The Real Blackwater Scandal
Another example of prosecutorial abuse in a political case.
WSJ.com
No, not as the left would have it, that Blackwater still exists. The scandal
is that the Justice Department's case against five former security guards for
the military contractor unraveled late last week in what appears to be another
instance of gross prosecutorial misconduct, as abusive Justice lawyers went
after an unsympathetic political target.
The indictments—which were thrown out by D.C. District Judge Ricardo Urbina
in a derisive and detailed 90-page opinion—stemmed from a 2007 firefight in
Baghdad's Nisour Square that left 14 Iraqis dead and others wounded. The
government contends that five Blackwater guards, who were providing tactical
support for the State Department after an IED exploded in the vicinity of a
meeting with Iraqi officials, went on an unprovoked killing spree against
unarmed civilians. The guards maintain that they came under attack by insurgents
and were responding in self-defense to a mortal threat.
Judge Urbina dismissed the charges because prosecutors misused sworn
statements the guards were compelled to make to investigators after the
shooting, under the threat of job loss. This was routine practice under military
contracting rules, though the statements could not be used in criminal
prosecutions. Promptly after the Nisour incident these statements were also
leaked to the media, which ran with the narrative of modern-day Hessians gone
berserk.
"In their zeal to bring charges against the defendants in this case," Judge
Urbina ruled, prosecutors had violated Fifth Amendment protections against
self-incrimination by using these compelled statements to formulate their case
and ultimately obtain indictments against the guards. The judge calls it "the
government's reckless violation of the defendants' constitutional rights."
Because of prior contact with the compelled statements, the Justice
Department's entire criminal division had recused itself from the case, which
was handed over to national-security prosecutors and later to Assistant U.S.
Attorney for the District of Columbia Kenneth Kohl. The veteran Justice
public-integrity lawyer Raymond Hulser was eventually assigned to lead a "taint
team" to rebuild the case without using the off-limits statements, and he
repeatedly warned the trial team that their evidence was "thoroughly tainted."
"By all accounts these prophylactic measures fell well short of
expectations," Judge Urbina notes with some understatement. In "direct
contravention of the clear directives" of Mr. Hulser, the statements were used
to obtain a search warrant against Blackwater, figured into plea discussions,
and exposed in testimony to the grand jury, forcing Justice to withdraw the case
and present it to a new panel.
In the second round that featured redacted testimony from the first grand
jury, prosecutors also excised what Judge Urbina calls "substantial exculpatory
evidence." The judge goes on to say that Justice's "inconsistent, extraordinary
explanations" for its conduct "smack of post hoc rationalization and are simply
implausible," and ultimately "lacking in credibility."
Certainly the shootings at Nisour are a tragedy that strained U.S. relations
with the Iraqi government, though the details seem reminiscent of the 2005
incident at Haditha, which the Washington political class played as another My
Lai massacre but in reality was the product of the complex, asymmetrical combat
conditions in a war zone. The courts martial against all but one of the Marines
at Haditha have been dismissed or collapsed.
In this case, too, one question is whether prosecutors felt they could get
away with such abusive behavior because Blackwater was such a politically
unpopular defendant. The firm had political ties to Republicans, and Democrats
and their media allies had made Blackwater a whipping boy to further undermine
public support for the Iraq war. (Blackwater is now renamed Xe Services and no
longer contracting in Iraq.)
This marks the fourth recent example in which judges have tossed out cases
citing Justice Department abuse involving easy political targets. In the last
year it has become clear that the ethics conviction against former Alaska
Senator Ted Stevens was likely a miscarriage of justice, with prosecutors
covering up evidence and trying to keep a witness from testifying.
There's also the vendetta against two former executives at Broadcom in the
forgotten political uproar over backdating stock options. That case was thrown
out last month after a judge ruled that prosecutors had improperly pressured
witnesses and leaked information to the press. Earlier this decade, a federal
judge tossed out multiple tax evasion cases against former KPMG partners.
Something is rotten in the culture of Justice, leading ambitious government
crusaders to think they can get away with flouting due process when the
political winds are blowing hot. Congress and the press corps may be too
politically implicated to police this prosecutorial malpractice, so it may be up
to the judiciary to apply more stringent sanctions.
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