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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Marine Lawyer Gagged by Pentagon Marine Lawyer Gagged by Pentagon Today a House Judiciary Subcommittee is holding hearings on tortureexcuse me, highly coersive interrogation techniqueand how they affect potential trials before the Military Commissions. Marine Lieutenant Colonel V. Stuart Couch was invited to give testimony before the Congressional committee. The Wall Street Journal reports this morning on what happened next: Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said it was Defense Department policy not to let prosecutors speak about pending cases. Couch was going to testify about the dilemma he faced as a prosecutor when he learned that a potential defendant against whom he was trying to build a case had been tortured. Couch was assured not to worry, the fact that the detainee had been tortured would be suppressed, so that the court would never learn about it. That would, of course, have entailed a conscious fraud on the Courtwhich appears to be standard Department of Defense operating procedure these days. But Col. Couch didnt want to play that game. Now lets consider Bryan Whitmans response. Ive been tracking Mr. Whitmans pronouncements for some time and find that they have a quite extraordinary fiction-to-fact ratio. This statement is a classic case in studied evasion. There is no doubt that sound policy opposes letting prosecutors speak to the press about pending cases. Indeed, its more than just policy. Its a matter of ethics found in the Code of Professional Responsibility. But in this case, there is no pending case. Couch was not speaking to the press, he was testifying before a Congressional oversight committee on their invitation. Whitman is attempting to mislead his audience about the underlying facts and to make a decision which was political and manipulative sound like something perfectly natural. But is it true that the Pentagon has a policy about not allowing prosecutors to speak about cases? If we go back and study the record, we find that just isnt so. In fact the chief prosecutor for the Gitmo Military Commissions cases was Col. Moe Davis, and he was out speaking to the press 24/7, doing everything in his power to publicly portray the defendants as horrible hardened criminals. Was that against policy? It should have been. But in fact the Pentagon had a very carefully coordinated policy of doing just the opposite. The objection here is really something different. Its exposing the Pentagons practices authorizing torture and then lying about it. If Col. Couch were to embrace the Pentagons line, theyd have no problem with him speaking. The problem is that he was prepared to testify honestly about the torture program, and that was a show-stopper. Note that the determination was made by William (Jim) Haynes, Donald Rumsfelds lawyer, who continues to serve as general counsel after the Senate Judiciary Committee gave a thumbs-down to his nomination for a federal judgeship in the Fourth Circuit (Over my dead body, in the words of one Fourth Circuit Republican). Mr. Haynes is one of the prime torture conspirators, and the author of a December 2002 memorandum endorsed by Rumsfeld that has already provided the basis for two criminal indictments of the former Defense Secretary. Haynes is one of the Bush Administration officials most likely to be indicted for his role in the torture scandal when he steps down from office. Mr. Haynes has a strong reason to prevent Col. Couch from testifying, since almost anything he would have to say would be embarrassing to, and might even incriminate, Mr. Haynes. But then lets consider the other side of this. The Constitution, federal law and three rulings of the Supreme Court all make clear that oversight of the Military Commissions process is vested in Congress. So on what basis do Pentagon officials obstruct Congresss exercise of its oversight function? Mr. Whitman evidently feels under no compunction to explain that. Perhaps because he has no explanation.
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#7. To: aristeides, *WAR CRIMES* (#0)
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