Bringing Bush to Court
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Elizabeth de
la Vega
by Tom Engelhardt and
Elizabeth de la Vega
DIGG THIS
Keep in mind,
I've run Tomdispatch.com for only a few years, but I've been a book
editor in mainstream publishing for over 30 years. Sometime last
spring, I was on the phone with former federal prosecutor Elizabeth
de la Vega talking about books she might someday write, when she
suddenly said to me, "You know what I'd like to do?" When I asked
what, she replied, "What I've done all my life."
"What's that,"
I wondered innocently enough.
"I'd like
to draft an indictment of President Bush and his senior aides, and
present the case for prewar intelligence fraud to a grand jury,
just as if it were an actual case of mine, using the evidence we
already have in the public record. That's the book I'd like to do."
With those
three decades of publishing experience, I never doubted that this
was an idea whose time should come and now it has. De la
Vega has drawn up that indictment a "hypothetical" one, she
hastens to add convened that grand jury, and held seven days
of testimony. Yes, it's a grand jury directly out of her fertile
brain and the federal agents who testify are fictional, but all
the facts are true. She understands the case against the Bush administration
down to the last detail; and she's produced, to my mind, the book
of the post-election, investigative season: United States v.
George W. Bush et al.
It's a Tomdispatch.com
book project, produced in conjunction with Seven Stories Press,
a superb independent publisher, and officially published on December
1st. I think it's simply sensational. It makes a "slam dunk" case
for the way we were defrauded into war; despite the grim subject
matter, it's a beautifully designed little book, a pleasure to hold
in your hand; and, because de la Vega is a natural as a writer,
it's also thoroughly enjoyable reading. With genuine pride, I'll
be turning the Tomdispatch.com website over to excerpts from the
book this week, beginning with the posting of De la Vega's introduction
on the Enronization of American foreign policy today. The actual
"indictment" will be posted on Wednesday; the first day of grand
jury testimony on Thursday.
I assure you,
this is must-read event; no less important, this is a must-buy book
that must be given over the holiday season to friends, relatives,
those who politically disagree with you, and even perhaps sent to
Congressional representatives. Please get the investigative ball
rolling by purchasing the book at Amazon.com.
Today, United
States v. George W. Bush et al remains in the realm of fiction,
but tomorrow, if you lend a hand… who knows? ~ Tom
A Fraud
Worse than Enron
By Elizabeth
de la Vega
Elizabeth
de la Vega, appearing on behalf of the United States. That is
a phrase I've uttered hundreds of times in twenty years as a federal
prosecutor. I retired two years ago. So, obviously, I do not now
speak for any U.S. Attorney's Office, nor do I represent the federal
government. This should be apparent from the fact that I am proposing
a hypothetical indictment of the President and his senior advisers
not a smart move for any federal employee who wishes to remain
employed. Lest anyone miss the import of this paragraph, let me
emphasize that it is a DISCLAIMER: I am writing as a private citizen.
Obviously,
as a private citizen, I cannot simply draft and file an indictment.
Nor can I convene a grand jury. Instead, in the following pages
I intend to present a hypothetical indictment to a hypothetical
grand jury. The defendants are President George W. Bush, Vice President
Richard Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice, and former Secretary of State Colin Powell.
The crime is tricking the nation into war in legal terms,
conspiracy to defraud the United States. And all of you are invited
to join the grand jury.
We will meet
for seven days. On day one, I'll present the indictment in the morning
and in the afternoon I will explain the applicable law. On days
two through seven, we'll have witness testimony, presented in transcript
form, with exhibits.
As is the
practice in most grand jury presentations, the evidence will be
presented in summary form, by federal agents except that
these agents are hypothetical. (Any relationship to actual federal
agents, living or deceased, is purely coincidental.)
On day seven,
when the testimony is complete, I'll leave the room to allow the
grand jury to vote.
If the indictment
and grand jury are hypothetical, the evidence is not. I've prepared
for this case, just as I would have done for any other case in my
years as a prosecutor, by reviewing all of the available relevant
information. In this case, such information consists of witness
accounts, the defendants' speeches, public remarks, White House
press briefings, interviews, congressional testimony, official documents,
all public intelligence reports, and various summaries of intelligence,
such as in the reports of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
and the 9/11 Commission. I've discarded any evidence, however compelling,
that is uncorroborated.
