Thursday, May 7, 2009

CIA Memos...No Nuremberg

“Even these thugs got a lawyer; even these thugs got a trial,” United States Senator Chris Dodd said of the Nazi defendants at Nuremberg, adding: "I know a lot of people don’t want to go back — and the president said to look [ahead]. ... But in a sense, not to prosecute people or pursue them when these acts have occurred is ... to invite it again in some future administration.” When a questioner asked if such a probe regarding the authorizing of torture techniques should go “as high as Cheney’s office,” Dodd interrupted to say, “You gotta go where you gotta go.”

There has been much talk in our nation about the recently released memos from lawyers advising of the legality of water boarding and other interrogation techniques. First thing is first; I believe torture is morally wrong. It has no place in a civilized society and it fosters the inherent danger that someone will give a false confession. But of interest in this story and how it has developed is the idea that the lawyers who wrote the memos should be punished. A lawyer being held criminally responsible for the advice given to a client causes me some pause. Perhaps it is because I have advised clients through difficult situations where they sought my opinion about the legality of an activity. Although I have always sought to help clients comply with the law, I always feel cautious and guarded when I give prospective advice. But what about cases were a lawyer is not sure if a situation violates the law? What if the lawyer is wrong or may give an opinion that is contrary to popular belief? What if a lawyer is conflicted by the experience of a deep personal tragedy or gives the advice following experiencing this great tragedy? Should that lawyer be held criminally liable?

I think President George Bush did a lot of stuff wrong during his presidency. He was the worse president in my lifetime. And I for one would like to see him and his vice-president punished for the many wrongs they did while in office. But I still remember where I was when the first plane crashed into the World Trade Center. I remember how I felt after that date. I remember how my heart hurt for the families who lost loved ones. But to travel down a spiraling road of vengeance seeking a measure of political payback for the wrongs of the Bush administration by holding the lawyers responsible for advising their clients; is a place we should not go. Lawyers are suppose to advise clients. Thankfully President Obama SUSTAINED! objections to Guantanamo. What happened there was "unAmerican." But it was no Nuremberg. Lawyers should feel free to advise a client, in good faith, without fear of repercussion. To do otherwise might chill sixth amendment rights.

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"I freed a thousand slaves I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves."

- Harriet Tubman