http://www.harpers.org/archive/2010/06/hbc-90007242
The Justice Department and the Torture of Maher Arar
By Scott Horton

Yesterday the Supreme Court declined to review the Maher Arar 
case, leaving in place a reprehensible Second Circuit decision 
that proclaims the immunity of American government officials even 
in the face of meticulously documented charges that they 
consciously took steps resulting in the torture of an innocent 
human being. Congratulations are in order to the Obama Justice 
Department—it seems on the verge of establishing the legal 
proposition that officers of the American executive are free to 
torture and commit other heinous crimes with complete impunity.

The nation’s greatest attorney general, Robert Jackson, reminded 
the world in 1946 that “legal responsibility cannot be the least 
where power is the greatest.” He insisted that no doctrine of 
state immunity could be invoked by individual government actors to 
shield them from the consequences of committing certain serious 
crimes, including torture. In 1946, the Justice Department fully 
backed him up. That was in an era when the Justice Department 
counseled the president about his obligations to act consistently 
with his international treaty commitments. Today, notwithstanding 
President Obama’s assurances in Oslo, we see only evidence that 
the Justice Department holds those international commitments, 
specifically those under the Convention Against Torture, in 
contempt. That convention requires unequivocally that access be 
afforded torture victims to seek redress for damages. It also 
requires, again unequivocally, that a criminal investigation be 
undertaken into how Maher Arar came to be sent to Syria with a set 
of questions to be put to him by his torturers.

There are powerful reasons to inspect the conduct of the Justice 
Department in this case. In his brief to the High Court, acting 
Solicitor General Neal Katyal argued (PDF) that allowing the suit 
to go forward might disclose embarrassing diplomatic dealings. 
This specious stock argument only serves to highlight a particular 
sense of vulnerability at the pinnacle of the Bush Justice 
Department. Indeed, Katyal as much as acknowledged this when he 
argued that the litigation, if it were to advance, would bring 
into question “the motives and sincerity of the United States 
officials who concluded that petitioner could be removed to 
Syria.” That’s absolutely correct. An immigration hearing officer 
reviewed the evidence and concluded that Maher Arar would more 
likely than not be tortured if he were sent to Syria, and that he 
should therefore not be sent to Syria. This decision was 
overturned following the intervention of two young political 
appointees in the office of the Deputy Attorney General. The 
Deputy Attorney General himself, Larry D. Thompson, resigned 
almost immediately after the incident, creating a clear impression 
that he was disturbed by what had transpired. There is also strong 
evidence to suggest that the entire process was being monitored 
and advised by senior figures with the National Security 
Council—inside the White House.

When an internal investigation was undertaken into these matters 
by the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general, senior 
Justice Department officials turned cartwheels to block the 
investigation, refusing even to disclose the identity of the 
political personnel who were involved in the matter, and later 
insisting on the redaction of almost the totality of the inspector 
general’s report. As I noted in my own testimony about the matter 
before the House Judiciary Committee, this obstruction appears to 
have been driven by two considerations. First, it is now clear 
that Justice Department lawyers made false or at least extremely 
misleading and incomplete statements to the federal courts 
addressing Maher Arar’s claims, in an ultimately successful effort 
to bat them down. Second, the decisions taken in the office of the 
deputy attorney general involve all the prima facie elements of a 
violation of section 2340A, the Anti-Torture Statute, and were 
therefore liable to be investigated and prosecuted as felonies. 
(It’s noteworthy that both of the DHS inspectors general involved 
in preparing the Maher Arar report agreed openly during the 
hearing with my conclusion that the evidence at hand crossed the 
threshold to justify a criminal investigation, and agreed that the 
locus of the misconduct most likely was at the top of the Justice 
Department.)

Hence, there is every reason to “question the motives and 
sincerity” of the senior Justice Department officials 
involved—because they may well have been engaged in criminal 
conduct and because they used their authority to thwart the 
criminal investigation that was essential to resolving the matter. 
But Katyal’s statement discloses another unseemly aspect of the 
case: rather than appear in court as an advocate of the law and 
the values it embraces, the Justice Department appeared as 
criminal defense counsel on behalf of its own officials. This 
attitude of unaccountability is the essential continuity between 
the Obama and Bush Justice Departments. It needs to be recognized 
for what it is: an elevation of the perks and privileges of 
government power above the fundamental doctrine of accountability 
for the exercise of such power.

Throughout this litigation, the Justice Department has attempted 
to hide behind Canada, insinuating that the case, if allowed to 
proceed, would embarrass an important ally. But our neighbor to 
the north offers an instructive example of how a democratic state, 
conscious of its duties and obligations, deals with embarrassing 
allegations of torture. Canada has made full disclosure of its 
missteps, publishing a white paper as thick as two Manhattan 
telephone directories, issuing a full apology to Maher Arar, and 
making a payment of roughly $10 million to him in compensation for 
the damages suffered. Most significantly, even as the Obama 
Administration was attempting to close the door on the matter, 
Canadian law-enforcement authorities announced the opening of a 
criminal probe designed to identify and prosecute the government 
actors responsible for Arar’s rendition to torture.

The Arar case is thus far from over. Arar is still waiting for an 
apology from the United States, and he still has his right to 
compensation. The Obama Administration owes both Arar and the 
American public a full accounting of what transpired in this case, 
and it owes Arar a considerable sum of money. The unnamed Justice 
Department political cowboys who sent Arar to be tortured in Syria 
need to spend some time in the spotlight, and they need to atone 
for their misconduct in the way the law demands. This end is 
called justice, and it’s what the Department of Justice has been 
working feverishly to subvert.
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