Then, using
a sophisticated system of documents piled on every surface in my
dining room, I've organized and analyzed the reliable information
chronologically, by topic, and by defendant. I've compared what
the President and his advisers have said publicly to what they knew
and said behind the scenes. Finally, I've presented the case through
testimony that will, I hope, make sense and keep everybody awake.
After analyzing
this evidence in light of the applicable law, I've determined that
we already have more than enough information to allow a reasonable
person to conclude that the President conducted a wide-ranging effort
to deceive the American people and Congress into supporting a war
against Iraq. In other words, in legal terms, there is probable
cause to believe that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, and Powell violated
Title 18, United States Code, Section 371, which prohibits conspiracies
to defraud the United States. Probable cause is the standard of
proof required for a grand jury to return an indictment. Consequently,
we have more than sufficient evidence to warrant indictment of the
President and his advisers.
Do I expect
someone to promptly indict the President and his aides? No. I am
aware of the political impediments and constitutional issues relating
to the indictment of a sitting president. Do those impediments make
this merely an empty exercise? Absolutely not.
I believe
this presentation adds a singular perspective to the debate about
the President's use of prewar intelligence: that of an experienced
federal prosecutor. Certainly, scholars and experts such as Barbara
Olshansky, David Lindorff, Michael Ratner, John Dean, and Elizabeth
Holtzman have written brilliantly about the legal grounds for impeachment
that arise from the President's misrepresentations about the grounds
for an unprovoked invasion of Iraq. But for most Americans, the
debate about White House officials' responsibility for false preinvasion
statements remains fixed on, and polarized around, the wrong question:
Did the President and his team lie about the grounds for war? For
many, the suggestion that the President lied is heresy, more shocking
than a Baptist minister announcing during vespers that he's a cross-dresser.
For many others indeed, now the majority of Americans
that the President lied to get his war is a given, although no less
shocking.
So my goals
are threefold. First, I want to explain that under the law that
governs charges of conspiracy to defraud, the legal question is
not whether the President lied. The question is not whether the
President subjectively believed there were weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq. The legal question that must be answered is far more comprehensive:
Did the President and his team defraud the country? After swearing
to uphold the law of the land, did our highest government officials
employ the universal techniques of fraudsters deliberate
concealment, misrepresentations, false pretenses, half-truths
to deceive Congress and the American people?
My second
goal is to supplement the scholarly analyses already written, by
moving beyond exposition, beyond theory, to the inside of the courtroom,
or more precisely, the grand jury room. By presenting the President's
conspiracy to defraud just as a prosecutor would present any fraud
conspiracy, I hope to enable readers to consider the case in an
uncharged atmosphere, applying criminal law to the evidence that
they believe has been proved to the standard of probable cause,
just as grand jurors would in any other case.
Why is it
important to do this? Because whether the President and his senior
officials conspired to defraud the United States about the grounds
for war is, at least on one level, a legal question, but, without
a shift in political will, there will never be any reasoned consideration
of it as such. The President will not be held accountable for misrepresenting
the prewar intelligence unless and until Congress conducts hearings
similar to the Watergate hearings. As yet, however, we seem painfully
incapable of reaching that point. We are like inept tennis partners,
collectively letting the ball slip by in the no-man's-land between
the service line and the baseline, or in this case, between the
legal and the political.
Perhaps more
important, however, is that, although the evidence of wrongdoing
is overwhelming, the facts are so complicated far more so
than those that prompted the Watergate hearings that it's
impossible to have a productive debate about them in the political
sphere. Indeed, modern-day spin has vanquished substance so thoroughly
that even the most well-grounded charge of deliberate deception
is often considered more despicable than the deception itself.
One forum
where that's not true is the courtroom. The court system is far
from perfect, but there we at least expect that people will not
substitute personal attacks for argument. We expect a reasoned exploration
of fact versus fiction, honest mistake versus deliberate fraud.
We also expect, and the law requires, that people hear all the
evidence before deciding, thereby avoiding the rapid volley
of sound bites that so regularly masquerades for debate on television.
Hence, this hypothetical grand jury presentation: it is a vehicle
to deliver a message.
My third goal
is to send the message home to whomever will listen. And
this is it:
The President
has committed fraud.
It is a crime
in the legal, not merely the colloquial, sense.
It is far
worse than Enron.
It is not
a victimless crime.
We cannot
shrug our shoulders and walk away.
