Hi! I’m an Evangelical With the U.S. Department of Justice, and
I’m Here to Lie to You
by
William L. Anderson
by
William L. Anderson
Recently by William L. Anderson: The
Ultimate Prosecutorial Weapon: Honest Services Fraud
You belong
to your father the devil and you willingly carry out your father's
desires. He was a murderer from the beginning and does not stand
in truth, because there is no truth in him. When he tells a lie,
he speaks in character, because he is a liar and the father of lies.
~ John
8:44 (New
American Bible)
As one who
has written continuously about federal criminal law and prosecutorial
abuse, I rarely find myself surprised by anything that the minions
of the misnamed U.S. Department of Justice do or say. The DOJ is
populated with people for whom truth has taken a permanent vacation,
and I doubt seriously that the situation will change just because
there is a new attorney general.
However, a
recent article about the overturning of a criminal conviction in
federal court has managed to surprise me, if only to be amazed at
the sheer hubris by DOJ personnel. Indeed, at a federal appeals
court hearing, a DOJ official openly admitted that she and her colleagues
presented a false case – and clearly was proud of it. Holman
Jenkins of the Wall Street Journal writes about the overturning
of a conviction of a former CEO:
In a final
indignity, after Mr. (Greg) Reyes's conviction, the government
admitted it knew its central contention was false, thanks to numerous,
immunized statements from finance department officials. As Justice
official Amber Rosen told the appeals panel in oral argument this
past May: "Defendants aren't entitled to a perfect trial. . .
. Misstatements happen."
"Misstatements
happen." Rosen knew and pretty much admitted that she and her
colleagues knew that they were lying in court, lying to a judge,
lying to a jury, lying to the public, lying to everyone. Nothing
will happen to her, and nothing will happen to her fellow prosecutors,
who most likely will retry Reyes not because he is guilty of anything,
but rather because they can do it, and since they openly admit they
are liars, they pretty much have the run of the store.
The case against
Reyes involved backdating of stock options, a common business practice
that federal prosecutors suddenly decided to criminalize as part
of its crusade to create new and draconian "economic crimes."
The feds were trying to claim that Reyes had misled his colleagues,
but the government’s actions clearly were at odds with itself. Jenkins
writes:
Never mind
that this story flew in the face of the publicly known facts or
that the government's sole witness, a junior finance department
official, later recanted, saying she had been bullied by prosecutors.
Hilariously, even as Justice argued in one courtroom that Brocade's
finance department had been kept "in the dark" about backdating,
the SEC was simultaneously impaling two former heads of Brocade's
finance department for aiding, abetting and benefiting from backdating.
So, it has
come to this: federal prosecutors now openly admit to appeals judges
that they knowingly presented a false case, lied to everyone, and
that such lying just "happens." I would like to know how
people who claim to be against lies have turned into liars themselves.
Unfortunately, I believe I have discovered one piece of this puzzle,
and it involves people who openly claim to be Evangelical Christians
and at least some of the culprits have held high church office.
I will deal
only with three people, but they have been influential. The first
is John Ashcroft, who was the federal government’s attorney general
during George W. Bush’s first term. I have covered Ashcroft’s lies
and shenanigans in articles here,
here,
and dealt with the general culture of DOJ lying here.
(The last article also deals with an incident involving current
AG Eric Holder, so the beat goes on.)
Ashcroft was
one who wore his Christianity on his sleeve, but made sure that
his Christian beliefs never interfered with his lying. The second
person is the former U.S. Attorney for Eastern Virginia, Paul
J. McNulty, who also served as the number two person in the
DOJ until he resigned after having misled Congress regarding the
firing of some U.S. attorneys, a case that still has some traction.
The impeccable
libertarian writer James Bovard already has dealt with many of McNulty's
actions in his book, Terrorism
and Tyranny, and Bovard's accounts of McNulty's "misstatements"
are worth reading. As the chief federal prosecutor on terrorism
cases, he had his hand in the infamous "Lackawanna Six" case, one
that Judge
Andrew Napolitano condemned as being the product of DOJ lawbreakers.
