8-26-09 Calling Out the Torture Enablers at St. Thomas Law School |
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By Coleen Rowley From Huffingon Post | Original Article (See original article for photos and two videos.) Just as new details emerged on Monday, August 24 of CIA interrogators' abuse of prisoners involving mock executions, threatening prisoners with power drills, and choking them to the point of passing out, Associate Law Professor Robert Delahunty quietly resumed teaching fall classes on constitutional law at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in Minneapolis. Delahunty along with co-author John Yoo at the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) laid the cornerstone legal memo that gave the green light to "go to the dark side" as Dick Cheney was urging. The 2004 CIA Inspector General report is heavily redacted but it's apparently so disturbing that it led Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. on this very same day to appoint a prosecutor--the same one looking at the destruction of the CIA torture tapes--to review the abuses, setting the stage for a probe that could lead to criminal charges of CIA personnel. Ironically, it turns out that CIA case officers had apparently worried from the start and with good reason that they would end up being blamed as the (Lyndie England-Charles Grainer) "bad apples" and charged with war crimes. "One officer expressed concern that one day, agency officers will wind up on some 'wanted list' to appear before the World Court for war crimes stemming from activities" in the secret prison sites, the report said. The FBI for its part wisely abstained from participating in torture and reportedly opened an actual "war crimes file" documenting what it was witnessing of the abuses until it was forced by higher-ups to close its file. Now that details of the highly unethical, illegal and ineffective waterboarding, torturing and abusing of prisoners are coming out, and the green light is no longer on, Delahunty, Yoo and other Bush Administration lawyers who served as the enablers and architects of the abuses have, of course, run for the hills, to rest on their academic laurels and hide behind the ivy-covered walls of places like the University of St. Thomas Law School in Minneapolis. On May 13, 2009, Paulsen testified about "The Lawfulness of the Interrogation Memos" to the Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary as follows:
(Incidentally I could not find that the Distinguished Chair and St. Thomas Law Professor Michael Stokes Paulsen disclosed to this Senate Committee that Delahunty, one of the OLC torture memo authors he extols, is employed at his law school. Who invited Delahunty to St. Thomas in the first place? Something that's not well known is that two law professors left St. Thomas Law School partially because they opposed Delahunty's hiring.) In any event, there is no one who has framed the real issue more constructively than former Church Committee Senator Walter Mondale who had this to say back in April:
Of course neither Professor Delahunty nor Dean Mengler would come out to talk to our anti-torture group but sent instead a Mr. Chato Hazelbaker, the St. Thomas Law School Director of Communications, out to talk with us. Hazelbaker assured us that Professor Delahunty was "a nice guy" and a dignified scholar with the full backing of the University but Hazelbaker could not otherwise answer any of the legal arguments being made about Delahunty and the "torture memos".
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