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Prosecuting Torture: Is Time Really Running Out?

by: Elizabeth de la Vega, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Prisoners at Camp 4 at Guantanamo Naval Base. (Photo: Getty Images)

"My ship Liberty sailed away on a bloody red horizon
The groundskeeper opened the gates and let the wild dogs run."

- Bruce Springsteen, "Livin' in the Future"

    When the highest officials of our nation flung open the gates of law and morality and let the wild dogs of torture run, they set in motion a constellation of potentially-indictable federal crimes. While I do not think a grand jury investigation into those violations should be publicly initiated right now, (for strategic reasons discussed here), I do agree entirely with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse that the Attorney General must not rule out prosecutions for these violations. In the May 4, 2009, National Law Journal, the Democrat from Rhode Island writes: "The factual record ... has not been fully developed and reviewed - and no good prosecutor would make a final determination until all the facts are in." As usual, the former US Attorney has it exactly right. No responsible prosecutor would do that and, indeed, as long as the record is unfolding, the Attorney General wouldn't be able to render any meaningful final "verdict" of no prosecution even if he wanted to. (And, certainly, no potential defendant could hold him to it.) So - regardless of what the prognosis for prosecution appears to be on any given day - it is critical to keep those revelations coming, as well as to support proposals for a non-partisan commission that will publicly air all the facts, and, most important, not give up on eventual indictments.

    So Many Crimes, but How Much Time?

    Won't it be too late if we wait much longer? Absolutely not. There's a lot of misinformation out there on this topic, mainly as a result of gross oversimplification of the law. However, notwithstanding anything you may have heard - about charges disappearing in 2010 and all hope being lost after 2011 - time is not running out to prosecute Bush administration officials either for torture itself or for the many crimes they committed to keep their program alive throughout their tenure.

    To understand how statutes of limitation would apply to any indictment arising out of the Bush White House's torture operation, you need to know how a case is evaluated for prosecution. It's a whole-concept approach. The prosecutor considers all relevant information in light of the elements of possibly-applicable crimes, and then decides whether probable cause exists to believe a certain violation has occurred, by whom, and whether it can be proved through admissible evidence. Oftentimes, even a fairly simple set of facts can give rise to several different crimes.

    Obviously, if the rampage of prisoner abuse that the Bush White House triggered in the fall of 2001 - along with the ongoing concealment of the program - were a "case," it would not involve a simple set of facts. On the contrary, it encompasses a huge universe of evidence - eight years' worth - and scores of possible defendants. There is a raft of possible federal crimes and each would have to be analyzed separately, first to make a charging decision and then to determine the statutory indictment deadline.

    It's an exacting analysis I couldn't even attempt to undertake in a short piece based solely on public information. But, take heart: The facts we do know provide ample probable cause to believe that, sometime after September 11, 2001, the Bush administration began a massive criminal conspiracy to, among other things: (1) commit torture in violation of 18 U.S. C. Section 2340A; and (2) defraud the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. Section 371. Now, I do not know if these former White House officials are finally listening to attorneys who give them legal advice they don't want to hear. But if they are, they well know by now that their defense can never rest.

    There are many other charging possibilities - i.e. conspiracy to commit war crimes in violation of 18 U.S.C. Section 2441 - but, to give you an idea of how the legal analysis works, here's a short course in statutory time limits for the two crimes listed above:

    Section 371: Conspiracy to Defraud the US With Regard to Torture

    There is much I could say about the crime of conspiracy to defraud the United States in violation of 18 U.S. C. 371. (I've already said quite a bit, relative to the Bush administration's pre-war intelligence fraud, at TomDispatch.) But this piece is about indictment deadlines, so I'll keep the preliminaries brief: The pattern of numerous misrepresentations to Congress by Bush White House officials and their surrogates, along with the secret legal memos and Executive Orders that surreptitiously attempted to vitiate existing law, the destruction of evidence, and the suppression of information that might reveal the illegality of the torture operation, constitute overwhelming proof of a conspiracy to defraud the US with regard to the torture program. And when would the clock start ticking? Not until the last "overt act" (or knowing material omission) by any conspiracy member in furtherance of the illegal agreement. In this situation, that would be no earlier than January 20, 2009, because - among other reasons - as the recently-declassified Senate Intelligence Committee narrative makes clear, the Bush administration continued to conceal the ongoing existence of Office of Legal Counsel "authority" for the use of waterboarding and other forms of torture until the bitter end.

