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APFN - Conference to Plan Bush War Crimes Prosecution

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Conference to Plan Bush War Crimes Prosecution
Mon Jun 30, 2008 05:39
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Conference to Plan Bush War Crimes Prosecution

Posted Jun 17, 2008, 06:51 am CDT
By Debra Cassens Weiss

The dean of Massachusetts School of Law at Andover is
planning a September conference to map out war crimes
prosecutions, and the targets are President Bush and other
administration officials.

The dean, Lawrence Velvel, says in a statement that ?plans
will be laid and necessary organizational structures set up,
to pursue the guilty as long as necessary and, if need be,
to the ends of the Earth."

Other possible defendants, he said, include federal judges
and John Yoo, the former Justice Department official who
wrote one of the so-called torture memos.

?We must insist on appropriate punishments,? he continued,
?including, if guilt is found, the hangings visited upon top
German and Japanese war criminals in the 1940s."

Velvel elaborates in an introduction to a series of articles
published in The Long Term View (PDF). He writes ?there is
no question? that Bush and other officials are guilty of the
federal crime of conspiracy to commit torture.

He also criticizes Justice Department officials for their
legal memos. ?The DOJ lawyers who wrote the corrupt legal
memos giving attempted cover to Bush's actions have been
rewarded by federal judgeships, cabinet positions, and high
falutin' professorships,? he writes. Yoo is a professor at
the University of California-Berkeley law school, while
another former Justice Department official who signed a Yoo
memo, Jay Bybee, is a judge on the San Francisco-based 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Velvel tears into President Bush as well, writing: ?The man
ultimately responsible for the torture had a unique
preparation and persona for the presidency: he is a former
drunk, was a serial failure in business who had to
repeatedly be bailed out by daddy's friends and
wanna-be-friends, was unable to speak articulately despite
the finest education(s) that money and influence can buy,
has a dislike of reading, so that 100-page memos have to be
boiled down to one page for him, is heedless of facts and
evidence, and appears not even to know the meaning of
truth.?

A Wall Street Journal editorial published today stands in
stark contrast to Velvel?s criticism. It assails House
Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers for issuing
subpoenas seeking information about the possible torture of
Sept. 11 suspects. The editorial mentions the testimony of
British professor Philippe Sands, who also contends U.S.
officials are guilty of war crimes.

?Nearly seven years after 9/11, the U.S. homeland hasn't
been struck again and American civil liberties remain
intact,? the newspaper writes. ?So how does Congress say
?thank you?? By trying to ruin the men who in good faith set
the legal rules that have kept us safe.?
http://legalblogwatch.typepad.com/legal_blog_watch/2008/06/law-school-plan.html
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