╌>

Trump's circular "lawfare": Justice Department targets its own lawyers for following the law | Salon.com

  
Via:  Devangelical  •  2 weeks ago  •  9 comments

By:   Jesselyn Radack

Trump's circular "lawfare": Justice Department targets its own lawyers for following the law | Salon.com
When orders and ethics collide, our judicial system frays

Sponsored by group The Reality Show

The Reality Show

maga hypocrisy alert ...


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


As a former Justice Department (DOJ) ethics attorney, I was ousted for saying no to something questionable the government wanted to do, namely a harsh interrogation of an American captured in Afghanistan after 9/11 without his counsel present. So it is distressing to now read that the department has placed one of its top immigration lawyers on leave for failing to follow questionable orders.

The apparent infraction of the senior career attorney, Erez Reuveni, is that he truthfully conceded in court that the transfer of a Maryland man to an El Salvadoran gulag — despite a court order allowing the man to stay in the U.S. — was erroneous. Reuvani is among several recent high-level career officials who've suffered adverse personnel actions, including termination, for refusing to comply with a directive from Trump or his team to take an action the DOJ official determines to be illegal, unethical or both.

There are over 44,000 lawyers employed by the federal government, in every branch and at every level. Case law, statutes, and legal scholarship have long recognized that government attorneys have ethical obligations in addition to those placed on other lawyers. Additionally, although part of the executive branch, the Justice Department has long held the laudable, however imperfect, distinction of being independent. While there is no explicit codification of this independence, it is grounded in prosecutors' use of institutional norms, internal DOJ regulations, and professional responsibility rules to maintain autonomy and impartiality. Todd Blanche, President Trump's former criminal defense lawyer turned Deputy United States Attorney General (AG), accused Reuveni of "engaging in conduct prejudicial to your client." This begs the question of whose interest the government lawyer serves: his or her section supervisor, branch chief, division head, the agency itself, its statutory mission, the government writ large, the people as a whole, the public interest, or some combination thereof.

The problem with President Trump is that he has a different view of government lawyers' obligations altogether: they are his personal attorneys. A prime example is Trump's nominee for U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Ed Martin, whose confirmation was just put on hold by a Congressman because Martin "consistently undermined the independence and abused the power of the US Attorney's office." Specifically, Martin, who was a proponent of "Stop the Steal," openly threatened and intimidated political rivals, dismissed charges against criminal defendants he was still representing, fired public servants for their roles in legitimate investigations, used his office to crack down on dissent and free speech and made a number of controversial statements and decisions. On top of that, he has little prosecutorial experience, especially in running DC's office, which is unique in the size and scope of its work because it serves as both the local and the federal prosecutor of the nation's capital.

Neither Trump, nor Blanche nor Martin seems to grasp the difference between a private attorney and one in the public sector, despite serving as president, Deputy AG, and an interim U.S. Attorney, respectively. They are also unwilling or unable to abide by basic ethics rules that govern all lawyers, despite multiple Trump attorneys having been suspended, disbarred, or sentenced to prison (think Rudy Giuliani, Michael Cohen, Kenneth Chesebro, John Eastman, and Jenna Ellis) for the same failure. In fact, many lawyers believe that government attorneys owe a higher duty to the public. The government may sometimes have a valid legal argument, but citizens generally want their government to operate on a more elevated plane than the bare minimum of what the law requires.

Justice Department attorneys have long stood up to presidents. AG Francis Biddle opposed the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox refused to curtail the Watergate investigation against President Nixon's wishes. Even attorneys in Trump's prior administration have pushed back. AG Jeff Sessions recused himself from the Department's inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 elections. Another Trump AG, Bill Barr, opposed Trump when he concluded that the Department had found no evidence of large-scale voter fraud that would overturn Biden's victory in 2020.

Like Reuvini, I was a career civil servant. Like Reuvini, I had been praised by my supervisors and recently promoted. Like Reuvini, I dared to advise the department to confess its error to the court. For my actions, I was ultimately forced out of my job, referred to the state bars in which I am licensed as an attorney, and put on the "No-Fly List." As a DOJ alum, an employment lawyer and someone who served on the D.C. Bar Legal Ethics Committee, I hope that the current Justice Department has the institutional wisdom and integrity to restore Reuveni to work with no adverse consequences to his career. He upheld his duty of candor to the tribunal and his obligation not to engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation - which is more than I can say for the government lawyers who flouted a federal court order curtailing deportation on the flimsy excuse that it was initially issued orally rather than in writing.

The mistake here was wrongfully accusing a protected legal resident, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, of being a "convicted" "gang member" of "MS-13" "involved in human trafficking" (the government has issued no evidence in support of any of the allegations in scare quotes) and sending him to a notoriously violent prison in a country from which he was given sanctuary. I was old school in believing that, in the words of the Supreme Court, a government lawyer's "interest in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done." I hope this maxim still holds.