Why? Because
We Are All Kitty Genovese's Neighbors
As an Assistant
U. S. Attorney in Minneapolis, a member of the Organized Crime Strike
Force in San Jose, and Chief of the San Jose Branch U.S. Attorney's
Office, I prosecuted all manner of criminal cases. There were bank
embezzlements, government frauds, violent takeover robberies, piloting
a commercial passenger flight while under the influence the
pilot had had twenty rum and (diet) Cokes and four hours' sleep
before takeoff and investment frauds, to name a few. Most
were interesting; some downright loopy. One hapless fellow, for
example, stole a truck filled with frozen turkeys and drove it across
state lines to Wisconsin, thereby landing himself in federal prison
rather than in county jail. For good measure, the following week
before he'd been apprehended for the frozen-turkey heist
he stole a truck filled with packaged frozen broccoli and
drove it to Iowa.
Unquestionably,
though, the most compelling cases were those that involved victims
of violent crimes, robberies, or fraud. So I was not surprised
to hear the lead Enron prosecutor's comment after the jury convicted
former Enron CEOs Ken Lay and Jeffrey Skilling: "What inspired me,"
John Hueston said, "was just that, that I had spoken to so many
employees, so many victims who lost their savings, people who pleaded
with me and the other prosecutors to see justice done."
Thanks to
Hueston and his team, the victims of the Enron fraud a $68
billion dollar crime that left 20,000 people without jobs, pensions,
and life's savings have obtained some measure of justice.
They will never be made whole, but at least the CEOs who orchestrated
the fraud have been held accountable. In the case of the largest
corporate fraud ever prosecuted in the United States, the system
has worked, albeit imperfectly.
Thus far,
however, in the case of the vastly broader and more devastating
Iraq war fraud orchestrated by the CEO of the United States and
his management team, the system has failed. And we are all victims
of this fraud. George W. Bush exploited the vulnerability of an
entire populace reeling from the September 11, 2001, attacks to
manipulate them into supporting a war based on false pretenses.
If the financial cost of the President's fraud is astronomical
$340 billion in direct war costs alone as of August 2006
the human cost is incalculable, and far more profound: over 2,500
American soldiers killed and 19,000 wounded; possibly many more
than 50,000 Iraqis killed; untold numbers of grieving Iraqi and
American family members; hundreds of thousands of Iraqis homeless;
and a million soldiers who have been sent to this war and will never
be the same.
While we are
all victims of the President's crime, we are also all bystanders.
The crime is ongoing, happening right before our eyes, and we are
all onlookers; we are all, in a sense, Kitty Genovese's neighbors.
As Malcolm
Gladwell recounts in his book The
Tipping Point, Kitty Genovese was viciously assaulted, stabbed
three times, and finally killed, on the way to her Queens, New York,
home one night in 1964. Thirty-eight neighbors heard or watched
her ordeal, but no one called the police until the attack was essentially
over. The murder was universally seen as a horrifying example of
modern-day indifference to the plight of others. But, Gladwell explains,
psychologists Bibb Latane and John Darley conducted experiments
that led to a far different explanation: "When people are in a group
. . . responsibility for acting is diffused. They assume that someone
else will make the call, or they assume that because no one else
is acting, the apparent problem . . . is not really a problem."
Ironically, then, it was not that no one called to help Kitty Genovese
"despite the fact that thirty-eight people heard her scream;
it's that no one called because thirty-eight people heard
her scream."
For over a
year now, polls have shown that the majority of Americans believe
President Bush deliberately misrepresented prewar intelligence.
Executive branch officials who deliberately mislead Congress and
the public intending to influence congressional action have committed
a federal crime. That means that roughly 100 million Americans believe
Bush has committed a crime, yet most, like Kitty Genovese's neighbors,
are just passive bystanders although not, I believe, due
to indifference.
Indeed, many
of us are just watching it happen because we feel powerless to stop
it. Hundreds of thousands of people have, in effect, called 911,
but not even Democrats in Congress have been willing to answer the
phone. It is not that they don't have enough information; it is,
our Democratic representatives say, because it is not good political
strategy.
The proposition
that it is not good political strategy to insist that government
officials obey the law is highly debatable. More important, strategizing
in the face of an ongoing crime is wrong. Ask any legislator whether
he would strategize about possible political fallout before intervening
to stop a crime that was occurring in front of his eyes and the
response would be, "Of course not." But that is exactly what's happening
right now.