    What does all this mean? It means that the deadline for indicting a charge of conspiracy to defraud the US against the former president and vice-president, and "others known and unknown" is years away. The statute of limitations period for a section 371 violation is five years, so as late as January 20, 2014, these officials and their associates could be charged with forming a criminal agreement that began "on or before October 2001." At trial, the prosecution could introduce proof of any conspirators' actions that furthered the goals of the conspiracy, from the fall of 2001 through January 20, 2009. So no allegations relating to this crime would be "lost." Indeed, if there were a conviction, the judge could consider evidence from the entire time span as offense conduct that determines the sentence. (Each of the false statements to Congress along the way - including those made by former Attorney General Michael Mukasey and former Director of National Intelligence Michael Hayden in 2008 - would be also be potential charges that could be brought up to five years after the fact.)

    Section 2340A: Torture

    Forget for a moment, if you would, everything you think you know about statutory deadlines for indicting torture and bear with me while I start from scratch. (If you don't think you know anything, no problem.)

    The torture statute, 18 U.S. C. 2340A, proscribes two types of offenses: (1) committing torture, which, in criminal law, is called a "substantive crime;" and (2) conspiring, or agreeing, to commit torture which is - not surprisingly - called a "conspiracy." We need to address the conspiracy charge first.

    When two or more people are charged with common illegal activity, the indictment usually includes a conspiracy. But - just to make things more confusing - there are two types of federal conspiracies. And the statute of limitations analysis is different for each one. The section 371 conspiracy, for example, requires both an agreement to commit a crime and at least one act done "to effect the object of the conspiracy." As I explained above, the indictment deadline for this type of conspiracy is calculated from the date of the last overt act.

    In contrast, the torture conspiracy provision - section 2340A (c) - does not require any overt act at all. (The prosecutor can charge them, but they're not an element of the crime.) Instead, the statute simply makes it illegal for a person to conspire to commit torture. To prove the crime, the prosecutor must show that: (1) two or more persons agreed to commit or cause the commission of acts of torture, under color of law, upon persons who were in the conspirators' custody and control; and (2) the defendant knowingly joined the illegal agreement at any time. But here's the most important point: This type of conspiracy continues, as a legal matter, as long as its members are still trying to accomplish its objectives - regardless of when they committed their last overt act.

    So, to determine when the statute of limitations would begin to run on a conspiracy to torture charge against White House officials and others, ask yourself this question: When did Bush, Cheney et. al. stop trying to maintain their "harsh interrogation program?" The answer is that they didn't - not, at least, while they remained in office. Legally, then, the crime continued at least until January 20, 2009, so the statutory clock doesn't begin to run until that date. And, at any time after January 2009, until the limitations period expires - if it ever does - a prosecutor could charge a conspiracy to torture that began in 2001 and lasted until the end of the Bush administration. All foreseeable acts by any conspirator who was advancing the goals of the conspiracy could be alleged, introduced at trial and considered for sentencing purposes. (For an example of just such an indictment, see U.S. v. Roy M. Belfast, Jr. a/k/a Chuckie Taylor, filed in the Southern District of Florida against the son of former Liberian dictator Charles Taylor.)

    Ok. We know when the time period began to run, but how many years do we have before it runs out? The answer may surprise you.

    Because the federal criminal code is apparently organized so as to be as difficult to fathom as possible, you can't just look at 18 U.S. C. 2340A and find the statute of limitations period that applies to it. Instead, you have to read 18 U.S. C. 3286, which - in what may prove to be one of the all-time greatest instances of getting hoisted by one's own petard - was amended as part of the 2001 Patriot Act. Section 3286 has two subsections. This, in its entirety, is the first:

Section 3286. Extension of Statute of Limitation for Certain Terrorism Offenses

(a) Eight-Year Limitation. - Notwithstanding section 3282, no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any noncapital offense involving a violation of any provision listed in section 2332(b)(g)(5)(B), or a violation of section 112, 351(e), 1361, or 1751(e) of this title or section 46504, 46505, or 46506 of title 49, unless the indictment is found or the information is instituted within 8 years after the offense was committed. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, offenses listed in section 3295 are subject to the statute of limitations set forth in that section.

    Translating this jumble into plain English, what section 3286(a) says - in relation to the anti-torture statute - is that formal charges must be brought within eight years of the crime. The way to determine that for yourself would be to read 18 U.S.C. Section 2332b(g)(5)(B), which is the list of terrorism offenses that's referenced in Section 3286(a). The prohibition against torture - 18 U.S. C. 2340A - is one of them.

