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Anthony Gregory

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Holding Attorneys General in Contempt

Posted: 07/03/2012 6:16 pm

Eric Holder's Justice Department has predictably decided to shield him from prosecution in response to the House of Representatives holding him in contempt. It is the latest chapter in a drama starring a stonewalling attorney general, a president claiming executive privilege, and a bizarre scandal in which the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives armed Mexican drug cartels, presumably to trace the weapons but instead losing track of almost all of them. It is not the first time the U.S. government has armed its nominal enemies, but the "Fast and Furious" debacle should ignite an entire national debate on America's national law enforcement apparatus and the war on drugs. Too bad this is very unlikely. More fundamentally, the whole affair reminds us that high federal officials regard themselves as above the law.

Those who see Congress' move as a partisan fishing expedition have a narrowly valid point. It is not that Holder and the Obama administration deserve less scrutiny than they are enduring -- far from it. But conservatives did sing a different tune when their own party was mired in disturbing scandals. If only Democrats under George W. Bush had exercised more fortitude in holding that administration's feet to the fire.

The entire sorry spectacle should prompt a serious question: Why was Eric Holder the first sitting U.S. attorney general to be held in criminal contempt by the House of Representatives?

Accepting for the sake of argument that Holder is no worse than many of his predecessors, we can ask why Congress never held them in contempt, either.

In 2006, Bush's Attorney General Alberto Gonzales oversaw the forced resignation of over half a dozen U.S. attorneys in the first mass removal of U.S. attorneys in American history, sparking a scandal in response to which the Bush administration invoked executive privilege to protect itself. Bush similarly used privilege to cover up the Justice Department's activities concerning the National Security Agency's warrantless wiretapping program, after Gonzales faced accusations of deceiving Congress under oath. As White House Counsel, Gonzales had also drafted Executive Order 13233 in 2001, which empowered presidents to invoke executive privilege over presidential records. Gonzales was never held in contempt.

Bill Clinton's attorney general Janet Reno helped him in crafting his own claims of executive privilege. He invoked the privilege fourteen times -- more than twice as often as Bush did. In August 1995 Reno testified before members of the House of Representatives concerning her approval of the use of CS gas to end the standoff between Branch Davidians and federal agents near Waco, Texas, in April 1993. The FBI used the gas, which had been banned from war in the Chemical Weapons Convention, "to induce [David] Koresh to start letting his people go," Reno explained. "I asked whether the gas could cause permanent harm, especially to the children and the elderly." The FBI assumed the targeted adults would use gas masks, but believed that the children did not have masks that fit them. In her testimony Reno also flatly denied that the FBI used incendiary devices that could have sparked the fire that claimed almost 80 lives. FBI spokesman John Collingwood later contradicted this testimony in 1999. Reno was never held responsible for this or other government overreach. The lawsuit leveled at her for her well-publicized violent repatriation of Elian Gonzales to Cuba was dismissed in federal court.

In the late 1980s, independent counsel appointed by Congress charged Ronald Reagan's Attorney General Edwin Meese with involvement in the Wedtech scandal. The Wedtech Corporation had won many millions of dollars in no-bid contracts with the Army, many of them through dubious use of the Small Business Administration's program for minority-owned companies, and paid back political favorites with shares of stock. The business's many cover-ups -- including fraud and falsifying documents -- cascaded in public view and eventually implicated Meese, a former lobbyist for Wedtech, who resigned but was acquitted of all charges.

Many attorneys general have conducted atrocious acts for which they never even had their wrists slapped. Robert F. Kennedy ordered the wiretapping of Martin Luther King. In the twilight of the Wilson administration, Attorney General Alexander Palmer arrested thousands, mostly immigrants and peaceful dissidents targeted for labor or antiwar activism and associations rather than criminal actions, and deported hundreds of them to Communist Russia. Attorney General Edward Bates was heavily involved in the arrest of thousands of civilians without due process during the Civil War.

Infrequently have attorneys general, the top law enforcers of the nation, faced any justice for their misbehavior. Grover Cleveland's Attorney General Augustus Garland was the first cabinet head even to be censured by Congress when he refused to disclose documentation on a fired U.S. attorney, but he stayed in power to the end of Cleveland's term. Nixon's Attorney General John Mitchell was an anomaly, in that he was held criminally accountable for his involvement in the Watergate scandal, and sentenced to prison in 1975 for conspiracy, perjury, and obstruction of justice -- although this happened after he left office.