So, consider
this my 911 call. I'm calling on Democrats and Republicans
to do the right thing. And I'm calling on everyone else to do whatever
you can to convince Congress to do the right thing. I am not talking
about bringing people to justice in the vengeful sense that
President Bush employs. I am talking about effecting justice. I
am talking, finally, about holding our highest government officials
accountable for a complex and calculated program of false pretense,
misleading statements, and material omissions a criminal
betrayal of trust that is strikingly similar to, yet far worse than,
the fraud committed by Enron's top officials.
Enron:
Misleading Statements and Material Omissions
In July of
2002, President Bush stood before a snappy blue-and-white banner
marked "Corporate Responsibility" and announced that he was opposed
to fraud. With the enactment of the new Corporate Corruption Act,
the President declared, there would "not be a different ethical
standard for corporate America than the standard that applies to
everyone else. The honesty you expect in your small businesses,
or in your workplace . . . will be expected and enforced in every
corporate suite in this country." CEOs would now have to personally
vouch for the truth of their public statements.
Bush's speech
announcing a higher standard for CEOs was itself misleading. Hearing
it, one might easily conclude that if the President hadn't pushed
for this new law, corporate officers would be legally entitled to
lie, cheat, and steal. Not true, of course. The new law, also called
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, did not suddenly, for the first time in
United States history, require corporate officials to be truthful,
forthright, and fair with the public. Such obligations have been
inherent in criminal fraud and other statutes for years.
Indeed, the
Enron prosecution did not involve the Sarbanes-Oxley Act at all.
The main charge was conspiracy to defraud: that is, conspiring to
deceive investors by manipulating financial data, making false and
misleading statements, and deliberately omitting important facts,
in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371.
Manipulation
of data, false and misleading statements, and material omissions
sound familiar?
At trial,
former Enron CEOs Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling claimed they
were not responsible for the deception because they had no idea
what their underlings were doing. As the jury was instructed, however,
anyone who makes representations intending that the public will
rely on them, has an affirmative obligation to make sure that they
are true and accurate. Representations made with reckless indifference
to their truth are as false as outright lies.
After four
months of complex testimony, the jury reached a simple conclusion:
Lay and Skilling were responsible for what went on their company.
As school principal Freddie Delgado put it: "I can't say that I
don't know what my teachers were doing in the classroom. I am still
responsible if a child gets lost."
In other words,
the Enron jurors concluded that, legally, the desks of CEOs Lay
and Skilling were the final repositories of the proverbial buck.
Those jurors were average Americans office workers, educators,
engineers, a nurse and they knew, even without the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act, that CEOs should be held to the same standards of honesty and
accountability that they would apply to themselves in their own
lives. Faced with evidence that Lay and Skilling had repeatedly
made public statements that were seriously undermined, if not flatly
contradicted, by information and warnings they had received behind
the scenes, the jury refused to allow them to avoid responsibility
by blaming their subordinates.
Iraq: Misleading
Statements and Material Omissions
The techniques
of deception used by George W. Bush and his aides are identical
to those used by Lay and Skilling. In his July 2002 speech announcing
the signing of the Corporate Corruption Bill, the President said,
"The only fair risks are [those] based on honest information." The
President and his top advisers were acutely aware of the solemn
risks posed by an invasion of Iraq, but instead of debating those
risks honestly, they developed slogans, including the familiar "risks
of inaction are greater than the risks of action" that simultaneously
usurped and deflected counterarguments while providing no information
whatsoever, honest or otherwise.
Such propaganda,
cynical and craven as it is, might not qualify as criminal fraud,
but the propaganda alone was insufficient to convince Congress and
the American people to invest in the plan for war. To remedy this
deficiency and close the deal, the President and his top aides made
hundreds of representations, both general and specific, that were
carefully crafted to manipulate public opinion. As we now know,
many of those assertions were false and misleading. More important,
we also now know that President Bush and his advisers had notice
and direct knowledge that their representations were seriously undermined
and in some key instances, disproved by information that was available
to them. Consistently, the President and his aides knowingly conveyed
false impressions, concealed important information, made deliberate
misrepresentations, and professed certainty about facts that were
speculative at best. Such is the definition of criminal fraud
whether committed by the President of the United States or the CEO
of a major corporation.
The only difference
between the fraud committed by the Enron officers and the fraud
committed by the President is that the latter was far more comprehensive
and far more calculated. Even as President Bush stood center stage
endorsing honesty that July four years ago, he and his company were
setting the stage for another show. If the "only fair risks" speech
was a perky Frank Capra clip, the White House's next production
would be twenty-first-century H.G. Wells.