    Consequently, if section 3286(a) were the end of the matter, the deadline for indicting Bush administration officials on conspiracy to torture charges would still be years away - January of 2017. But it's helpful to read a statute in full before reaching conclusions about its effect. So, here, with my emphasis added, is precisely what the rest of section 3286 says:

Section 3286

(b) No Limitation. - Notwithstanding any other law, an indictment may be found or an information instituted at any time without limitation for any offense listed in section 2332(b)(g)(5)(B), if the commission of such offense resulted in, or created a forseeable (sic) risk of, death or serious bodily injury to another person. (emphasis added)

    The oft-repeated common wisdom that there is no time limit for indictments charging torture only if "death results" is, in other words, dead wrong. (How did this misleading description of the law take hold? It's possible that its author was former Office of Legal Counsel attorney John Yoo himself. In footnote 41 of his March 2003 memo to Defense Department General Counsel William Haynes, he wrote: "Whether death results from the act [of torture] also affects the applicable statute of limitations. Where death does not result, the statute of limitations is eight years; if death results, there is no statute of limitations." This is a textbook example of why it's risky to paraphrase statutes in an official legal document.)

    But regardless of the source of this inaccurate shorthand, we now know what the statute actually says, and can readily appreciate its import. Section 2340A prohibits both the substantive act of torture and conspiracy to commit torture. We also know that it is one of the terrorism offenses listed in section 2332(b)(g)(5)(B). Therefore, we know that - pursuant to section 3286(b) - there is no statute of limitations whatsoever on charges against anyone who: (1) committed torture; (2) aided and abetted the commission of torture; or (3) conspired to commit torture if any of those crimes either: (a) actually resulted in death; or (b) created a foreseeable risk of death; or (c) created a foreseeable risk of serious bodily injury to another person. In other words - as a result of amendments enacted in 2001 at the behest of Bush administration officials themselves - the available period for their indictment for torture could well be the rest of their lives.

    For now, I'll leave it to others to apply the multitude of publicly-available facts to these legal requirements. But the test of foreseeability is a well-established one founded in common sense. In the case of charges against White House officials it would be: Would a reasonable person who had the information available to the senior officials be able to anticipate that death or serious bodily injury to another might result when they issued orders that loosed the wild dogs of torture - both literally and figuratively - against prisoners in US custody around the world? The answer is obvious, particularly as victims of torture were receiving emergency medical treatment to keep them alive for yet another round, and one death after another actually began to ensue.

    The Bottom Line

    Am I emphasizing that there is time to indict in order to suggest that anyone should lay low, or hold back in seeking justice? No. Quite the opposite. I'm trying to emphasize that people should not throw in the towel prematurely. Keep up the pressure, absolutely, but brace yourselves for the long haul.

    Most important, in the near-term, think twice about fueling the inaccurate impression that it's game-over in eighteen months in order to create a sense of urgency, when it is the gravity of these crimes that should be paramount. And gravity and urgency are not the same thing. Many powerful people from across the political spectrum would be utterly delighted if the millions of Americans now pushing for accountability gave up in despair in a year or two because they mistakenly believed that prosecutions were no longer possible. But it is self-defeating in the extreme for those who want Bush, Cheney et. al. held responsible for their actions to foster this misconception. A widespread false belief that prosecutions are a limited-time offer provides a ready excuse for ultimate inaction to any and all who wish to "move on" as if eight years of torture were merely an unpleasant incident on the sidewalk. At the same time, people who don't know options still remain will be helpless to argue otherwise. In the world of criminal prosecutions, this is not a short story; it's a sprawling Icelandic saga. And - as any attorney who has prosecuted complex federal cases could tell you - it will be many years, if ever, before legal time limits will bar the hearing of this horrific epic in a US criminal court.

  

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Elizabeth de la Vega is a former federal prosecutor with more than 20 years of experience. During her tenure, she was a member of the Organized Crime Strike Force and chief of the San Jose Branch of the US attorney's office for the Northern District of California. Her pieces have appeared in a variety of print and online publications including Truthout, TomDispatch.com, The Nation, The Los Angeles Times, Salon, Mother Jones and The Christian Science Monitor. The author of "United States v. George W. Bush et al," she may be contacted at ElizabethdelaVega@Verizon.net or through Speakers Clearinghouse.

