From the Los Angeles Times
More scrutiny, secrecy at Justice Department
The
Office of Professional Responsibility, which monitors lawyers' conduct,
has taken on weighty issues since 9/11, yet it has stopped issuing
regular public reports.
By Richard B. Schmitt
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 6, 2008
WASHINGTON —
Justice Department lawyers and investigators have come under more
scrutiny after the Sept. 11 attacks than at perhaps any time since
Watergate. Questions have been raised about the administration's
strategies for going after terrorism suspects and about whether
politics was allowed to taint the department's core mission to provide
equal justice under the law.
But the internal unit that polices the lawyers' conduct has been
operating under a growing shroud of secrecy, shutting down what were
once regular, public disclosures about its activities.
The Office of Professional Responsibility historically has attracted
little attention because of its focus on the department's everyday
civil and criminal matters. Now, however, it is taking on some of the
weightiest issues in government -- examining the role Justice's lawyers
played in formulating administration interrogation policies for
suspected terrorists and in endorsing a National Security Agency
program of warrantless electronic surveillance.
It has been thrown the task of deciding whether department lawyers
engaged in selective prosecution of Democratic political figures. It
also is looking into lawyers' involvement in a decision four years ago
to deport a Canadian citizen to Syria, where he was imprisoned and
tortured. That case has emerged as one of the most infamous examples of
a policy known as rendition, in which suspected terrorists are
transferred to other nations for interrogation.
The OPR has broad power to recommend disciplinary action, including
dismissal, if it finds that any of the Justice Department's 10,000
lawyers have violated ethics rules or other regulations. But officials
have declined to say whether even one government lawyer has been found
to have engaged in professional misconduct in connection with the war
on terrorism -- despite often fierce criticism from civil liberties
groups, defense lawyers and judges.
The ethics watchdog has exonerated department lawyers in at least two
high-profile terrorism-related investigations.
According to a redacted copy of a confidential OPR report obtained by
The Times, the office found that department lawyers had not engaged in
misconduct in connection with the controversial practice of using
special warrants to round up and incarcerate men after Sept. 11 who
were considered witnesses to crimes. Human rights groups said the
technique was a way to illegally detain, sometimes for months, dozens
of Muslims whom the government suspected but could not prove were
engaged in criminal activity.
The report, issued more than a year ago, concluded: "Department of
Justice attorneys involved did not misuse the material witness statute,
and thus did not commit professional misconduct or exercise poor
judgment."
The OPR also exonerated department lawyers in connection with the case
of Brandon Mayfield, a Muslim attorney in Portland, Ore., who was
detained when the FBI erroneously linked his fingerprints to detonators
involved in the March 2004 Madrid train bombings. In 2006, the
government apologized and paid Mayfield a $2-million settlement. The
OPR action was made public by the Justice Department without
elaboration.
But the resolution of most matters investigated by the OPR remains
closely guarded, even in cases where courts have found evidence of
serious prosecutorial misconduct.
For example, a multimillion-dollar securities fraud case in Las Vegas
was dismissed two years ago after an assistant U.S. attorney
acknowledged in the middle of trial that he had failed to turn over
evidence to defense lawyers that undermined the credibility of some
crucial government witnesses.
"This is prosecutorial misconduct in its highest form; conduct in
flagrant disregard of the United States Constitution; and conduct which
should be deterred by the strongest sanctions available," a federal
appeals court ruled in agreeing that dismissal of the fraud charges was
warranted. The U.S. attorney reported the allegations to the OPR, which
sent a team to Nevada to investigate.
Natalie Collins, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in Las
Vegas, told a legal newspaper that the OPR found no evidence of
"intentional misconduct" by the office. She declined to say whether any
other misconduct was found or whether any discipline was ordered. The
OPR declined to comment.
Though the office does not release reports about individual cases, it
does inform the parties to the investigations of the results, and they
are free to make the decisions public.
After President Bush took office in 2001, the Justice Department
reversed a decade-old policy of publicly disclosing detailed summaries
of OPR investigations of department lawyers found to have committed
professional misconduct. Janet Reno, attorney general since 1993, had
believed that publicizing the information would bolster confidence in
the department; and during her tenure she had authorized the release of
two dozen public summaries of misconduct cases -- including one against
then-FBI Director William S. Sessions.
The OPR also has been far behind in producing required annual public
reports summarizing its activities. Last month, it released its report
covering fiscal year 2005. That means many investigations undertaken
during the tenure of former Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales remain under
wraps.
Some legal experts say there is an impression that the Justice
Department is hiding something.
Publishing the summaries "reassures the public that [the Department of
Justice] takes its self-regulatory responsibilities seriously and puts
prosecutors on notice that they face public embarrassment if they are
caught engaging in wrongdoing," said Bruce Green, a former federal
prosecutor and a professor at Fordham Law School in New York.
Associate Deputy Atty. Gen. David Margolis said it was his decision to
excuse the OPR from preparing summaries of cases that might be released
to the public. He said the decision reflected a lack of resources, as
well as concern about balancing public interests with the privacy
rights of individual attorneys facing accusations.
"My goal is to get fair and speedy dispositions of allegations against
our attorneys," he said, "and, to the extent possible, let the public
know what we did and why we did it without unnecessarily or
gratuitously . . . publicly humiliating our line attorneys as
individuals."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times