Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Waldron/Yoo Debate

For a webcast of last week's debate on the Use of Torture in American Foreign Policy check out: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/law/acs/. Former DOJ Office of Legal Counsel Attorney Marty Lederman has some interesting commentary, posted below and on the blog Balkinization.


Waldron/Yoo Debate on Torture

Marty Lederman

Last Thursday, the Columbia Law School chapters of the American Constitution Society and Federalist Society co-sponsored a debate on torture featuring University Professor Jeremy Waldron, of Columbia, and John Yoo, of the Boalt
Law School (formerly of OLC). Professor Waldron is the author of the forthcoming article Torture and Positive Law: Jurisprudence for the White House, to be published in the Columbia Law Review.

The Columbia ACS has now posted a video of the hour-long debate. I strongly encourage all those interested in this issue to take the time to view it. Professor Waldron's presentation is perhaps the most powerful and
cogent account I have recently seen on this subject. But don't take my word for it: I also strongly recommend this defense of Professor Waldron by the pseudonymous Columbia Federalist Society blogger "T. More."

A couple of especially provocative comments from Professor Yoo: Upon noting that Professor Waldron is a distinguished Kantian philosopher: "I think it would be very difficult to be a Kantian and to have any responsibility in the government."

And, in response to a question about the broad assertions in the OLC memos of the President's alleged authority as Commander-in-Chief to ignore statutory limitations-such as the argument in the August 2002 torture opinion (which I discuss briefly here) that Congress is powerless to restrict the President's decisions concerning "what methods to use to
best prevail against the enemy"-Professor Yoo explains that Congress cannot criminalize any "legitimate exercise" of conduct that "falls within" the President's Commander-in-Chief power. What Professor Yoo apparently means by
this is that if the President may engage in particular conduct in the absence of statutory limitation, Congress is foreclosed from restricting that conduct by statute. Thus, for example, Professor Yoo shockingly asserts that Congress could not enact a law prohibiting the President from ordering the use of nuclear weapons or from sending troops to Europe.

Perhaps the most interesting exchange occurred toward the end of the debate, when "Ex Post" asked Professor Yoo to engage Professor Waldron on the moral questions raised by the Administration's legal manipulations of the words
of the torture statute and the Geneva Conventions. Yoo explained that such moral considerations are for the policymakers, not the lawyers: "In [writing] the legal memos, what's the function of a lawyer? I view the function of a lawyer in those cases as to interpret the Geneva Conventions or the torture statute and not to interject my own moral views into what
the government should do. . . . [The moral arguments] are the kinds of things that ought to be considered in an analysis that's separate from the legal analysis."

To which Waldron responded as follows: "I think with regard to some law, you can do the strict separation between
the letter of the law and the moral spirit that Professor Yoo has indicated. [W]ith regard to much human rights law, and much international law, and much constitutional law, sometimes you cannot do that; you cannot understand the
human rights provisions without understanding-at least in some sense-the moral ideas that inform it, imbue it, give it its coherence, shape its concepts, give us our sense of its importance. I believe that's true of human rights provisions prohibiting torture. I believe it's true also of the scheme of protection laid down in the Geneva Conventions. You need to
understand this not as a strange set of runes which we will look at as if we've never seen them before, and have no idea what they're trying to do, but [will] try to figure out what the text requires. In some sense, that's obtuse lawyering, as well as obtuse morally.

Now, Professor Yoo is exactly right that that doesn't mean we intersperse our own moral or ethical or religious preferences into the matter. But these are provisions that have what Gerry Neumann [of Columbia Law School] calls a 'supra-positive aspect.' You cannot understand them without understanding that they embody certain moral ideas-and that [understanding] affects what you can do in the way of manipulating them or limiting them or restricting them out of existence."

I think Professor Waldron is absolutely correct that it is "obtuse" to attempt to construe the torture statute and the Geneva Conventions without giving serious regard to the moral and practical objectives that obviously embue those laws. And as many of my earlier posts here have demonstrated, I'm certainly no defender of the legal analysis in the August 2002 OLC
torture memorandum, which did not even acknowledge those moral and practical objectives. Nevertheless, having been an OLC attorney for eight years, I can attest that it is often much easier said than done to incorporate the "supra-positive" aspect of such laws into one's legal analysis; or, more to the point, it's extremely difficult to persuade policymakers to act in
accord with such "supra-positive" aspects of the laws, when the actual words of the laws contain evident gaps, limitations, and ambiguities-some of which were inserted intentionally by the lawmakers who negotiated, drafted, and ratified such enactments. I'd be very interested in hearing others' views on this question.

Monday, April 11, 2005

Judge Calabresi's ACS Convention comments

The Second Circuit ruled today on whether Judge Calabresi violated the Judicial Code of Conduct in some extemporaneous remarks he made at the ACS Convention last summer. The decision gives the full text of his remarks, his apology letter, and a follow-up letter from Chief Judge Walker. The opinion discusses both the remarks and whether ACS is a political organization. It can be found here.

Event on Wednesday

Some ACS folks are helping to put this together. Its not an ACS event, but I thought I would share the info.

