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FBI stages unprecedented raid on congressmans office
By Kate Randall
24 May 2006
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The FBI conducted a search of the office of Louisiana Representative
William Jefferson over the weekend in what is the first such intrusion
by an agency of the executive branch into the office of a sitting
congressman in US history. In a press conference on Monday, Jefferson,
a Democrat, denounced the raid as an outrageous intrusion
into the separation of powers.
The raid on Jeffersons office in the Rayburn House Office
Building on Saturday night was a politically motivated breach
of constitutional boundaries aimed at asserting the power of the
executive branch over the legislative. It is yet another political
marker in the governments moves towards dictatorial forms
of rule.
The action was an unmistakable signal to any congressmen who
might be inclined to seriously investigate the myriad illegal
and unconstitutional actions of the administration, and hold leading
members of the administration accountable.
There were, no doubt, other political calculations as well.
The choice of a Democrat as the target of the raid was not accidental,
given the welter of bribery and influence-peddling scandals that
have beset the Republicans in recent months.
Jefferson is the subject of a bribery investigation. The FBI
is probing allegations that he took hundreds of thousands of dollars
in bribes to promote business ventures in Nigeria, Cameroon and
Ghana. His New Orleans and Washington-area homes were search by
the FBI last August.
In a search-warrant affidavit unsealed on Sunday, the FBI states
it has videotaped evidence of Jefferson taking $100,000 in bribe
money and that it found $90,000 of the same cash inside his apartment
freezer. Two other individuals have pleaded guilty to bribing
Jefferson to promote the Kentucky-based Internet and cable TV
company, iGate.
Underscoring the unprecedented and egregious character of the
Justice Department operation is the reaction it has provoked from
leading Republicans. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist stated
he was very concerned about the incident and said
Senate and House counsels would review it.
In a strongly worded statement, House Speaker Dennis Hastert
(Republican, Illinois) protested the overreaching and abuse
of power by the executive branch. He continued: I
am very concerned about the necessity of a Saturday night raid
on Congressman Jeffersons Capitol Hill Office in pursuit
of information that was already under subpoena and at a time when
those subpoenas are still pending and all the documents that have
been subpoenaed were being preserved.
Hastert added, The Founding Fathers were very careful
to establish in the Constitution a Separation of Powers to protect
Americans against the tyranny of any one branch of government.
They were particularly concerned about limiting the power of the
Executive Branch.
Insofar as I am aware, since the founding of our Republic
219 years ago, the Justice Department has never found it necessary
to do what it did Saturday night, crossing this Separation of
Powers line, in order to successfully prosecute corruption by
Members of Congress... Nothing I have learned in the last 48 hours
leads me to believe there was any necessity to change the precedent
established over those 219 years.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich sent an email to congressional
Republicans Sunday night, commenting, What happened Saturday
night... is the most blatant violation of the Constitutional Separation
of Powers in my lifetime... I am shaken by this abuse of power.
Representative David Dreier, the California Republican who
is chairman of the House Rules Committee, said I think this
is really outrageous.
Republican House Majority Leader John Boehner, speaking with
reporters in an off-camera briefing, said he wondered whether
people at the Justice Department had looked at the Constitution
lately. He predicted that the matter might eventually go to the
Supreme Court.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Democrat, California) issued
a milder rebuke, stating that members of Congress must obey
the law and cooperate fully with any criminal investigation,
but that Justice Department investigations must be conducted
in accordance with constitutional protections and historical precedent.
The search of a congressional office violates the speech
or debate clause of the US Constitution, contained in Section
6 of Article 1, concerning the legislative branch. This clause
was aimed at shielding legislators from intimidation by the executive
branch, and has been broadly interpreted by the courts throughout
history. It traces its origins back to a clause in the English
Bill of Rights of 1689, aimed at protecting the independence of
Parliament against the monarchy.
