New York Times (February 25, 2010)
Editorial ………….
The Torture Lawyers
Is this really the state
of ethics in the American legal profession? Government lawyers who abused their
offices to give the president license to get away with torture did nothing that
merits a review by the bar?
A five-year inquiry by
the Justice Department’s ethics watchdogs recommended a disciplinary review for
the two lawyers who produced the infamous torture memos for former President
George W. Bush, but they were overruled by a more senior Justice Department
official.
The original
investigation found that the lawyers, John Yoo and Jay Bybee, had committed
“professional misconduct” in a series of memos starting in August 2002. First,
they defined torture so narrowly as to make it almost impossible to accuse a
jailer of torturing a prisoner, and they finally concluded that President Bush
was free to ignore any law on the conduct of war.
The Justice Department’s
Office of Professional Responsibility said appropriate bar associations should
be asked to look at the actions of Mr. Yoo, who teaches at the University of
California, Berkeley, and Mr. Bybee, who was rewarded for his political loyalty
with a lifetime appointment to the federal bench. It was a credible accounting,
especially since some former officials, like Attorney General John Ashcroft,
refused to cooperate and e-mails from Mr. Yoo were mysteriously missing.
But the more senior
official, David Margolis, decided that Mr. Yoo and Mr. Bybee only had shown
“poor judgment” and should not be disciplined. Mr. Margolis did not dispute
that Mr. Yoo and Mr. Bybee mangled legal reasoning and produced work that
ultimately was repudiated by the Bush administration itself. He criticized the
professional responsibility office’s investigation on procedural grounds and
excused Mr. Yoo and Mr. Bybee by noting that everyone was frightened after
Sept. 11, 2001, and that they were in a hurry.
Americans were indeed
frightened after Sept. 11, and the Bush administration was
in a great rush to torture prisoners. Responsible lawyers would have responded
with extra vigilance, especially if, like Mr. Yoo and Mr. Bybee, they worked in
the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. When that office renders an
opinion, it has the force of law within the executive branch. Poor judgment is
an absurdly dismissive way to describe giving the green light to policies that
have badly soiled America’s reputation and made it less safe.
As the dealings outlined
in the original report underscore, the lawyers did not offer what most people
think of as “legal advice.” Mr. Yoo and Mr. Bybee were not acting as
fair-minded analysts of the law but as facilitators of a scheme to evade it.
The White House decision to brutalize detainees already had been made. Mr. Yoo
and Mr. Bybee provided legal cover.
We were glad that the
leaders of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, Representative John
Conyers Jr. and Senator Patrick Leahy, committed to holding hearings after the
release of the Justice Department documents.
The attorney general,
Eric Holder Jr., should expand the investigation into “rogue” interrogators he
initiated last year to include officials responsible for facilitating torture.
While he is at it, Mr. Holder should assign someone to look into the
disappearance of Mr. Yoo’s e-mails.
The American Bar
Association should decide whether its rules are adequate for deterring and
punishing ethical failures by government lawyers.
The quest for real
accountability must continue. The alternative is to leave torture open as a
policy option for future administrations.