McNulty also pursued the infamous "paintball
terrorists" case in which people were railroaded into prison
although no supposed "terrorist plot" ever was discovered.
One of McNulty’s
most egregious cases involved the prosecution of physician William
Hurwitz, a pain medication specialist accused of (in McNulty’s words)
being a "major
and deadly drug dealer." Because McNulty’s district has
lots of government employees and generally produces pro-government
juries, gaining a conviction, even in a case fraught with questions,
was relatively easy. Writes Jacob Sullum:
The prosecutors
did not dispute that Hurwitz had helped hundreds of patients recover
their lives by prescribing the high doses of narcotics they needed
to control their chronic pain. Instead they pointed to the small
minority of his patients – 5 to 10 percent, by his attorneys'
estimate – who were misusing the painkillers he prescribed, selling
them on the black market, or both.
The prosecutors
did not claim Hurwitz, who faces a possible life sentence, got
so much as a dime from illegal drug sales. Instead they pointed
to his income as a physician, which they said was boosted by fees
from patients who were faking or exaggerating their pain.
The prosecutors
did not allege that Hurwitz had any sort of explicit arrangement
with those patients. Instead they described a "conspiracy of silence,"
carried out by "a wink and a nod."
The evidence
supporting this theory was, not surprisingly, ambiguous at best,
leaving plenty of room for reasonable doubt. Yet the prosecutors
got the jury to overlook the obvious weaknesses in their case
and convict Hurwitz, in essence, of trusting his patients too
much.
Indeed, as
Harvey Silverglate writes in his newest book, Three
Felonies a Day, the Hurwitz conviction ultimately
meant that doctors around the country became fearful of the very
medications that alleviate pain, which meant that many Americans
would suffer pain needlessly because Paul McNulty wanted a scalp.
Apparently,
after his indictment, Hurwitz had agreed to turn himself in at the
office of the U.S. Marshals. McNulty had other ideas, having his
own storm troopers burst into Hurwitz’s home, and having him manhandled
in front of his wife and children. This was not done just to humiliate
and bully Hurwitz, although it is clear McNulty enjoyed the bullying;
indeed, another reason was so that McNulty could make the false
claim at the sentencing hearing that Hurwitz was "uncooperative"
upon his arrest. (This is a common tactic among federal prosecutors,
and one more example of the Culture of Lying that now owns that
agency.)
The reason
that I bring in McNulty is twofold. First, as both the lead federal
prosecutor on "terrorism" issues and as the number two
at DOJ, McNulty was in a key position to affect DOJ culture and
to insist upon honesty. The reason I make that point is that, second,
McNulty is a ruling elder in a congregation of the Presbyterian
Church in America, the same Evangelical denomination to which my
family and I belong.
Unfortunately,
instead of helping to bring honesty and decency to the DOJ, McNulty
chose to further the same Culture of Lying that Bill Moushey exposed
more than a decade ago in his award-winning series, "Win
at All Costs." Instead of integrity, the DOJ under McNulty’s
leadership went into the direction that ultimately resulted in the
dishonest and cynical testimony: "Misstatements happen."
Like Ashcroft,
McNulty wears his Christianity on his sleeve, and both were featured
positively in the Evangelical magazine, World.
(World even gave Ashcroft its "Daniel of the Year"
award in 2001.) Another federal prosecutor who openly promotes his
Christian beliefs is Matt Martens, an assistant U.S. attorney in
Charlotte, North Carolina.
Martens, a
deacon and a Baptist lay preacher, was the lead prosecutor against
Victoria Sprouse, whose case I have documented here
and here.
In this case, Martens knew that one of his "star" witnesses
had sworn under oath in a civil case that Sprouse was innocent
of any fraud and was unaware of fraud being committed in real estate
deals for which she was the closing attorney.