BENEFIT CONCERT
TO PREVENT HOTEL DARFUR
 
A preventable humanitarian crisis, affecting more than two million people, is raging in the Darfur region of western Sudan right this minute. Not since the Rwanda genocide of 1994 has the world seen such a calculated campaign of slaughter, rape, starvation and displacement. Government-backed militias, known collectively as the Janjaweed, are systematically eliminating entire communities of African tribal farmers. Villages are being razed, women and girls raped and branded, men and boys murdered, and food and water supplies targeted and destroyed.
 
WE CAN NOT REMAIN SILENT
Help Us Make Some Noise!
 
Join New Yorkers as we celebrate local musicians and heighten awareness about this dire situation.
 
Wednesday, April 13th 8:00pm
doors open at 7:30pm
Tonic - 107 Norfolk Street, NYC
between Delancey and Rivington
$16 admission (includes one free drink)
 
Musicians include:
 Karl Huth (www.karlhuth.com), Matt Stamm (www.mattstamm.com), Ben Eyler (www.beneyler.com) and Vanya Green.
 
Featured speaker will be:
Gerry Martone, Director of Emergency Response for the
International Rescue Committee (www.theirc.org), who will share his personal experiences as relief worker in the Darfur region.
 
For more information about the crisis in Darfur, please visit www.savedarfur.org. If you have any questions concerning the event, please email us at preventdarfur@yahoo.com.

Sunday, April 03, 2005

CLS Student Senate Elections

There's been some talk of ACS involvement in last week's CLS Student Senate elections. ACS did not endorse or support any candidate for the Student Senate. If you have any questions about ACS's involvement (or lack thereof!) feel free to email Liz at eaa2101@columbia.edu.

Congrats to next year's ACS Board!

President- Mary Kelly Persyn
Vice President, Membership Development: Whitney Russelll
Vice President, Practitioner Relations: Nick Napolitan
Vice President, Special Initiatives: Suehiko Ono
Treasurer: Jenny Bell
Secretary: April Day
Debate Chair: Thomas Harding
Blog/Webmaster: Aaron Liederman, Keith Bradley
3L Rep: Mike Newman, Liz Aloi

This week in law and policy

Title IX protects whistleblowers

A divided Supreme Court ruled this week that Title IX protects whistleblowers from retaliation. Any person who reports an institution's abuse of Title IX regulations regarding the funding of women's sports may not be fired in retaliation for that report. The ruling marks a significant expansion in the law's reach, as it confers a private right of action on individuals who have been retaliated against and rules that the victim of retaliation need not have been the victim of the discrimination.

The case is Jackson v Birmingham Board of Education, docket 02-1672, and as always you can read more at the SCOTUSblog.

Supreme Court strengthens age discrimination law

In an era when "40 is the new 30," the Court has held that intentional discrimination need not be proved in age bias suits. Rather, demonstration of a policy's disparate impact on older workers suffices to bring a case to trial. Employers will then be able to rebut by showing a reasonable, age-irrelevant basis for the policy.

Within five years, half of the workforce will be age 40 and higher. Read more from NYT and from SCOTUSblog.

Federal judge rebukes President and Congress for Schiavo law

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals refused to hear an appeal based on a law passed by Congress that transferred jurisdiction of the Schiavo case from state to federal court. In arguing that the law was unconstitutional, Judge Stanley F. Birch Jr.'s concurring opinion stated that President Bush and Congress had acted "in a manner demonstrably at odds with our founding fathers' blueprint for the governance of a free people." Judge Birch was nominated by the first President Bush and is regarded as a consistently conservative jurist. More here.

Former detainee from Canada files suit

Maher Arar, a 35-year-old Canadian engineer, has filed suit against the United States, alleging that he was apprehended, transported, and detained illegally and that torture was used against him during his detention. His charges appear to be the most credible yet reported; the New York Times reports that flight logs bolster his claims.

The Canadian citizen alleges that American authorities apprehended him in New York as he changed planes en route from Tunisia, where he had just vacationed. He was taken to Syria and held for ten months where, he says, the conditions of his detention were cruelly cramped and he was beaten with a steel cable.

Arar's treatment reflects the Bush administrtion policy of extraordinary rendition, in which detainees are deported for the purposes of interrogation. While US officials insist that they would not knowingly deport a person to a nation that would use torture, credible stories like Arar's have weakened that claim. Canada has been conducting an inquiry into Arar's case for the last year. The Justice Department has not commented on the case and the Bush administration has refused to cooperate in the Canadian inquiry, citing concern about the revelation of classified information.

Study rebukes US on pre-war Iraqi WMD intelligence

A Presidential Commission study released March 31 sharply rebukes US agencies for failures connected to the collection of intelligence purportedly indicating Iraqi WMD possession. The commission places part of the blame on outmoded Cold War tendencies and a cumbersome bureaucracy that overly burdens capable and dedicated intelligence agents.

The Commission also concluded that the damage done to American credibility abroad by the botched intelligence on Iraq will take several years and continual effort to reverse.

The report's recommendations included a reorganization of the Justice Department, better data coordination, and better training for intelligence professionals. Read more here.