seems unrealistic. Yet the firing of one person, no matter now misguided or sub par their performance as the leader of a critical federal institution might have been, will not solve the deep institutional problems that are becoming increasingly evident in our national security policy.

Calls for Gonzales' exit stem from two seemingly separate scandals, the politicization of U.S. Attorneys, tasked with making independent prosecutorial decisions for federal law violations, and from the FBI's misuse of national security letters, or NSLs. The latter, as Geoffrey Stone explains here are a sort of subpoena that allows the FBI to secure documents from businesses without judicial warrants. Not only has the number of NSLs skyrocketed, their misuse has also gone underreported.

These two stories are, in fact, symptoms of a common problem. Eighty years ago, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt marshaled a group of progressive reformers to establish new federal agencies to confront the Great Depression. FDR's reformers understood the importance of professionalized, empirically-based solutions to the nation's pressing problems. Thus, in addition to tackling the nation's financial woes, they tried, with some success, to create new institutions that would provide expert, non-ideological solutions to real problems.

Now, the FBI was not always the model of disinterested professionalism. It was, after all, J. Edgar Hoover, who led the bugging of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the efforts to destroy his name and precipitate his suicide. This was just the tip of a larger iceberg of abuses. But the Bureau, and other security agencies, was eventually reined in by Congress at the end of the 1970s, as Fritz Schwarz and I have explained. Many success controls and oversight mechanisms were set in place.

More so than at any other time, we have seen during this Administration a concreted effort to demolish these mechanisms for the FBI and its larger institutional home, the Department of Justice.

For starters, the machinery of justice has been politicized. The civil rights division of the department of justice, for example, has been shanghaied into endorsement of dubious redistricting in Texas and a voter id law in Georgia. Anecdotally, one hears that hiring in the Justice Department is no longer done by career lawyers, as it was from the Ford to the Clinton years. Now it is the responsibility of political appointees.

At the same time that professional standards are under assault, oversight has been evaded or gutted. It is not only the use of NSLs that has not gone reported. Both Congress and the public are still in the dark about a gamut of national security measures that directly impinge on our civil liberties.

Take, for example, the NSA's warrantless surveillance program. Earlier this year, the Government announced that it had got that approved by the FISA Court, a body of judges that is supposed to screen all intelligence search warrants. That sounds comforting, until you realize that the surveillance protocols endorsed by the generally conservative FISA panels may be just as sweeping and open-ended as the past secret programs. Or until you learn that the Administration has insisted that only a handful of members of Congress will be briefed in a limited form that effectively disables legislative oversight.

Another example of worrying non-disclosure concerns a 2002 law, introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy, that requires the Attorney General to disclose any times when the President decides a law is unconstitutional, and thus should be ignored. From the President's own signing statements, and from internal Justice Department memos, we know that the President invokes this power with dangerous regularity, claiming prerogatives far beyond those the Constitution gives him. And yet the Attorney General has never filed a report with Congress on the number of times the executive has declined to comply with federal law.

Combine the assault on professionalism with the refusal of oversight, and you get a dangerous vacuum: decisions about investigation and prosecution are no longer made on the basis of objective criteria. They are used to leverage partisan gain (as decisions about the Texas redistricting and the Georgia id law certainly seemed to be). Or they will be made for even narrower, selfish purposes.

The result is a set of policies that leaves us less safe as well as less free. Concrete proof of this came a couple of weeks ago in another report by the Justice Department's Inspector General (who was also responsible for the revelations about the NSLs). This report concerns the Justice Department's prosecution and reporting of terrorism cases within the United States, and makes disturbing reading. It turns out that various components of the Justice Department have "decentralized and haphazard" ways of reporting terrorism cases. In presenting their records to Congress and the American public, investigators and prosecutors have been systemically overreporting both the number of terrorism cases in the United States, and their successes in these cases.

They do this by treating any prosecution that comes from an investigation vaguely linked with "terrorism" as being a "success" in the War on Terror. For example, there has been a sequence of airport sweeps for undocumented workers, most famously one called "Operation Tarmac." Of course, these operations pulled in dozens of undocumented workers (mostly Hispanic), who were duly prosecuted: All of these prosecutions were counted as "terrorism" cases even though there was never any connection between the individuals concerned and any hint of terrorism. Yet this large investment of federal resources hasn't necessarily made the nation any safer - even as it strokes nativist sentiments.

Of course, the kind of policy makes individual prosecutors look good. And it bulks up the numbers that Justice reports to Congress at the end of each year, justifying greater appropriations. But it also gives a misleading impression of the scope of the terrorist threat in the United States, which in turn is used to underwrite new, and harsher, policies.

Until we have a return to real oversight, and a fresh commitment to professionalism with the Justice Department, we won't be able to get our counter-terrorism policies straight. We will continue to misallocate resources and misjudge the threat. This means holding hearings on how internal oversight within the Justice Department is done. It means examining the functioning of critical institutions like the Office of Legal Counsel, which has an important influence on legal policy. And it means strengthening disclosure laws - and the sanctions for non-disclosure - to ensure a meaningful conversation between the ranches of government.

Getting rid of Gonzales, in short, may be satisfying for some in Congress who have been frustrated by his stonewalling - but it will not solve these systemic problems, which demands wholesale legislative reform as answers.

Tags: Justice, Liberty & National Security, Checks & Balances, Domestic Counterterrorism

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Hooray for…Albany?

The lights in Hollywood shine a little bit brighter on Oscar night, but who knew how much light they would cast on New York? Notwithstanding NY native Martin Scorcese’s victories for Best Picture and Best Director, several parallels can be drawn between the Academy Awards and New York’s political process. The state legislature, like the Academy, has voting practices viewed by outsiders as mysterious, if not secretive. Reform efforts have been ushered stage-right like an Oscar winner who’s thanked a few too many people in a rambling speech. And the incumbency advantage of elected officials combined with their control of redistricting ensures that, like the awards show, that though the outfits change in the legislature, the people wearing them rarely do.

Eileen Markey’s article in City Limits alludes to another parallel. The majority of our state's prisoners come from downstate (New York City), but virtually all the state's prisons are upstate. More importantly, those prisoners are counted as "residents" of upstate towns in the decennial census, but they are unable to vote. Thus, for the purposes of reapportionment and redistricting in NY, prisoners are like seat fillers at the Oscars: they give districts the appearance of being full, but they have absolutely no clout.

This practice has meaningful economic and political consequences. The resources diverted to districts upstate do little to aid prisoners, while the actual residents get a disproportionately large slice of the pie. In turn, less money is directed to downstate districts that already lack resources and support returning prisoners upon their release. Politically, this method has favored Republicans, who are heavily concentrated upstate. By allocating prisoners up north, redistricters respecting one-person/one-vote doctrine must create more districts upstate; these puffed-up districts have tended to elect GOP candidates.

There are simple ways to change New York’s method of counting prisoners. Some states simply do not count prisoners when redistricting. Others, including Sen. Eric Schneiderman have proposed creating a database with the last known addresses of prisoners, and counting them there. Either proposal would bring more fairness to the system and help end the current practice in NY which heaps insult onto injury: not only are prisoners being used for partisan gain, but their home districts suffer as well. Or, put another way, not only are they little more than nominees with no chance at a statue, they're left without the coveted swag too.

Tags: Democracy, NY Reform, Redistricting

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