Charles Tiefer, a University of Baltimore law professor, commented
to the Washington Post that the raid on Jeffersons
office constituted an intimidating tactic that has never
before been used against the legislative branch. He added,
The framers [of the Constitution] would turn over in their
graves.
Donald Ritchie, a historian with the Senate, said his office
could find no record of a similar incident, though the homes and
business offices of lawmakers had been searched in the past.
Information that has emerged since Saturday night makes clear
that Bush administration officials were well aware they were treading
on constitutionally protected ground in executing the raid. In
seeking a search warrant from a federal district judge in suburban
Virginia, the Justice Department outlined special procedures they
would follow, including the use of a filter team to
supposedly ensure that the search did not infringe on privileged
legislative material.
This filter teamcomprised of prosecutors
and FBI agents whom the Justice Department contends are unconnected
to the investigationwould review any seized items or documents
to determine whether they are privileged and therefore immune
from the search warrant. It is clear, however, that the members
of this team would be answerable to the Justice Department, an
executive branch agency ultimately accountable to the White House.
As such, this safeguard would serve again to establish
presidential powers over the legislative branch.
Another sign of the calculated nature of the operation is the
fact that FBI officials activated a special command center for
the sole purpose of monitoring the raid.
Defending the raid in response to the outcry from members of
the Senate and House, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales on Monday
would only say, I admit that these were unusual steps that
were taken in response to an unusual set of circumstances.
On Tuesday he claimed that his office had decided the search of
Jeffersons office was absolutely essential to move
forward with that investigation.
This is hardly plausible, given the mass of evidence the government
had evidently already assembled against the Democratic congressman.
There was, moreover, no legitimate reason for sidestepping the
normal procedure of issuing subpoenas.
The Justice Department search of Jeffersons office must
be seen in the context of the frontal assault on traditional democratic
procedures and constitutional safeguards being carried out by
the Bush administration. This is a government that operates in
secret and refuses to hold itself accountable either to Congress
or to the American people.
Its methods and policiesan illegal war based on lies,
the use of torture, secret prisons and kidnappings, the denial
of due process and habeas corpus rights, a vast and secret program
of warrantless spying on the American people, the repeated refusal
to hand over documents to Congress or allow White House officials
to testify in congressional investigations, the use of the military
for domestic policing operations in violation of the posse
comitatus actconstitute preparations for police state
forms of rule that are well advanced.
Only three days ago, Gonzales indicated that the government
was considering prosecuting journalists for reporting, on the
basis of leaks provided by intelligence agency whistle-blowers,
information on the National Security Agency data base of the phone
records of more than 200 million Americans and the existence of
secret CIA prisons abroad where alleged terrorists are being held
indefinitely without any access to legal process. He said that
the government had the legal authority to prosecute newspapers
and journalists for such disclosures.
A week earlier, on May 15, two ABC News reporters revealed
that the FBI, at the request of the CIA, had been tracking their
phone calls.
To condemn the FBI raid in no way implies political support
for Jefferson or suggests he is innocent of the corruption charges.
In fact, the rampant corruption in Washington, which involves
both parties, with corporate money shamelessly used to buy congressmen
and their votes, is itself a manifestation of the same process
of political decay. Both parties are complicit in anti-democratic
measures whose essential purpose is to defend the rule of a narrow
financial elite that is enriching itself by driving down the living
standards of the broad mass of working people.
In this case, the Bush administration used allegations of corruption
as the pretext for a further assault on the constitutional principle
of the separation of powers between co-equal branches of governmentexecutive,
legislative and judicialso as to move further toward the
establishment of a presidential dictatorship.
See Also:
Senate hearing on CIA nominee: Democrats
rubberstamp Bush police-state spying
[19 May 2006]
NSA phone spying program: a blueprint
for mass repression
[15 May 2006]
US media, Democrats deflect opposition
to government spying on Americans
[13 May 2006]
Framework for a police state
US government phone spying targets all Americans
[12 May 2006]
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