Comments

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Possible crimes should be

Possible crimes should be investigated and then a determination made as to whether to take the matter to grand juries and ultimately prosecuted. To speculate now as to whether a prosecution should take place is to affirm that it is OK for government employees and contractors to break the law so long as they claim it is in the interest of national security. Clearly the neo-cons have learned the lessons of Watergate. Had Nixon declared the matter one of national security and refused to respond to Congressional subpoenas as the Bush-Cheney administration had done he could have avoided impeachment. Of course his operatives had to break in while the Bush-Cheney-Rove cabal was free to wire tap member of Congress and the DNC and anyone else they pleased with absolutely no judicial oversight. How can people not be outraged by an imperial presidency not being investigated? We can see what happened when Reagan-Bush and Oliver North were able to walk after committing treasonable acts and how it empowered Bush and his cohorts in crime.

So excellently put as usual,

So excellently put as usual, Elizabeth. No doubt the BushCONS want as much misconceptions and obfuscation as possible, and for this entire debacle to just fade away forever. But, as you put so well, we must NOT allow this matter to fade from consciousness AT ALL. Thank you for making very clear that we have plenty of time to see to it that all of these monsterous, mass-murderous criminals are brought to justice just as any of the rest of us would be; and, I agree with you, we should NOT seek the appointment of a special prosecutor, but that is what even the ACLU is calling for. Why haven't they gotten your message? Do they just simply disagree with it? Or are they NeoLibCON controlled opposition who are indirectly seeking to aid and abet this matter never truly having an outcome of accountability all the way to the top, which is what the appointment of a special prosecutor and a drawn out cover-up by way of that special prosecutor would inevitably lead to?

Thank you Ms. de la Vega for

Thank you Ms. de la Vega for this information. I'm quite willing to wait for the wheels of justice to turn, as long as they actually turn. My fear is, however, that the powers behind our politicians will prevent any such justice from being applied. They will be adamant in preventing prosecutions for the simple reason that if they were to alow them to occur they will have the effect of forcing those members of our government that are considering new crimes for their masters to possibly reconsider. In other words, the power to control our politicians would be seriously weakened, and this would be very dangerous for those actually in power. They might, become subject to laws themselves, for example. A situation that certainly does not currently apply. And we can't set the precedent of applying the law to our lackey-politicians either, can we. Perhaps a few, for truly egregious crimes that don't affect their masters profits, but never for the real crimes committed, like supporting war crimes, terrorism, and the general looting of America. That would be going way to far!

For the life of me I still

For the life of me I still can't fathom why all the emphasis has been on torture. It is an issue that appeals to the rambo's in our country and will never get huge public support. However the deceit and actions preceding and during the illegal wars of Iraq and Afghanistan are provable crimes against any number of laws, not the least of which being The International Court and the Geneva Conventions. It is criminal and certainly insane to ignore this reality and responsibility!

I have a few questions: What

I have a few questions: What about other crimes committed while Bush was in office? What about crimes committed by Cheney, Rumsfeld, etc. when they worked for previous administrations and first put their criminal philosophies into action? Using your interpretation of the law, Is there still no statute of limitations for the Iran/Contra scandal because it was directly related to the murder of thousands of innocent Nicaraguans who were neither Contras nor Sandinistas? Is there still no statute of limitations for the Iran/Contra scandal because the weapons Cheney and his buddies sold Iran, at a personal profit, could have been used against American citizens? Is there still no statute of limitations against Nixon’s still-living conspirators, since his treasonous act of thwarting President Johnson’s peace talks resulted in the deaths of thousands of additional Americans in Viet Nam? Is there STILL a virtual statute of limitations, no matter what, if the next president is a Republican and pardons everyone anyway? Taking time to collect more evidence is a nice idea, but so is striking while the iron is hot and doing something about this while people still care. My impression is that if G. Gordon Liddy were to come out bragging that he personally pulled the trigger that murdered President Kennedy a lot of people in this country would say, "Yeah, but that was such a long time ago. Can't you liberals just give it a rest so we can move on?" Putting off dealing with what could be the most Constitutionally significant threat to our democracy since the Civil War is a dangerous gamble. I don’t think Democrats have the juggling skills to pull it off, unless they’re really ready to fight, and challenge FOX when it calls us crazy “conspiracy theorists” for wanting justice.

