An
Open Letter To Judge Reggie Walton
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
Judge Reggie
B. Walton
U.S. District Court
Washington, D.C.
Dear Judge
Walton:
My name is
Christopher Manion. I am the last U.S. government employee to have
been accused of leaking, and then to be publicly cleared. That occurred
20 years ago. My, how the time does fly.
I open with
that awkward introduction in accordance with the instructions
from William Jeffress, who apparently represents Mr. Lewis Libby,
recently convicted of several felonies in your courtroom by a jury
of his peers. Mr. Jeffress provides advice on how to write letters
to you regarding Mr. Libby’s sentencing. He says I should identify
myself in the first paragraph.
Like Mrs. Joseph
Wilson, for whom I hold no personal portfolio, I was once a midlevel
functionary – in my case, I worked on the staff of the U.S. Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations in the 1980s. Like Mrs. Wilson’s
husband, my boss, U.S. Senator Jesse Helms (R- N.C.), was unpopular
with various elements in the Executive Branch, especially in the
State Department.
In July 1986,
a prominent Reagan appointee in the State Department was mad at
Senator Helms. So, in a conversation with the chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, this official accused me of leaking classified
information to a foreign government. Senator Ted Kennedy heard about
it and received a briefing from the committee. A few days later,
the story was mysteriously leaked to the New York Times, and made
headlines worldwide.
For the next
eighteen months I was the subject of intensive investigations. Finally,
in October 1987, the Senate Intelligence Committee and the Justice
Department publicly released their conclusion that "no leak
occurred." It had all been a frame-up. (While the person with
whom the false charge originated was not prosecuted for that act,
he was later convicted of other counts of lying to Congress. For
these crimes he was eventually pardoned by the first President Bush.
He now works in the White House. I forgave him long ago, but have
never heard from him since).
Senator Helms
defended me strongly. My exoneration came as a result of his trust
and support, as well as the volunteer legal efforts of crack attorney
Terry O’Donnell, and, critically, the tireless efforts a Senator
of the opposition party, Democrat David Boren of Oklahoma. Senator
Boren had assumed the chair of the Intelligence Committee in 1987
and was outraged by the whole fiasco.
The only time
I had ever met Senator Boren was in 1987, on the Senate floor. I
introduced myself after learning of his efforts to set the record
straight on my behalf. "I’m going to make sure you get a fair
shake," he said, and he firmly put his hand on my shoulder
for emphasis. That moment remains suspended before me in my mind
as a profound occasion of providential magnitude.
Had Senator
Boren never come to my defense – had my accuser had his way I’d
probably be getting out of jail about now. As it was, I never lost
my job, or my security clearances (I never lost any sleep, either).
Once I was cleared, the ombudsman of the Washington Post informed
me of the facts of media life (and their refusal to run a story).
"When you were accused, it was news but it wasn’t true. Now
that you’ve been cleared, it’s true but it isn’t news."
Your honor,
I relate all this to you to underscore a simple fact: malicious
lies have profound consequences on real people. When they break
the law, they should be punished.
I do not have
a recommendation about the length of sentence your court might impose
on Mr. Libby. But I do believe that those who have security clearances
should live up to the implicit contract we made when we received
them. Namely, that we keep secrets ourselves, and should not encourage
others to reveal them.
What about
the role of the press? Sure, they encourage leaks. They have a "get
out of jail free" card (at least, they used to). In that regard,
I once had the pleasure of hanging up on William Safire, then of
the New York Times, when he called me at my Senate office and ask
me to reveal the content of a classified hearing that had been held
earlier that day. "You know you don’t like the guy," he
said, referring to the subject of the hearing.
"It’s
classified," I said, and hung up.
Click.
I later discovered
that Mr. Safire was actually a friend of the person testifying,
and surmised that he merely intended to use any information I might
supply simply to share with his friend, and not with his readers.
Nonetheless, he was asking me to commit a felony. I assume he must
have done that sort of thing a lot. Strange.
Yes, I do have
respect for security clearances. Yes, I do agree with many of my
conservative friends (and some of my liberal targets in debate)
that too many simple facts are classified in Washington. And that
our intelligence agencies are profoundly inept. But that is "flour
of another sack," as Mr. Anzures, my Spanish teacher in Mexico
City forty-four years ago, used to say. If you say you won’t leak,
you shouldn’t leak. And if a malicious Executive Branch official
tries to use the leaking process to advance his own political agenda,
it is wrong. And if, as a part of that effort, the leaker, or his
superiors and colleagues encouraging the leak, tries to ruin the
career of a government employee who is playing by the rules, it
also constitutes an injustice. And, if the story leaked is also
a lie, the injustice is compounded by slander.
Judge Walton,
these are mortal sins, as well as breaches of the natural law and
positive law.
I have no specific
recommendation as to Mr. Libby’s sentence. But please do not be
fooled by the assertions of Mr. Libby’s supporters that only the
"far left" advocates your lawful role in the rendering
of justice. Quite the contrary. If "leftism" means the
concentration of illicit political power in the hands of a few,
and the destruction of competing sources of authority in the society,
then leftism is a vast and bipartisan enterprise in Washington these
days.
Those who uphold
the rule of law are hardly leftists. You should be aware that many
conservatives throughout America do take the Constitution seriously.
And it is hardly "leftist" to believe, with Thomas Aquinas
and Thomas Jefferson, that telling the truth is an act that we owe
to our neighbor under "the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God."
Indeed, it is the virtuous citizens of Federalist 57 that we are
striving to emulate, their freedoms to preserve.
True conservatives
expect our government officials to tell the truth (with regard to
testifying under oath) to keep their word (with regard to leaking
classified information), and to follow the Constitution. With regard
to Mr. Libby’s sentencing, I can only encourage you to do your duty.
Sincerely,
Christopher
Manion
Front Royal, Virginia
P.S. Mr. Jeffress
apparently suggests that letters to you should be sent to him so
he could forward them to you. I somehow doubt that this communication
would reach you, were I to follow his advice.
March
27, 2007
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2007. All Rights reserved.
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