The
testimony of James Comey proved long on atmospherics and short on
ethics. While many were riveted by Comey’s discussion of his discomfort
in meetings with President Trump, most seemed to miss the fact that
Comey was describing his own conduct in strikingly unethical terms. The
greatest irony is that Trump succeeded in baiting Comey to a degree that
even Trump could not have imagined. After calling Comey a “showboat”
and poor director, Comey proceeded to commit an unethical and
unprofessional act in leaking damaging memos against Trump.
Comey
described a series of ethical challenges during his term as FBI
director. Yet, he almost uniformly avoided taking a firm stand in
support of the professional standards of the FBI. During the Obama
administration, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch gave Comey a direct
order to mislead the public by calling the ongoing investigation a mere
“matter.” Rather than standing firm on the integrity of his department
and refusing to adopt such a meaningless and misleading term, Comey
yielded to Lynch while now claiming discomfort over carrying out the
order.
When
Trump allegedly asked for Comey to drop the investigation of Michael
Flynn or pledge loyalty, Comey did not tell the president that he was
engaging in wildly inappropriate conduct. He instead wrote a memo to
file and told close aides. He now says that he wishes he had the courage
or foresight to have taken a stand with the president.Professor Jonathan Turley is a nationally recognized legal scholar who has written extensively in areas ranging from constitutional law to legal theory to tort law. He has written over three dozen academic articles that have appeared in a variety of leading law journals at Cornell, Duke, Georgetown, Harvard, Northwestern, University of Chicago, and other schools. After a stint at Tulane Law School, Professor Turley joined the George Washington faculty in 1990 and, in 1998, was given the prestigious Shapiro Chair for Public Interest Law, the youngest chaired professor in the school’s history.
However, the clearest violation came in the days following
his termination. Comey admits that he gave the damaging memos to a
friend at Columbia Law School with the full knowledge that the
information would be given to the media. It was a particularly curious
moment for a former director who was asked by the president to fight the
leakers in the government. He proceeded in becoming one of the most
consequential leakers against Trump.
Comey said that he
took these actions days after his termination, when he said that he woke
up in the middle of the night and realized suddenly that the memos
could be used to contradict Trump. It was a bizarrely casual treatment
of material that would be viewed by many as clearly FBI information. He
did not confer with the FBI or the Justice Department. He did not ask
for any classification review despite one of the parties described being
the president of the United States. He simply sent the memos to a law
professor to serve as a conduit to the media.
As a
threshold matter, Comey asked a question with regard to Trump that he
should now answer with regard to his own conduct. Comey asked why Trump
would ask everyone to leave the Oval Office to speak with Comey unless
he was doing something improper. Yet, Trump could ask why Comey would
use a third party to leak these memos if they were his property and
there was nothing improper in their public release.
In
fact, there was a great deal wrong with their release, and Comey likely
knew it. These were documents prepared on an FBI computer addressing a
highly sensitive investigation on facts that he considered material to
that investigation. Indeed, he conveyed that information confidentially
to his top aides and later said that he wanted the information to be
given to the special counsel because it was important to the
investigation.
Many in the media have tried to spin this
as not a “leak” because leaks by definition only involve classified
information. That is entirely untrue as shown by history. Leaks involve
the release of unauthorized information — not only classified
information. Many of the most important leaks historically have involved
pictures and facts not classified but embarrassing to a government.
More importantly, federal regulations refer to unauthorized disclosures
not just classified information.
Comey’s position would
effectively gut a host of federal rules and regulations. He is
suggesting that any federal employee effectively owns documents created
during federal employment in relation to an ongoing investigation so
long as they address the information to themselves. FBI agents routinely
write such memos in investigations. They are called 302s to memorialize
field interviews or fact acquisitions. They are treated as FBI
information.
The Justice Department routinely claims
such memos as privileged and covered by the deliberative process
privilege and other privileges. Indeed, if this information were sought
under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) it would likely have been
denied. Among other things, the Justice Department and FBI routinely
claim privilege “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters
which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in
litigation with the agency.” . . . . . read the full article here, at The Hill.
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