7-14--09 Court Allows Padilla Suit Against Yoo To Proceed |
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By: bmaz From Emptywheel | Original Article
Yoo might be having a bad day when a Federal judge starts his analysis of your immunity claim by citing Alexander Hamilton from the Federalist Papers. And that is exactly what Judge Jeffrey S. White of NDCA District Court has done:
First, a little background is in order. The plaintiff is Jose Padilla, an American citizen arrested with great fanfare on May 8, 2002, on a material witness warrant, by the Bush Administration as being a "dirty bomb" suspect. As the "material witness" warrant was a sham, Bush (through Rumsfeld) quickly designated Padilla an "enemy combatant" and placed him in the custody of the Department of Defense, the military, and locked him up indefinitely in the US Naval brig in Charleston, South Carolina. Padilla was detained without being charged, was subjected to extreme isolation, including isolation from both counsel and from his family, and was interrogated under threat of torture, deportation and even death. He was placed in solitary confinement in a tiny cell in an otherwise empty wing of the military brig. Padilla alleges that he was “subjected to a systematic program of unlawful interrogation methods and conditions of confinement, which proximately and foreseeably caused him to suffer extreme isolation, sensory deprivation, severe physical pain, sleep deprivation, and profound disruption of his senses. The defendant is the notorious John Yoo, Bush torture lawyer extraordinaire. Yoo, of course, is currently a law professor at the University of California Berkeley and was, at the times material to the complaint, Deputy Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel for the Bush/Cheney Administration. Padilla states, and the court accepted as fact, that Yoo:
In a nutshell, Jose Padilla is suing Yoo for being the protagonist in writing legal cover that got Padilla detained indefinitely without due process and tortured to the point of mental insanity. John Yoo responded to Padilla's complaint with the tried and true, and uncommonly successful, ploy of filing a Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss based upon qualified immunity. Taking a huge cue from his Chief Judge, Vaughn Walker, Judge Jeffrey White has taken the absurdity of the government (yes the DOJ is still representing Yoo) position apart at the seams and thrown it in their face. Judge White has ruled that all of Padilla's claims, save one, may proceed forward. And he lays the wood to the Bush/Cheney torture regime and their depraved contortion of the law, and the Constitution, in the process. It is an extremely well written opinion, and I highly recommend you read the whole thing if so inclined. The first item that struck me is how Judge White has sidestepped the recent Iqbal decision. Just as I though might be the case, Iqbal is shaping up to be nowhere near the problem many thought; instead, Federal judges like Jeff White and Vaughn Walker are affirmatively using it as authority to permit civil liberties cases by finding exactly the conditions necessary to satisfy Iqbal. When the trial court affirmatively complies with that process, and that is what was done here, and still finds the grounds for a valid cause of action, it is going to be very hard for an appellate court to undercut the decision. Next, the court undertakes a detailed analysis of the criteria necessary for a valid Bivens claim and, wonder of wonders, finds Padilla's claims sufficient. The discussion by White where he finds a valid Bivens claim is long, covering pages 12 through 28 of the opinion but, to put it mildly, is a work of art. Like Vaughn Walker in al-Haramain and Jewel et. al, Jeffrey White has taken the supposed strength of Yoo's defense and narrowed it, defined it and filleted it open. And, as with the Iqbal portion, he has done so in a manner that is designed to withstand the rigors of appellate scrutiny. John Yoo ought to be very concerned about this. In the third and last major section of the opinion (starting on page 29), Judge White specifically dissects Yoo's bleating qualified immunity assertion.
The last part - "when they perform their duties reasonably" - is the key here. As you might guess, Mr. Padilla does not think that John Yoo performed his duties reasonably (neither do I). This has always been the threshold that the blithering idiot main stream media keeps spewing cannot be reached. Guess what, Judge White is a little more sanguine and thinks reasonable people could find that John Yoo was unreasonable. The court described the standard applicable to consideration:
At this point, it should be noted that the court here is not finding that Yoo's conduct violated Padilla's rights as alleged in the amended complaint, only that Padilla has stated a sufficient cause of action that may be responded to and on which the case may proceed forward with discovery and determination on the merits. But the words and discussion in the decision leave little doubt that the court believes there are solid cognizable claims against Yoo:
There you have it, governmental lawyers like Yoo, Bradbury, and Gonzales can be held liable for the foreseeable consequences of unprofessional work. This language must be doubly disturbing to Yoo et. al coming right before the imminent release of the reportedly scathing OPR Report. Padilla alleges, among a whole page of detailed and descriptive allegations contained on page 33 of the opinion, that Yoo:
Judge White held:
Nice, tight and sweet words and, again, devastating to the interests of John Yoo and similarly situated torture attorneys. Oh, and one other thing, Judge White eviscerated the inane argument that because Padilla was not convicted of anything at the time, he was not entitled to Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment. This argument, Scalia's rambling to Lesley Stahl notwithstanding, has been flat out silly from the start, and many of the commenters here have pointed out the obvious arguments against it for some time now. That said, it is good to see it dispatched in writing by a Federal judge:
Exactly right; thank you Judge White. Now there was one minor claim by Padilla that did not survive White's scrutiny, and, under the factual circumstances, White is probably correct to bounce it. That claim was that Yoo had violated Padilla's Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination. White reasoned that because there is no allegation in the complaint that Padilla was ever made to be a witness against himself or that his statements were admitted as testimony against him in his criminal case, he did not state a claim for violation of the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Again, a minor claim in the scope of the complaint and an arguably correct denial of it. One last thought. It appears to me, whether consciously or unconsciously, Judge White has fashioned his opinion with a very determined eye to having it stand up on appeal, and specifically in the Supreme court. From the outset of his discussion, White framed it in terms of the auspices of Hamdi v. Ashcroft, 504 US 507 (2004). Hamdi was one of the very first opinions from The Supremes reeling in the unitary executive acting under Article II and the AUMF. The really notable thing about Hamdi, however, is the separate opinion authored by Nino Scalia berating the Bush/Cheney detention and treatment of American citizens in the war on terror, naming Padilla expressly. Scalia, relying heavily on Ex parte Milligan, 4 Wall. 2, 128—129 (1866) said:
Everybody always assumes that Anthony Kennedy is the point of attack for success on these issues in the Supreme Court, and I do not disagree that he is a target. But I do not think he is the only one and, irrespective of his excited informal chatter with Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes, I think, because of the Hamdi framing, and other intricacies, Antonin Scalia is square in the sights of Jeffrey White and his opinion in Padilla v. Yoo. Once again, a NDCA judge has set up a beautiful piece of work designed to not only survive review in the 9th Circuit (and I think it will), but also with the foresight to play in the Supremes. It is a beautiful thing. All in all, it is a fantastic decision, once again the Federal judges in the 9th Circuit and NDCA come riding to rescue of the United States Constitution when our Federal government and legislature will not. It is a reminder of the simple beauty of the balance and separation of powers the Framers left us, and the importance that each branch passionately protect all citizens' rights. Maybe someday Barack Obama will get his finger out of the political winds and stop protecting and excusing the gross malfeasance of the authoritarian state and protect the Constitution instead. Hope springs eternal.
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