Red Box Rules

Trolling, taunting, spamming, and off topic comments may be removed at the discretion of group mods. NT members that vote up their own comments, repeat comments, or continue to disrupt the conversation risk having all of their comments deleted. Please remember to quote the person(s) to whom you are replying to preserve continuity of this seed. Any use of the phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome" or the TDS acronym in a comment will be deleted.  Any use of the term "Brandon", "Traitor Joe", or any variations thereof, when referring to President Biden, will be deleted.  Right wing trolls can expect to have their irrelevant questions and comments deleted. Posting debunked lies will be subject to deletion


Article is LOCKED by author/seeder
 

Tags

jrGroupDiscuss - desc
[]
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1  seeder  devangelical    2 weeks ago

in a few years, the idea of no due process for trump officials that have denied it to others sounds very fair ...

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2  Trout Giggles    2 weeks ago
The apparent infraction of the senior career attorney, Erez Reuveni, is that he truthfully conceded in court that the transfer of a Maryland man to an El Salvadoran gulag — despite a court order allowing the man to stay in the U.S. — was erroneous. Reuvani is among several recent high-level career officials who've suffered adverse personnel actions, including termination, for refusing to comply with a directive from Trump or his team to take an action the DOJ official determines to be illegal, unethical or both.

The man in question committed no crimes. The White House even admitted it made a mistake. But the Blonde Bimbo has said they can't get him back to the states and instead of saying why she goes into a rant about the gang members and how dangerous they are.

Yeah...don't stick to the topic, Pam

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  Trout Giggles @2    2 weeks ago
Attorney General Pam Bondi pushed back Sunday against a federal judge’s ruling that the Trump administration must bring back an illegal immigrant from Maryland who was wrongly deported to El Salvador .

Ms. Bondi said members of Immigration and Customs Enforcement testified that Kilmar Abrego Garcia , who was put on a March 15 deportation flight in error, was a member of the MS-13 gang.

“The argument that because these people are living among us, these illegal aliens from El Salvador , means they are not part of a gang?” Ms. Bondi said on Fox News Sunday. “That is how they are hiding. That is how they are succeeding.”



“That is how they insulate themselves,” she said. “So, we have to rely on what ICE says, we have to rely on what Homeland Security says.”

“I firmly believe in the work they are doing and we are going to make America safe again,” she said.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis said Friday the government has until midnight on Monday to bring Mr. Abrego-Garcia back from El Salvador after a government lawyer admitted they lacked the lawful basis to send him to his home country.

Judge Xinis, an Obama appointee, said the government had not provided any evidence to back up their claim that Mr. Abrego-Garcia is a dangerous member of MS-13.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3  JohnRussell    2 weeks ago

How many other non criminals have been shipped to the El Salvador prison ? 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4  JohnRussell    2 weeks ago

There is apparently going to be some due process accorded to these illegal immigrants now. They can try to prove they are innocent in front of judges in right wing judicial districts in Texas. 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
4.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  JohnRussell @4    2 weeks ago

I hear that can be hard to do. They first have to find an attorney willing to take their case

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
4.1.1  Igknorantzruls  replied to  Trout Giggles @4.1    2 weeks ago
They first have to find an attorney willing to take their case

I hear that can be hard to do, whereas it might upset the bare naked emperor who likes to strike back, cause of the pussy Republicans who enabled a monster energy drinker without the means to be a thinker, who B leaves the Constitution is his, and his to with tinker, asz he is a lunatic fringe benefactored inn two he has divided U / S, and the absence of the Y isn't duie to the Puss Y's he has grabbed buy the short and curly's the stooge with the heir a parent a many has failed this country a plenty,

fore whence we don't need no stinkin badges/laws cause we elected a total lying Madges liquid frauds, and Oui' all be soakin inn it

fore skin inn the game, isz keeping abreast of the tit a lating knews the intolerant of tolerance won views from his losing stand point, for his dire erection election direction, cause irregardless of how much viagra, we are definitely goin down,

down like a $5 hooker in China Tarrif Town Hall meeting their Caucasian sneaker Pimp pull in US all down till he pops, cause that ain't know Asian Mama, it a piers to bee moored and it stings, especially when the blister in charge iz left to roam at large and alooud about who isz allowed to due ore say anything about anything he does, did, might do, and about what and he he has already done did it too,

4 the slant taken on all others has a slant that seems in Hunan , asz he porkz the egss priced hire, the very Foo Young ones, illegal to desire, sew he dozen do just one, know fun, 

cause when the knew he would sherriff is in town, we don't knead know stinkin Laws, we just sit back and watch US All

go down.... 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
5  JohnRussell    2 weeks ago

I'd say Pam Bondi is an embarrassment but I dont want to embarrass embarrassments. 

 
 
 
evilone
Professor Guide
6  evilone    2 weeks ago

I also read this article this morning...

The Department of Justice (DOJ) was preparing to send U.S. marshals to a former employee’s home ahead of an appearance she is set to make with two high-profile Democrats over restoring actor Mel Gibson’s gun rights.
.
.
Correspondence between former Pardon Attorney Liz Oyer and the Justice Department indicates the department planned to dispatch U.S. marshals to deliver a letter seeking to dissuade her from talking at the event about allegations that she was fired for recommending Gibson’s gun rights be restored.
 
 

Who is online

Igknorantzruls


45 visitors