Wall Street Journal by Former Attorney General Mukasey
We need not worry unduly about the factual void at the center of the FBI director’s announcement on Friday that the bureau had found emails—perhaps thousands—“pertinent” in some unspecified way to its investigation into Hillary Clinton’s handling of classified emails while she was secretary of state.
True, we don’t know what is actually in the emails of Huma Abedin, Mrs. Clinton’s close aide, but we can nonetheless draw some conclusions about how FBI Director James Comey came to issue his Delphic notice to Congress, and what the near-term future course of this investigation will be. Regrettably, those conclusions do no credit to him, or to the leadership of the Justice Department, of which the FBI is a part.
Friday’s announcement had a history. Recall that Mr. Comey’s authority extends only to supervising the gathering of facts to be presented to Justice Department lawyers for their confidential determination of whether those facts justify a federal prosecution.
Nonetheless, in July he announced that “no reasonable prosecutor” would seek to charge her with a crime, although Mrs. Clinton had classified information on a private nonsecure server—at least a misdemeanor under one statute; and although she was “extremely careless” in her handling of classified information such that it was exposed to hacking by hostile foreign nations—a felony under another statute; and apparently had caused the destruction of emails—a felony under two other statutes. He then told Congress repeatedly that the investigation into her handling of emails was closed.
Those decisions were not his to make, nor were the reasons he offered for making them at all tenable: that prosecutions for anything but mishandling large amounts of classified information, accompanied by false statements to investigators, were unprecedented; and that criminal prosecutions for gross negligence were constitutionally suspect.
Members of the military have been imprisoned and dishonorably discharged for mishandling far less information, and prosecutions for criminal negligence are commonplace and entirely permissible. Yet the attorney general, whose decisions they were, and who had available to her enough legal voltage to vaporize Mr. Comey’s flimsy reasons for inaction, told Congress she would simply defer to the director.[...]
When the FBI learned that two of the secretary’s staff members had classified information on their computers, rather than being handed grand-jury subpoenas demanding the surrender of those computers, the staff members received immunity in return for giving them up. In addition, they successfully insisted that the computers not be searched for any data following the date when Congress subpoenaed information relating to its own investigation, and that the computers be physically destroyed after relevant data within the stipulated period was extracted.
The technician who destroyed 30,000 of Mrs. Clinton’s emails after Congress directed that they be preserved lied to investigators even after receiving immunity. He then testified that Clinton aides requested before service of the subpoena that he destroy them, and that he destroyed them afterward on his own initiative.
Why would an FBI director, who at one time was an able and aggressive prosecutor, agree to such terms or accept such a fantastic story?
The search for clues brings us to an email to then-Secretary Clinton from President Obama, writing under a pseudonym, that the FBI showed to Ms. Abedin. That email, along with 21 others that passed between the president and Secretary Clinton, has been withheld by the administration from release on confidentiality grounds not specified but that could only be executive privilege.
After disclosure of those emails, the president said during an interview that he thought Mrs. Clinton should not be criminally charged because there was no evidence that she had intended to harm the nation’s security—a showing required under none of the relevant statutes. As indefensible as his legal reasoning may have been, his practical reasoning is apparent: If Mrs. Clinton was at criminal risk for communicating on her nonsecure system, so was he.
That presented the FBI director with a dilemma that was difficult, but not complex. It offered two choices. He could have tried to proceed along the course marked by the relevant laws. The FBI is powerless to present evidence to a grand jury, or to issue grand-jury subpoenas. That authority lies with the Justice Department, headed by an attorney general who serves, as her certificate of appointment recites, “during the pleasure of the President of the United States for the time being.”
However, the director could have urged the attorney general to allow the use of a grand jury. Grand juries sit continuously in all the districts where an investigation would have been conducted, and no grand jury need have been convened to deal with this case in particular. If she refused, he could have gone public with his request, and threatened to resign if it was not followed. If she had agreed, he would have been in the happy position last week of having discovered yet further evidence that could be offered in support of pending charges. If she had refused, he could have resigned.
There is precedent within the Justice Department for that course. During what came to be known as the Saturday night massacre in 1973, Attorney General Elliot Richardson and his deputy, William Ruckelshaus, resigned rather than follow President Nixon’s order to fire Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox. Indeed, on his own telling, Mr. Comey threatened to resign as Deputy Attorney General unless the George W. Bush administration changed its electronic-surveillance program, although the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court later approved the feature to which he had objected.
Instead, Mr. Comey acceded to the apparent wish of President Obama that no charges be brought. There is precedent for that too—older and less honorable. It goes back to the 12th century when Henry II asked, “who will rid me of this troublesome priest?” The king’s eager subordinates duly proceeded to murder Archbishop Thomas Becket at the altar of Canterbury Cathedral. That choice—to follow the sovereign’s wish—left Mr. Comey facing only further dishonor if he did not disclose the newly discovered emails and they leaked after the election.
And what of the future? Mr. Comey reportedly wrote his letter to Congress over the objection of the attorney general and her deputy. Thus, regardless of what is in the newly discovered emails, the current Justice Department will not permit a grand jury to hear evidence in this case. And because only a grand jury can constitutionally bring charges, that means no charges will be brought.
Which is to say, we know enough to conclude that what we don’t know is of little immediate relevance to our current dismal situation.
