Posted on DU some time ago. Thanks for keeping this storyt alive, magellan.
Wednesday, August 17, 2005
John Roberts' Massive Conflict-of-Interest in Critical War on Terror Court Case, Hamdan, Should (But Won't Be) an Obstacle to His Nomination
http://www.nashuaadvocate.blogspot.com/Highly Decorated Judge Mysteriously Failed Remedial Ethics Test While Judge for D.C. Circuit, Was Job-Hunting With a Litigant While Presiding on That Litigant's Case (Hint: the Litigant Was and Is the Bush Administration)
COURTESY OF WWW.SETHABRAMSON.BLOGSPOT.COM
If you're an attorney in America today and you've one ounce of objectivity on the non-partisan, apolitical, wholly professional issue of ethics in the legal field, you're pretty pissed off at Supreme Court nominee John Roberts right now.
That's because, according to The Washington Post, Roberts was engaged in secret job interviews with top Bush Administration officials--including Vice-President Dick Cheney, Chief-of-Staff Andrew Card, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and Deputy Chief-of-Staff Karl Rove--while one of Gonzales' deputies at the Department of Justice was arguing, before Roberts, perhaps the most important wartime executive powers case of our generation.
Any lawyer worth his salt, who practices in the field and not merely in the schoolhouse, knows this is an ethical violation, as judges--like attorneys, but frankly even moreso--are charged by the legal profession's Rules of Professional Conduct to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest in the cases they preside over (or, in the case of attorneys, the cases they litigate).
Roberts failed this test, failed it miserably, and frankly his impeccable judicial credentials--so touted by Republicans in the run-up to his nomination hearings--prove, beyond any doubt whatsoever, that he should have and did know better. Imagine, for a moment, that you're a litigant before the D.C. Circuit Court and your very liberty is at stake. Unbeknownst to you, one of the three judges selected to decide your fate is job-hunting with the party opposite.
No, correct that: much more than "job-hunting."
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