Last week by a
margin of 53-40 A divided Senate narrowly confirmed former federal judge Michael
B. Mukasey as the 81st attorney
general of the United States. Mukasey,
had outraged many lawmakers and human rights groups by repeatedly refusing to
classify waterboarding, a simulated-drowning technique, as torture.
What was not focused
on in the hearings or the senate floor debate was the Senator's failure to find
out what Judge Mukasey intends to do about rogue prosecutors within the
Department of Justice he may lead, and how the damage they cause affects public
confidence in the department and its mission. While Judge Mukasey’s
answer on water boarding may be important to the future of the country and the
War on Terror, of at least equal importance is the whether Judge Mukasey would
commit to taking strong disciplinary action against overzealous prosecutors by
using all the tools at his disposal, including the Office of Professional
Responsibility.
A once obscure topic, prosecutorial abuse has gained prominence in the minds of
many Americans as a result of the Duke lacrosse case, and the actions of the
prosecutor, former-District Attorney Mike Nifong. Nifong, although a
local prosecutor, has become the poster boy of prosecutorial abuse on every
government level. With a story line that included sex, racial tensions,
and gender and income inequality, the Duke case captured the attention of the
media and the nation. We now know that Nifong willfully disregarded
evidence of the boys' innocence and thanks in large part to enormous public
attention and condemnation, he has been rightly stripped of his badge and the
keys to his office.
Similar attention is drawn to cases with strong partisan interest like the
obstruction of justice case against Vice President Dick Cheney’s aid Scooter
Libby and the corruption case against Louisiana Democrat William Jefferson,
where public opinion is sharply divided but nevertheless intense. This
pressure too provides a safeguard against prosecutors who overreach or simply
trample Constitution rights.
While the media and the people act in these cases as the bulwark of liberty our
founders envisioned, the same can not be said for less popular cases. As
a result, we are moving toward a system where the safeguards provided by the
Constitutional rights of the accused are guaranteed only to those deemed by
television executives to be ready for prime-time. In cases where the
public interest is negligible and of low intensity prosecutors seem to have
almost free reign. Examples from the home district of Judge Mukasey, and
Senate Judiciary Committee member Sen. Charles Schumer, prove instructive.
In USA v. Stein, Assistant United States Attorney Stanley Okula of the
Southern District of New York (SDNY) was one of the lead prosecutors in a case
against executives from accounting giant KPMG. In three cases against
members of the Tollman family, he prosecuted cases against a wealthy family
living in Britain and Canada. Rather than a made-for-Hollywood plot line,
these cases lacked the sympathetic defendants or partisan interests it seems
are now needed to have ones Constitutional rights guaranteed.
Predictably, there was little noise from the media and public about these
cases, despite AUSA Okula being found by to have effectively stripped
defendants of their right to counsel, eviscerated attorney client privilege for
the defendants, and having brought down a reign of prosecutorial hell on an
entire family.
In the KPMG case, the government prosecution was found to have violated the
defendant’s Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. The judge wrote that the
prosecutors “used their life and death power over KPMG to coerce its personnel
to bend to the government’s wishes” and described the prosecutors actions as
“outrageous and shocking”. In the Tollman cases—Okula has gone after the
family in Canada, Britain and the United States—judges have been similarly
critical, including a British judge describing Okula’s actions as
“reprehensible” and a Canadian judge saying “misconduct of this sort cannot
ever be tolerated”.
Despite this extraordinarily harsh criticism by three courts in three different
countries, the prosecutor endures, ready to once again run roughshod over
Constitutional rights in pursuit of his unique and perverted notions of
justice.
Some may not find injustices against the wealthy a reason for concern, but they
should. It is a Canadian judge in the case of United States v. Tollman
who brings the issue into focus, reminding us why. He pointedly asks, “If
the system went awry for [Tollman], what hope is there for the weak, the poor
and those less powerful? The answer must be in the vigilance of the
justice system itself.”
That vigilance needs to begin the day the next US Attorney General is sworn in.
Nathan Tabor is a political activist based in
Kernersville, NC. He is the author of The Beast on the East River (Thomas
Nelson Publishing) and the Founder and CEO of TCVmedia.com and
TheConservativeVoice.com.