village voice
RSS/Podcast feed for Village Voice News Status Ain't Hood
Pine-Sol Lookin' Boy
Saints, Sinners, Obsession, and Seduction
Enter to win a Jennifer Jones and Charles Boyer Film Society of Lincoln Center series pass!
Lit Lounge
Enter for complimentary admission to see Power Solo from Denmark with Band Antenna, Sea That Dried Up, and Chem Trail at Lit Lounge!
Rasputin
Enter to win dinner and drinks for two at Rasputin Restaurant and Cabaret!
DeVotchKa
Enter to win tickets to see DeVotchKa on Tuesday, May 20th at Terminal 5!
United Artists
Enter to win a 90th Anniversary United Artists DVD prize package!
Iron & Silk
Enter to win 5 personal training sessions at Iron & Silk Fitness!
News
Nat Hentoff
Arlen Specter's Sellout
Senate Judiciary Committee chair intent on rescuing Bush from felony charges
by Nat Hentoff
August 29th, 2006 12:00 AM

Author of the Bush-approved National Security Surveillance Act
photo: Courtesy of Arlen Specter
It is within the court's duty to ensure that power is never condensed . . . into a single branch of government. —Chief Federal District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor, American Civil Liberties Union, et al. v. National Security Agency


Judge Anna Diggs Taylor's August 17 ruling that the National Security Agency, with the secret approval of the president, violated American law and the Constitution—with its warrantless spying on international communications of American citizens—is increasingly under attack.

Not only the president and his supporters discredit her judicial competence, but even some law professors who agree with her result (many do not) admonish her for writing with too much passion and too little legal analysis. But Harvard Law School's Laurence Tribe calls her decision "splendid," adding she has shown that "President Bush and his advisers weren't merely skating on thin legal ice . . . they were skating underwater."

This lay constitutionalist agrees with Professor Tribe. Whatever the fate of her ruling in the appellate courts, one finding by Judge Taylor is ironclad: "The President, indisputably, has violated the provisions of FISA (Foreign Intelligence Security Act) for a five-year period."

Another law professor agreeing with what he calls Taylor's "stinging opinion" is Jonathan Turley of the George Washington University law school and a frequent litigator in the courts on behalf of the Constitution. But Turley has gone farther than Judge Taylor. In "NSA ruling much like a pig in a parlor" (Chicago Tribune, August 20), Turley—who is in my network of constitutional scholars I frequently consult— says:

"Federal law expressly makes the ordering of surveillance under the [NSA-Bush] program a federal felony. That would mean that the president could be guilty of no fewer than 30 felonies in office." (Bush says he has reauthorized the program 30 times.) And, Turley continues, "it is illegal for other government officials to carry out such an order."

"This," he notes, "is the pig in the parlor that polite people in Congress refused to acknowledge."

The troublesome Judge Taylor has shone sunlight on these presidential felonies. That's why, Turley adds, "Republicans are now struggling to find a way to protect the president from public accountability."

The often independent Senate Judiciary Committee chair Arlen Specter (R-Pennsylvania) is now—surprisingly—the White House's major accomplice in trying to find the president and his felonious colleagues a way out of this acute inconvenience, especially with midterm elections looming.

Arlen Specter has negotiated with the White House what he calls a "compromise" bill that would "modernize" the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that the president has repeatedly violated.

Jim Dempsey of Washington's Center for Democracy and Technology—an expert civil liberties source of mine for decades—cites, among other connivances in Specter's legislation:

"A new Section 9 [to FISA] that would vastly expand the scope of warrantless surveillance that never has to be submitted to a court." As Jim Dempsey explains it to me, the government would be able to say to the FISA Court: "There are so many people we can't name whom we want to put under surveillance that we need one warrant to cover them all"—rather than the specific individual warrants under present law.

This would amount to—as Shayana Kadidal, a key litigator for the New York—based Center for Constitutional Rights, says—"whole programs of warrantless surveillance." Kadidal adds:

"Senator Specter's proposal" would enable "the President to target anyone believed 'to have communication with or be associated' with any organization 'believed' to be preparing for terrorism—or any persons associated with them. That description includes more or less every attorney I work with at the Center for Constitutional Rights, according to the government's claims about our clients."

But to please the president much further, Kadilal points out on the University of Pittsburgh law school's Jurist website:

"For good measure, Section 801 of the bill would also eliminate the criminal liability of the President and all his minions who ordered or participated in warrantless surveillance if they could convince a court that the surveillance fell within the inherent Presidential Constitutional Power that the administration claims justifies the NSA program."

But this insistence on commander-in-chief Bush's "inherent Presidential Constitutional Power" has been used by the administration to justify the abuse, and worse, of our suspected terrorist prisoners in violation of our War Crimes Act and the Geneva Conventions. In June, the Supreme Court ruled that the president does not have this "inherent" power to act unilaterally and violate our laws and international treaties.

Specter's sellout is puzzling since he has stated more than once his conviction that Bush has indeed violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act—as Judge Taylor unambiguously decided.

By the time you read this, the Republican Congress may have folded Specter's appeasement bill into an omnibus piece of legislation in order to more fully protect the president, his lawyers, and his implementers from any consequences of their felonies.

Meanwhile, there is a surprising lack of curiosity in most of the press about the federal judge who placed these felony charges directly on George W. Bush. Who is she? Did you know, for instance, that she arrived in Mississippi on the day civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner disappeared—and that she went to the Neshoba County Courthouse to find out from the dread sheriff Lawrence Rainey Jr. what happened to them. (The sheriff, later allegedly implicated in their murders was—not surprisingly in Mississippi at the time—acquitted.)


Next week: More about dauntless judge Anna Diggs Taylor.

More Nat Hentoff
Will Christine Quinn Stand Up to Commissioner Kelly?
Two probable mayoral candidates have some unfinished business about school thugs

Getting Our Reputation Back
People around the world who aren’t our enemies now distrust us as allies

Is Obama's Constitution Strong Enough?
He stirs the crowds, but when will he tell them about their lost liberties?

What the CIA Had to Destroy
The many reasons this torture evidence was too hot to handle

Waterboarding the White House
Echoes of Watergate in the twilight of the Bush presidency

Add a Comment

Not ? Login as a different user.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By submitting a comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms of Use.

Login or Register

Login or register to have a chance to win Free Stuff, subscribe to newsletters and much more!

Login Register

The Village Voice Ad Index
The Village Voice Summer 2008 Education Supplement

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Spring Arts Supplement

» click here to see more...