WASHINGTON — Bush administration lawyers who wrote ‘torture’ memos have been cleared of allegations of professional misconduct after a Justice Department internal investigation, which recommends no legal consequences for their actions. The report by the Justice Department concludes the high-ranking lawyers who developed controversial legal guidance on waterboarding and other enhanced interrogation techniques may have exercised poor judgment, but not professional misconduct. The conclusion resulted from a decision by top career Justice Department executive David Margolis to reverse a recommendation of investigators that found the two lawyers’ legal memos did constitute professional misconduct. That tentative conclusion, which was overruled by Margolis, said the lawyers should be referred to their state bar associations for potential disbarment. But in the final report, the examination of the legal guidance written by Justice Department lawyers John Yoo and Jay Bybee found they did not constitute a professional breach that could have led to state disbarment. The report by the Justice Department ethics office, called the Office of Professional Responsibility, also examined and cleared attorney Steven Bradbury. He headed the Office of Legal Counsel, which provided legal guidance to the executive branch during President George W. Bush’s second term. The […]
Saturday, February 20th, 2010
Report Clears Bush Officials Of Misconduct Over ‘Torture’ Memos
Author: TERRY FRIEDEN
Source: CNN
Publication Date: February 19, 2010 7:49 p.m. EST
Link: Report Clears Bush Officials Of Misconduct Over ‘Torture’ Memos
Source: CNN
Publication Date: February 19, 2010 7:49 p.m. EST
Link: Report Clears Bush Officials Of Misconduct Over ‘Torture’ Memos
Stephan: I'm sorry I just got off the Obama train. This report essentially dismantles the Nuremberg principles that America does not torture and does not tolerate those who do.
Growing up I knew several boys whose fathers had been lawyers in the Nuremberg trials, and my own father had a good friend who had played a significant role in those proceedings. I knew how proud they were to have been involved and, from them, I learned how historically rare it was for something like Nuremberg to have happened, and how that made America different from other war victors. Through a woman friend who knew Bishop Tutu I learned how that American effort had influenced his own thinking. Now it has all been discarded, like an out of style suit.
It was probably because he has had a bead on this through his own back channels, that Cheney has felt comfortable going out and bragging about how he was in strong support of torture.
The events of the last year, of which this is a culmination, suggest to me that Obama is just another political hustler with a fancy turn of gab. I am surprised at how disappointed I am that this is true.