If this is, indeed, a nation

If this is, indeed, a nation of laws and not of men; we, the people, must demand that all of these Bush crooks be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. This should include even those who sold the two elections that put Bush in power in the first place. Ignoring Hitler did not lead to a good result. Nor will a blind-eye, deaf-ear approach in this matter serve us well as a nation. Can the citizens of the USA file a class action suit to bring these criminals to justice? Please advise!

Here is the bottom line. If

Here is the bottom line. If we don't hold those who who manipulated OUR constitution to suit their political goals and start an under investigated war of choice then the next time a President wants to do it they will say, I can, after all Bush did. If the president does it it not illegal. So set up a special council, like we did with Bill Clintons lies about sex in the Oval office. Get to the truth as best we can. Expose those who did not defend our constitution. Then we are setting a president we can all live with. JUST BECAUSE THE PRESIDENT SAYS SO IT IS NOT LEGAL.

There will always be

There will always be deniers, but America's little holocaust (unprovoked invasion, torture, miscellaneous war crimes, terrorist acts committed with the aid of robots, the treatment of American military people as disposable cans of beer to be emptied and crushed, and suspension of the rule of law domestically) will never go away. The Muslim world will never forget it, and neither will anyone else who has half a brain. Our little holocaust has killed and buried the notion of American exceptionalism. All attempts to exhume that notion will fail, if only because nobody who wants to believe that America is inherently good, or that God is always on America's side, can actually look upon (or even smell) its holocaust-enabling corpse. Let's always be willing to hand shovels to those who want to dig it up once more, and let the world's cameras see and broadcast whatever comes out of the ground. Let Sean Hannity experience the discomfort of being waterboarded, to show the world how trivial it is (hand Sean a shovel, and roll the cameras). Let Dick Cheney "tell the truth" about his administration, and the "hundreds of thousands of lives" that he says his torture policy saved, but let him do it under oath (hand Dick a shovel, and roll the cameras). But, wait, here's an even simpler idea: just keep the cameras trained on the grave of American exceptionalism, keep plenty of free shovels nearby, and watch what happens. Encourage anybody who really wants to expose American exceptionalism to public view go ahead and dig it up. Ms. de la Vega is right: time is on the side of truth. I would add that truth is the only thing that really matters, here, and that its inevitable revelation is an exquisite form of justice. Let future generations remember Hitler, Pol Pot, Saddam, and Bush/Cheney in the same breath, as enemies of truth and of human life. Let this stain on American history keep America's arrogant military adventurism in check for as long as America survives, and let America and the rest of humanity survive longer because of that restraint.

The need for prosecution of

The need for prosecution of torture (and all other BushCo war crimes) is to stop the cycle of letting the rich and powerful live by a different justice system from the rest of us. As others have said, if they aren't held accountable, then it's just a matter of time before another dictator wannabe and his boss will try this again. Cases in point, Prescott Bush, Nazi collaborator, and one of the architects of the OSS/CIA transformation and OPERATION PAPERCLIP and its murderous OP Directorate offspring programs. Or Eliot Abrams and John Negroponte, both deeply imbedded in Iran-Contra - Abrams was convicted for his role and pardoned by Bush 41 (how convenient for him, who was one of the backers of Iran-Contra). Both end up on the Bush 43 National Security Council and in key roles of national security, respectively. (AND FIE to the Congress that approved Negroponte!) Neither the Bushes nor the Iran-Contra gang, nor any of the "evil doers" in this country have business setting foot in DC EVER AGAIN, let alone being able to set policy. That said, Ms. de la Vega's breakdown of the issues is very helpful (as always) and a good counterpoint to the corporate media's insistence that "unpleasantness" be put to bed ASAP.

I don't buy waiting and

I don't buy waiting and being patient any longer. The Republicans did not wait on a Special Prosecutor to investigate a blue dress and sex in the White House. The collective memory of Americans is already fading as Cheney, Fox "News", and others spin the story of protecting American lives with their use of torture, "pre-emptive"/invasive wars, and trampling on the Constitution. Soon there will be some overwhelming crisis and we will be told to put this all behind us. Then you can see repeats of the same offenses or worse in the future. Think how instructive it would have been to those in Washington to send Nixon or Oliver North to jail for their offenses.

