Ohlin on the Torture Lawyers

Ohlin on the Torture Lawyers

My friend Jens Ohlin, who teaches at Cornell, has posted an important new essay on SSRN, “The Torture Lawyers.”  Here is the abstract of the essay, which is forthcoming in the Harvard International Law Journal:

One of the longest shadows cast by the Bush Administration’s War on Terror involves the fate of the torture lawyers who authored or signed memoranda approving the use of torture or enhanced interrogation techniques against detainees. Should they face professional sanction or even prosecution for their involvement? The following article suggests that their fate implicates some of the deepest questions of criminal law theory and that resolution of the debate requires a fundamental reorientation of the most important areas of justifications and excuses. First, the debate about torture has been overly focused on justifications for torture. This can be explained in part by a general confusion in U.S. law over the necessity defense. Second, this Article therefore argues that necessity, when properly understood, constitutes two separate defenses, one a justification and the other an excuse, each with its own standard. The necessity justification does not apply to government agents who tortured detainees, though necessity as an excuse might apply under certain conditions. However, excused necessity – like all excuses – does not generate a corresponding exculpation for accomplices, like the torture lawyers, who might be said to have aided and abetted the principal perpetrators. Third, the Article questions the usual assumption of lawyers that they are only liable as accomplices if they supported their client’s criminality through frivolous legal arguments, though even under this standard the torture lawyers might face accomplice liability for some of their arguments. Finally, commentators are wrong that such prosecutions would be unprecedented. The United States itself prosecuted Nazi officials at Nuremberg for their failure to properly advise the Reich that their conduct violated international law.

It’s always great to see a scholar focus on the theoretical issues involved in the torture debate, instead of on the politics.  And Jens is a gifted comparative criminal law scholar, to say the least.

As Larry Solum would say, highly recommended!

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Foreign Relations Law, International Criminal Law, International Human Rights Law, National Security Law
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Non Liquet
Non Liquet

Without offense to Professor Ohlin, after reading this site and others for some time, I think I could name the Nuremberg precedent by heart (Justice! Ministries!). Two exceptionally good posts have appeared on Opinio Juris and Balkinization about both cases by you, Professor Heller.  For readers see: http://balkin.blogspot.com/2008/05/john-yoo-and-justice-case.html https://opiniojuris.org/2009/04/23/want-to-prosecute-the-lawyers-cite-ministries-not-the-justice-case/ (Professor Ohlin has also provided interesting summaries of the cases in the article on SSRN.) What I’d really like to see is an article from scholars about the nature of the lawyers’ role in an organized state in the perpetration of war crimes.  I find it fascinating that we have managed to construct a system where a lawyer can plead that he wasn’t “the decider” of an issue and thus not responsible for torture and “a decider” can say they are protected by reliance on a legal opinion to shield them from responsibility.  You create a moral vacuum through the division of labor where no one is guilty of a crime except perhaps those stupid or credulous enough to carry it out (who, in any event, were not responsible because, after all, they were just following orders.) And you have some very leading lights in both the law and academia defending… Read more »

Jordan J. Paust
Jordan J. Paust

Please see my new article in 43 Valparaiso Law Review 1535 (2009) and my op eds in JURIST, esp. this one:
The Second Bybee Memo: A Smoking Gun, available at:
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/forumy/2009/04/second-bybee-memo-smoking-gun.php
Also, note that no memo stated, for example, that waterboarding is permissible under international law.  No memo stated that waterboarding is not cruel treatment or inhumane treatment.  For example, the second Bybee memo only addressed “torture” and one federal statute.  Furthermore, it was facially wrong, manifestly incorrect.
JJPaust

Benjamin Davis
Benjamin Davis

It is important to note that no lawyer has plead or “decider” has plead in the manner suggested in a court of law.  Rather, this special and specious pleading has been done in the “court of public opinion” as part of the effort to get us to acquiesce in what the lawyer and the decider did with intent to do it.  This is called conspiracy to assault, main, torture etc and also – with lawyers giving operational and detailed advice to the persons in the room with the detainee – assaul, maiming, torture etc. If we insist that John Durham “follow the facts where they lead” then the lawyers will be in the box.  At this point, the lawyers are in the box in Spain.  And, if we insist, they will be in the box in the United States.  And the necessity defense will not protect them.  No defenses will protect them. I await the lawyers “manning up” and going to see John Durham and telling him about what really went on.  You know, as officers of the court.  I mean if everything was so above board who should be afraid to give evidence to a prosecutor to help his… Read more »