[Mb-civic] "Illegal" Meetings Between Bush Team,
Roberts Raise Ethical Concerns
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Tue Aug 23 18:07:44 PDT 2005
http://newstandardnews.net/content/index.cfm/items/2247
Illegal Meetings Between Bush Team, Roberts Raise
Ethical Concerns
by Jessica Azulay
In what critics call a clear violation of the US Judicial Code, Supreme
Court nominee John Roberts met with administration officials about the
high court job while hearing a historic case on the fate of unlawful
combatants.
Aug 19 - President Bush's Supreme Court nominee recently admitted
that he was interviewing for a seat on the high court while hearing a
case that called into question the president's authority to use a special
military tribunal to try a so-called "enemy combatant." Some legal
analysts not only say the apparent conflict of interest calls into question
the impartiality of the Judge John Roberts's deliberations on that case,
but argue that the nominee's failure to recuse himself from the
proceedings was illegal.
"The news that
Roberts was interviewed for the Court seat by
Attorney General Gonzales, Vice President Cheney and others while
he was deciding a case that went to the heart of the legality of the
administration's so-called 'war on terror' should finish off his
nomination," said Michael Ratner, president of the Center for
Constitutional Rights (CCR), in a press statement. CCR has been at
the forefront of litigating for the rights of the detainees held at the
Guantánamo Bay prison camp in Cuba, though the group is not
representing Hamdan personally.
As reported previously by The NewStandard, the US Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit handed down a decision authorizing
the use of a controversial military tribunal system to try Guantánamo
detainee Salim Ahmed Hamdan just days before Roberts, a judge on
that court, was announced by Bush as his nominee to replace retiring
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
"The central issue of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld was the application of the
Geneva Convention to alleged terrorist detainees," said Ratner. "The
policy was crafted by the very people who were interviewing Roberts
for his new job. He would have every reason to make sure his decision
did not disagree with the administration, and it did not."
But what was not known to the public at the time of Robert's
nomination was that he had met with administration officials --
including the head of the Justice Department, which was arguing the
Hamdan case on behalf of the White House -- several times both
before and during the proceedings. These job interviews were taking
place unbeknownst to Hamdan's lawyers and represent at least the
appearance of impropriety on the part of the Bush administration and
Judge Roberts.
The Judicial Code of Conduct explicitly requires judges to step down
from cases in which they have real or perceived conflicting interests.
"A judge is disqualified and shall recuse himself or herself in a
proceeding in which the judge's impartiality might reasonably be
questioned," reads the Code.
According to Robert's answers on a Judiciary Committee questionnaire
in preparation for the upcoming Senate confirmation process, Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales interviewed him about the Supreme Court
position on April 1.
Roberts disclosed that he was subsequently interviewed on May 3 by
Gonzales, Vice President Dick Cheney, Chief of Staff Andrew Card,
Counsel to the President Harriet Miers and Deputy Chief of Staff Karl
Rove, among others. Miers interviewed Roberts again on May 23, and
again by telephone on July 8. Roberts also interviewed with President
Bush on July 15.
The US Court of Appeals first began hearing the Hamdan case on
April 7. The three-judge decision affirming the Bush administrations
position was rendered on July 15.
"Did administration officials or Roberts ask whether it was proper to
conduct interviews for a possible Supreme Court nomination while the
judge was adjudicating the government's much-disputed claims of
expansive presidential powers?" wrote three law professors in an
opinion piece about the recent disclosure published in the online
magazine Slate. "Did they ask whether it was appropriate to do so
without informing opposing counsel?"
The commentary was authored by Stephen Gillers of the New York
University School of Law, Steven Lubet, of the Northwestern University
School of Law, and David J. Luban of the Georgetown University Law
Center.
"If they had asked," the three continued, "they would have discovered
that the interviews violated federal law on the disqualification of judges.
Federal law deems public trust in the courts so critical that it requires
judges to step aside if their 'impartiality might reasonably be
questioned,' even if the judge is completely impartial as a matter of
fact."
It is unclear how much of an effect the issue will have on Roberts's
chances at confirmation.
The Bush administration is denying that any impropriety took place.
"There was no conflict whatsoever," White House spokeswoman Dana
Perino told Newsday.
Other law professors, interviewed by the Washington Post,
downplayed the significance of Roberts not recusing himself from the
case.
Monroe Freedman, a legal ethicist at Hofstra University School of Law,
told the Post that requiring appellate court judges hoping for
promotions from the White House to step down from cases like
Hamdan would be too burdensome, even though such judges
frequently hear cases to which the federal government is a party.
But Gillers, Lubet and Luban said the Hamdan case is unusual due to
its central role in determining the limits of presidential authority in
crafting detention and judicial policies for the people it arrests during its
so-called "war on terror." They also noted the "spill-over effect" of that
case "on the legality of controversial interrogation techniques used by
the government at Guantánamo and elsewhere," as both issues are
rooted in the same provisions of the Geneva Conventions.
Meanwhile, commentators are speculating about how the recent
revelations might have an effect beyond Roberts himself. Gillers, Lubet
and Luban wrote that the validity of the Hamdan ruling is now called
into question.
"Although the procedural rules are murky," they wrote, "it may yet be
possible for Judge Roberts to withdraw his vote retroactively. That
would at least eliminate the [precedent-setting] effect of the opinion on
whether the Geneva Conventions grant minimum human rights to
Hamdan and others in his position."
Ratner, of CCR, said the situation implicates members of the Bush
administration as well as Roberts. He said the job interview -- coming
in the midst of a case with so much importance to the administration's
detention policies -- could be construed as a "bribe."
© 2005 The NewStandard
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