|
Liberty
and Safety
by
Andrew
P. Napolitano
by Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently by Andrew P. Napolitano: Can
Congress Write Any Laws It Wants?
For a professor
of law at one of the country's best law schools who was once the
go-to guy in the Justice Department whenever the Bush White House
needed legal cover for its truly lawless ventures outside the Constitution,
John Yoo has revealed a breathtaking ignorance of American values,
history, and jurisprudence.
In his startling
mea culpa, published in the Wall Street Journal yesterday,
Professor Yoo confessed to advising President Bush that he possessed
powers from some source other than the Constitution, that in the
name of public safety he could cut down all laws written for the
express purpose of restraining the President, and that Americans
would expect no less than this so long as they were actually kept
safe as a result of it.
He advanced
the argument that since the President's first job is to keep us
safe, he could disregard the 1978 FISA law as "obsolete" since it
was written in an era when modern day non-state terrorism was not
contemplated. By this unprecedented and perverse logic, one wonders
if the President was told if he could disregard as obsolete any
law that was inconvenient to his purposes; even the Supreme Law
of the Land itself, which the Constitution declares itself to be.
The whole purpose
of FISA was to abolish the Nixonian notion that "If the President
does it, it's not illegal." While FISA's statutory reduction of
the constitutionally-mandated standard for obtaining a judicial
search warrant from probable cause of crime to probable cause
of foreign status is itself of dubious constitutionality,
nevertheless, it is and was at the time Professor Yoo was telling
President Bush to disregard it, the "exclusive" lawful means for
agents of the President to wiretap foreign persons present in the
U.S. Moreover, the FISA court has become the President's rubber
stamp by granting well over 99% of requested warrants.
It is not painless
for one who loathes this law to defend it; but it was among the
laws that the President and the Professor swore to uphold, it does
force the executive branch to identify and specify who and what
it wishes to pursue, and it presents at least a minimum of checking
and balancing by forcing the President to go before a super-secret
court (without an adversary present) and seek permission to violate
the Fourth Amendment-guaranteed rights of the President's targets.
The time-is-of-the
essence argument is nonsense. I once issued a search warrant in
my gym shorts from my living room at 3 am, and I know of a former
FISA court judge who did the same from his cell phone while riding
a motorcycle. While neither of these situations is optimal, there
are at least written records of what was done to whom and why; and
that was a goal of the law which President Bush was told was obsolete.
The Framers
never contemplated FISA, and I cannot conceive of Jefferson, Madison,
or even Hamilton condoning it. But one thing we know the Framers
would never condone is a government that refused to reside within
the Constitution; "chained down" by it as Jefferson once said.
The Founders,
unlike John Yoo and George Bush, feared a king who enforced only
the laws he found convenient to his present needs, who dispatched
his agents with their own self-generated search warrants to knock
on any door and seize any thing they or the king wanted, and who
claimed to be doing all this for safety's sake.
Cutting down
the laws to get at the Devil is dangerous business. As Robert Bolt
argued in A Man for All Seasons, the land is planted thick
with laws. If you cut them down to get to the Devil, who could stand
the wind that then would blow?
When President
Lincoln and the Radical Republicans tried civilians in military
tribunals in the North, hundreds of miles from battle, and in the
South after the Civil War had ended, a unanimous Supreme Court stopped
them. It declared that "The Constitution of the United States is
a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers
with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times,
and under all circumstances."
President Bush
argued frequently and forcefully that his first job was to keep
us safe. He was wrong. The Constitution tells us that his sole job
was to enforce the Constitution; and that means keeping us free.
Free from tyrants who sought and claimed power from thin air; free
from prince-like federal agents who could behave without constitutional
or legal restraint; free to live with a government that obeyed its
own laws. Any president who keeps us safe but unfree is rejecting
his oath to the American people.
July 17, 2009
Andrew
P. Napolitano [send
him mail], who was on the bench of the Superior Court of New
Jersey between 1987 and 1995, is the senior judicial analyst at
the Fox News Channel. His newest book, coming in April, is Dred
Scott’s Revenge: A Legal History of Race and Freedom in America,
(Nelson, 2009) His previous books are A
Nation of Sheep, The
Constitution in Exile and Constitutional
Chaos: What Happens When the Government Breaks Its Own Laws.
Copyright
© 2009 Andrew P. Napolitano
|