As of July
30, 2002, Bush had directed the creation of the White House Iraq
Group, a public-relations operation whose sole purpose was to market
the war. This team, collectively called WHIG, was co-chaired by
the President's closest aides and long-term political consultants,
Senior Adviser Karl Rove whom Bush has described as "the
architect" of his 2004 reelection campaign and former Counselor
to the President Karen Hughes.
By July 30,
2002, the White House Iraq Group had already begun fabricating an
ominous scenario that blurred together the September 11 tragedy,
mushroom clouds rising over American cities, and terrorists releasing
strains of smallpox, interspersed with the shadowy face of a mad
Iraqi dictator spring-loaded to attack the United States. They were
collecting props anthrax vials and undated photos showing
centrifuge components and unidentifiable buildings where something
ominous might be happening, but we can't afford to wait to find
out. They were writing the script: power phrases like "Grave
and gathering danger" and "We can't afford to let the smoking gun
be a mushroom cloud," designed less to inform than to inflame. And,
finally, Rove, Hughes, and company were scheduling appearances for
the President's War Council members that would begin just a month
later, in early September 2002.
It was to
be a bravura performance by the President, the Vice President, the
Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, the National Security
Adviser, and many supporting cast members. The production was so
well done, in fact, that, like the radio audience terrified into
hysteria by the infamous "War of the Worlds" broadcast of 1938,
most of us were fooled. Admittedly, we resisted buying the duct
tape and plastic sheeting; we may not have wrapped our heads in
wet towels to ward off Martian gas like the 1938 radio audience.
What happened, however, was much worse: because of Bush's fiction,
we agreed to bomb people 8,000 miles away whose only "crime" was
that they were oppressed by a violent and cruel dictator.
Undoubtedly,
Americans were panicked by H. G. Wells's radio play in part because
they were exhausted and nervous in those tough Depression years.
But Orson Welles' breathless report of a Martian invasion was never
intended to cause panic, nor was it ultimately harmful.
The President's
elaborate production was, and still remains, an entirely different
story. It was a deliberate effort to create a permanent state of
fear in America. And to say it was harmful is like saying that it
hurts to get hit by a Mack truck.
Federal sentencing
guidelines recognize that one who defrauds a vulnerable victim,
such as a salesman who falsely represents the curative benefits
of an elixir to a cancer patient, has committed an even more serious
crime than one who defrauds a person who is not so "particularly
susceptible." The President knew that Americans were "particularly
susceptible" in 2002. We were exhausted, and justifiably terrified,
not only because of September 11 but also because of the anthrax
murders and the random Washington, DC, sniper killings that coincided
with the Bush-Cheney administration's push for war.
President
Bush and his White House Iraq Group did not merely exploit this
fear; they magnified it. Worse yet, the President was the very person
upon whom the public relied to protect it from danger and, one would
hope, from omnipresent fear itself. Having used the authority of
the Oval Office to make people more afraid, having created
an even darker backdrop of fear, our highest officials exploited
that reliance and the trust they enjoyed by virtue of their positions
to sell something they knew the American public would not otherwise
have bought. It was as if the cancer victim's trusted personal physician
had convinced him that his disease was more advanced than it really
was, and then used the same fraudulently heightened fear to manipulate
him into buying a bogus cure-all.
In the language
of criminal law, the President and his senior advisers have abused
a position of trust to defraud the most vulnerable of victims. How
would such a case be presented for prosecution? I invite you into
the grand jury room to observe:
Ladies
and Gentlemen, tomorrow begins our presentation in the case of
United States v. George W. Bush et al. Please remember that you
must decide the case based solely on the evidence that's presented
and the applicable law, without regard to prejudice or sympathy.
In other words, your politics, and any personal feelings you have
toward the defendants positive or negative should
have no bearing on your deliberations.
I will begin
by passing out the indictment, so don't forget your reading glasses
. . .
Excerpted
from United
States v. George W. Bush et al. by Elizabeth de la Vega,
published December 1, 2006 by Seven Stories Press and Tomdispatch.com.
November
28, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Elizabeth de la Vega [send
her mail] is a former federal prosecutor with more than 20 years
of experience. During her tenure, she was a member of the Organized
Crime Strike Force and Chief of the San Jose Branch of the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the Northern District of California. Her pieces
have appeared in the Nation Magazine, the Los Angeles
Times, and Salon. She writes regularly for Tomdispatch. This
is the introduction to her new book, United
States v. George W. Bush et al.
Copyright
© 2006 Elizabeth de la Vega
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|