While some progressives defend Holder based on his presumably bold accomplishments outside the Fast and Furious scandal, very few seek to defend Mitchell, whose involvement in enforcing desegregation should score at least as many points on the left as anything Holder has done.

Yet we should not feel too sorry for any attorney general. These people stand atop the Department of Justice, breaking down doors, wiretapping political opponents, jailing Americans by the hundreds of thousands for crimes far less serious than arming drug cartels, committing mass fraud, covering up unconstitutional surveillance programs, or ordering the use of poisonous gas against American civilians. When the head of American law enforcement is made to answer questions or held under a fraction of the scrutiny any normal citizen would face over a sloppily filled out tax form, some pirated software, or a bag of weed, it is not analogous to a witch hunt, unless those accused of witchcraft were typically the most powerful members of society.

Liberals are right to criticize Republicans for politicizing this issue. Conservatives are right that Democrats would have been outraged and called for Gonzales' or Ashcroft's head if either had been implicated in Fast and Furious. It is unfortunate that each party can conduct major malfeasance and get away with it by pointing out that the other party behaved just as badly.
Instead we should recognize that the executive branch, regardless of party, sees itself as above the law. As for those of us who favor transparency, honesty, and civil liberty, we should hold the whole bunch of them in contempt.

 
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Eric Holder's Justice Department has predictably decided to shield him from prosecution in response to the House of Representatives holding him in contempt. It is the latest chapter in a drama starrin...
Eric Holder's Justice Department has predictably decided to shield him from prosecution in response to the House of Representatives holding him in contempt. It is the latest chapter in a drama starrin...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NorthernLite
The future belongs to the people of reason
09:56 AM on 07/04/2012
Nice historical political wrap up however, I seem to recall that Chairman Issa has stated the neither Mr. Holder or the President are implicated in this program. Usually when a formal investigation of a program following information should be necessary. For instance, why was the program initiated, what was the purpose of the program, who authorized the program, what were the areas covered by the program, what were the stated goals of the program, what was the budget, how many employees were involved, when did the program start and what was the final date, and who authorized the closing of the program. What was the reason for closing the program. Were there any previous programs to be used for possible supporting data and if so, all the above information should also be noted for those programs. With this information completed, the investigators should then issue a complete public report for any required follow up action. Now the question is, how much of this has been accomplished over the past several months and without all the hysteria and political BS.
09:08 PM on 07/03/2012
I think it might be in the best interest of the country to follow though on mr boehner's suggestion to take holder to civil court. It would be a great forum to hear all sides of the issue, and not just the gop conspiracy theory aspects.
10:30 AM on 07/04/2012
The only problem I have is who is to pay for this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Bourbon
10:34 PM on 07/05/2012
The people who pay for this will be the same people who pay for Eric Holder to persecute and harass peaceful Medical Marijuana dispensaries.

You and Me.
09:04 PM on 07/03/2012
Erica holder proves himself to be a typical spoiled elite politican, he won't walk in. sit down, swear to tell the truth and and admit his knowledge, instructions on runing this botched schem that resulted in at least one death of a fed employee and probably two fed employees plus over 200 mexicans. If he didn't order this scheme he must be fired for imcompency if he did know and order this scheme he should put on trial as an ccomplish for murder of Brian Terry. eric hold is whing now that the rep are after obama thru him..... reps don't need to go through or areound anyone in their desire to rid the country of the amateur oba ma..
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EdCorner
Now what - more of the same...
09:04 PM on 07/03/2012
Good article, agreed - they should all be held in contempt not only in the courts but by the American people.
07:05 PM on 07/03/2012
Did somebody get killed? You cannot compare these disreputable actions. Human life is still precious, regardless of liberal twisting and distorting massages of the media. The man should be in prison. He took an oath to protect Americans and he wantonly disregarded any possibility of lives being lost by his actions.
Benjacomin Bozart
Jefferson-better to eat bacon at home than to rule
01:03 PM on 07/05/2012
Quite a number were killed especially as a part of the criminal and illegal wars so loved by the warfare statists. So-called Conservatives are nothing more than Trotskyite revolutionaries and Obama is one with the conservative movement so claiming he is somehow different from the other criminals from previous administrations is pretty inane.
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Jerry Bourbon
10:35 PM on 07/05/2012
Would you be referring to the "criminal wars" being fought by Obama in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya? Or would you be referring to the drone assassinations being ordered by Obama?

Whatever you are referring to, how is it relevant to the 150 or more dead Mexicans at the hands of Eric Holder's weapons?