However, Martens
had charged the witness with fraud, but offered him a deal of serving
only two years in prison if he would testify that Sprouse
knew that there was fraud on her part. The thing to remember is
that when the witness swore under oath several years before, he
was not under duress nor forced to exchange testimony for a reduced
prison sentence.
Thus, when
a man completely changes his testimony on a witness stand in order
to help a prosecutor fit his own "theory" of what happened,
I am going to be very skeptical. Furthermore, Martens and other
prosecutors should be reminded that their job is not to win, but
to do justice.
As I documented
in the second article on the Sprouse case, Martens lied to a judge
in order to ensure that Sprouse’s original attorney would not be
able to stay on her defense team:
It is important
to understand, however, that the outcome was fixed long before
the trial, and not by any criminal or regulatory
violations on behalf of Sprouse. Martens arranged for the
government to forbid Sprouse from selling, disposing, or mortgaging
any of her property in order to raise money to pay for her attorney,
Pete Anderson. Because all her assets were forbidden to be sold
or mortgaged she did not have any other funds by which to pay,
the judge declared her "indigent" and then permitted a maximum
of $25,000 for her legal fees.
The prosecution’s
strategy was obvious. If Sprouse could be denied adequate counsel,
as $25K is not going to buy anything more than an attorney who
wants to plead out right away, then a conviction was as good as
done.
What happened
afterward is most important – and sealed the outcome. Anderson
told the judge at a hearing in which she petitioned to have one
of her properties sold so she could raise legal fees that he still
wanted to represent Sprouse, given his knowledge of the case.
That is where Martens dropped a bombshell.
Martens told
the judge that it would take four-to-six weeks to present
the government’s case. Anderson argued that since it would take
his firm five months to prepare for trial with another month to
six weeks in a trial would mean his firm would have to spend six
months for a relatively tiny fee, which the firm could not afford.
Thus, he begged off the case and the judge appointed two attorneys
who then tried to force Sprouse to plea to a deal that would have
given her 20 years. Sprouse, believing she had not committed any
crimes and wanting her Constitutional day in court, refused, and
from then on, she and her counsel were at odds.
There are
a number of reasons why this development was significant, and
why Martens had orchestrated it. First, and most important, when
Martens actually presented the "evidence" during the trial, he
took less than four days. One does not boil four-to-six
weeks of material into four days; instead, Martens – an officer
of the court and one who is bound to tell the truth while carrying
out his duties – had not told the judge the truth.
Unfortunately,
like Ashcroft and McNulty before him, Martens is not a man of the
truth. Like Ashcroft and McNulty, Martens believes that the Bible
in the inerrant and infallible Word of God. However,
like Ashcroft and McNulty, he does not believe he is bound to the
Holy Scriptures, at least when he is trying to railroad innocent
people into prison. And like McNulty, Martens ordered Sprouse arrested
at 6 a.m. at her home (after his storm troopers nearly broke down
her front door) on the day that she already had agreed to turn herself
in to the U.S. Marshals at 9 a.m. Like McNulty, Martens wanted to
present a false picture of Sprouse being "uncooperative" with the
authorities regarding her arrest if and when he secured a conviction.
Evangelicals
like Ashcroft and others were quick to condemn Bill Clinton for
his escapades and especially his lying. Indeed, Clinton became well-known
for telling untruths and outright whoppers. Yet, what happened when
a Republican government came on the scene, a government which was
strongly influenced by those same Evangelicals who claimed to hate
Clinton’s lies?
Well, they
promoted lies. And nowhere was the Culture of Lying more pronounced
than at the DOJ, where some of the leaders were people who claimed
to be followers of the Prince of Peace, but, apparently decided
instead to emulate the Father of Lies. Indeed, "misstatements
happen," and they happen in large part because the very people
who say they are Christians seem to believe that when one is working
for the DOJ, the Ninth Commandment ("You shall not bear false
witness against your neighbor" which Roman Catholics regard
as the Eighth Commandment) has been repealed.
August
22, 2009
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. He
also is a consultant with American Economic Services. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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