You misspelled "Comey" in the headline
ReplyDelete“It goes back to the 12th century when Henry II asked, “who will rid me of this troublesome priest?” The king’s eager subordinates duly proceeded to murder Archbishop Thomas Becket at the altar of Canterbury Cathedral. ”
ReplyDeleteI live in Israel. I’m a PhD economist. I support Trump. Thank you Judge Michael B. Mukasey. The Bible records concerning the King of Israel against the Hebrew Prophet Elisha:
He said, “Thus and more may God do to me if the head of Elisha son of Shaphat remains on his shoulders today.” Now Elisha was sitting at home and the elders were sitting with him. The king had sent ahead one of his men; but before the messenger arrived, [Elisha] said to the elders, “Do you see—that murderer has sent someone to cut off my head! Watch when the messenger comes, and shut the door and hold the door fast against him. No doubt the sound of his master’s footsteps will follow.” (2 Kings 6:31-32).
"...the current Justice Department..." Bizarre. The author does exactly what he excoriates Mr. Comey for. He presumes to speak for others.
ReplyDeleteSince you're posting comments from former AG's, here's another one. The article, like this one, should form its own post on your blog, at least if you want to bother appearing like you're repairing these positions in an unbiased manner.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/james-comey-did-the-right-thing/2016/10/31/7fcf0018-9f84-11e6-a44d-cc2898cfab06_story.html?utm_term=.3eef04959f67
Bret Stephens has Comey's number:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.wsj.com/articles/resign-mr-comey-1477955914
a) Mukasey does not say, contrary to what you claim, that Comey's statement is the reason Clinton will not be charged. Rather, the reason is that the DOJ will not empanel a grand jury. This has nothing to do with Comey's statement, and everything to do with the pro-Clinton bias (read, corruption) that unfortunately infects the DOJ.
ReplyDeleteb) Mukasey agrees that at this point, having made his original poor decision not to recommend charges, Comey had no choice but to inform Congress of his decision to continue the investigation. That choice—to follow the sovereign’s wish—left Mr. Comey facing only further dishonor if he did not disclose the newly discovered emails and they leaked after the election.
we are simply have a different understanding of what he said.
ReplyDeleteBy going against the DOJ it is clear that they will not empanel a grand jury. Why?
He had already ruled the first time there was no basis for pressing charges - thus he caused biased the response by acting without evidence and going against precedent
Thus it will take clear cut unequivocal evidence of criminal activity for the DOJ to act - which is not likely to happen.
He is clearly at odds with the what everyone accepts that there are in fact DOJ rules that Comey violated
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/james-comey-is-damaging-our-democracy/2016/10/29/894d0f5e-9e49-11e6-a0ed-ab0774c1eaa5_story.html?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.7405ef554037
He had already ruled the first time there was no basis for pressing
ReplyDeletecharges - thus he caused biased the response by acting without evidence
and going against precedent
Then the problem is with what he said the first time, not with what he said this time.
Re. second point, correct. Mukasey holds that Comey was completely off the reservation the first time. But given the situation of that first terrible decision, at this point he has no choice but to speak out. Which is one of the points I've been making.
I guess the only solution to making such a mistake the first time that can not be corrected is to resign
ReplyDeleteThat would not correct the mistake. The way he did it, we do end up with some rough justice. He saved Hillary first time around, he halfway corrects by hurting her this time. Put another way, he failed the voters first time; tries to make it up to them this time.
ReplyDeleteCronyism and corruption in the DOJ. Who is investigating the latest Clinton emails? Podesta's close friend. Unbelievable how tone-deaf these people are.
ReplyDeletehttp://twitchy.com/gregp-3534/2016/11/01/cant-make-this-up-doj-official-running-clinton-email-probe-tried-to-get-son-a-job-with-the-clinton-campaign/
and
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-10-31/doj-tells-congress-it-will-work-expeditiously-review-abedin-emails-there-just-one-pr
Piers Morgan gets it, and he ain't no Republican:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3889698/PIERS-MORGAN-Desperate-Democrats-need-stop-lashing-Comey-no-choice-people-blame-email-mess-Huma-Bill-Hillary.html
Yes indeed. So much for everyone:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/lynch-backs-comey-decision-reopen-clinton-email-probe-article-1.2854128
Even the head of DOJ is aboard.
Didn't see any statement that she supports him - it is simply now that it has been done it has to be established clearly whether there is anything in the emails.
ReplyDeleteShe didn't say that she changed her mind about opposing him or claiming that he violated standard procedures.
She is a partisan hack.
ReplyDeleteWilliam Barr, AG under Bush I and Bill Clinton, strongly supports Comey's action this week:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/james-comey-did-the-right-thing/2016/10/31/7fcf0018-9f84-11e6-a44d-cc2898cfab06_story.html?utm_term=.cbbff1a01882
Of course. This is the Clinton MO; when someone catches them, they turn the tables and blame the messenger.
ReplyDeleteJames Kallstrom, former deputy director of FBI, quoted by Megyn Kelly in support of Comey's current actions:
ReplyDeletehttps://twitter.com/megynkelly/status/793624703025815552
Here's the clip:
http://video.foxnews.com/v/5193156709001/?#sp=show-clips
Since when has Mukasey become a member of the Clinton team?!
ReplyDelete