Before a Republican Pardons

Before a Republican Pardons Them? How quickly we forget that this President campaigned on and repeated after election - and echoed by his crew: "We need to look forward" wrt prosecuting the conspirators to torture. Who needs a repub to pardon when our dem doesn't even want to prosecute? Ignore the right/left paradigm - ignore the dem/repub paradigm - they are illusions that distract us from 'We The People' vs 'Centralized Power'. Read the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and examine each statement out of Washington in the context of the Bill of Rights. We are very, very far from home and only we can direct our Govt back to the wisdom in that great document, which was born when tyranny was a fresh enough memory to clarify the minds of the Framer's of the Constitution. They will not go easily, either - this will be like waking up in horror, discovering and removing a large, mature parasite which has become deeply attached to us and will struggle to re-embed as we pry each claw and sucker away from our body. They have and will assert their entitlement and contempt for us until will we 'just say NO MORE - YOU ARE NOT ABOVE THE LAW' and it doesn't count until there is actual conviction and meaningful hard time sentencing - anything less is continued capitulation. This is a test and we must pass it and it requires full participation and uncomfortable public support from all of us. It is our only chance to restore integrity - otherwise we ALL become guilty of torture and will be treated accordingly in this World.

There`s an 80 something

There`s an 80 something accused NAZI-GUARD that just lost his appeal for extradition! where do you get this misinformation regarding time running out for prosecution? FACT Lady,regardless whether Bush signed the World Court Accord or our self preservationist GUTLESS Congress fails their sworn duty the world has already judged and convicted the heinous acts of these amoral despots, sadly it`s the ordinary people as with Germany who will suffer for their callous disregard!

Your responders who care are

Your responders who care are frustrated by this restraint on the part of the new administration--and rightly so. The public with short attention span or who simply do not care will prevail so delaying action is in the torturers' interest, not in the cause of justice NOW regardless of how long the statue of limitations allows this not-yet-a- case to drag on. The law is an ass that needs a kick in the butt to work--time is on the culprits' side.

I am making and selling t

I am making and selling t -shirts this summer. AMERICA Home of the Brave and Land of the Free WAR CRIMINALS

Very well put, Steve

Very well put, Steve Newcomb, Elizabeth and "Accountability is Cleansing"!

If Obama and the democrats

If Obama and the democrats are concerned that prosecuting American's in the Bush/Cheney administration for torturing would be seen as too political, let's hand it over this issue to be investigated, and judged by the world criminal court. There's truth in repeating George Santayana: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. We cannot afford to leave these shameful events of the past behind and focus on the future. The future contains the past, rests upon it.

This is a scholarly

This is a scholarly exposition of the laws applicable to torture on the part of the Bush administration. A tip 'o the hat to Ms. de la Vega. I tend to disagree with those who are opposed to appointing a special prosecutor or "truth commission", as long as both have subpoena power. If the administration pursues its own investigation, it will absorb enormous resources and will prevent attention being given to other urgent matters. Let the special prosecutor/truth commission, both of which will not be distracted by other matters, do their work. The key thing is to appoint people (legal scholars/lawyers) who are tenacious, motivated and competent to do the job.

Torture, as 0219Anonymous

Torture, as 0219Anonymous pointed out, is not the only or even the worst crimes openly committed by Bush-Cheney. Leading a country to war with lies and under false pretenses, that was a much worse crime, and there were others. I would imagine that the statute of limitations for those crimes would be at least 8 years, beginning at the end of Bush's term: Jan. 20, 2009. All Obama should do is NOT limit the AG, nor Congress in their duties to find the truth and to prosecute crimes committed. He can encourage if the political atmosphere permits, but it's true he has a lot more on his plate right now. He needs to win some other stuff first, such as nursing the economy back to function, and containing, or somehow turning, the chaos engulfing AfPak, plus Health Care, financial regulation, etc. etc. I don't expect him to solve all other problems first, but this is one Obama can be relatively passive about: other actors have to act: Congress most of all. That's where we come in. Anyone who has a Congressperson or Senator on Committees like Armed Services and Judiciary, should write them letters or emails urging them to begin Congressional investigations, and to urge the Attorney General (to whom you could also write) to appoint a Special Counsel to investigate Bush War Crimes. But first the legal spadework has to be done, and a lot of independent legal experts are probably working on that as we debate this. At least I hope so!

Maybe a few of our attorneys

Maybe a few of our attorneys can get together and file state charges. I'm not sure this is the right time for Obama to get involved, but it seems like the Republicans think something is going to happen or we wouldn't see Cheney out there on his "Torture is Good for America" tour. We need to keep this going and do everything we can to prosecute those who need prosecution.