(Here is
the link to Flood’s letter, if you haven’t read it: https://www.scribd.com/document/408445903/Flood-letter-to-Barr#from_embed?campaign=VigLink&ad_group=xxc1xx&source=hp_affiliate&medium=affiliate).
Emmet Flood
is the Special Counsel to the President.
In other words, he is the President’s lawyer, not a lawyer for the Department of Justice, and not a lawyer for We the People. When I first read his letter, I recognized it
as political. After all, it came out the
day after the redacted Mueller Report was released to the public. At the time, I thought Flood made some good
points that were potentially damaging to Mueller. Then, the more I thought about it, the more I
thought Flood’s letter might have been just as misleading as Barr's 4-page
summary of the Report.
Here, then,
are my thoughts on Flood’s letter. I’m
going to adopt his quite odd and a bit hysterical use of italics to emphasize important points. And I'm going to bold them, too, just for fun and because I can!
Flood is
right when he says a prosecutor's duty is to investigate and not to
"conclusively" determine that no criminal conduct has occurred, or to
"exonerate." But Flood accuses Mueller of acting as judge and jury. Without
knowing the context in which Mueller used those words in Vol. II, there is the
possibility that Flood distorted their meaning.
That is what AG Barr did in his 4-page summary when he said Mueller failed
to “establish” a criminal conspiracy, thereby implying to the non-lawyer (>90%
of the population?) that there was no evidence of conspiracy. That is false. There was evidence. But Mueller judged it insufficient to support
a unanimous verdict of conspiracy sustainable on appeal. However, until I read Vol. II for myself, I’m willing to give Flood the
benefit of the doubt on this point.
But not on
this one. Flood is misleading and wrong
when he states unequivocally that the only reason prosecutors decline to
charge, is because they don't believe the investigated conduct constitutes a
crime for which all elements can be proven to the satisfaction of a jury beyond
a reasonable doubt. On the contrary,
when the subject of the investigation is a sitting president, a prosecutor must decline
to charge if he believes the criminal conduct can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. And that situation occurs only because of the
Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) policy against indicting a sitting president--which
Flood conspicuously fails to mention.
So Mueller
declined to charge the President with obstruction not because he couldn't prove obstruction beyond a
reasonable doubt, but precisely because he thought he could, and that the grand jury was likely to return an indictment
for obstruction, which is against OLC policy. (Side note:
The standard of proof applicable to grand jury proceedings is a “preponderance
of the evidence,” not “beyond a reasonable doubt.” This lower standard of proof makes it even
more likely that a grand jury would have indicted the President for obstruction
had Mueller decided to charge him, as Flood later incorrectly contends was Mueller’s duty.)
Flood’s
contention that Mueller did not do his “only one job” in closing his
investigation, namely to “provide the Attorney General with a confidential
report explaining prosecution or declination decisions,” seems unlikely. But I haven’t read Vol. II. Perhaps Mueller’s explanations were completely
missing or inadequate. So let’s accept for the sake of the argument that
they were. Then why didn’t AG Barr
reject the Report, send it back to Mueller, and tell him to revise it? AG Barr had the Report for a month before Flood wrote his letter.
Flood complains
that “the Report is laden with factual information that has never been
subjected to adversarial testing or independent analysis.” This is not only misleading
but disingenuous. How could the factual
information have been tested? Even if
Mueller had brought the evidence before the grand jury, that proceeding is
specifically not an adversarial
proceeding. There are no lawyers
present, and even the judge is absent during testimony to preserve
secrecy. And if Flood is implying that Mueller
didn’t make an independent analysis, that’s controverted by everything we know
about the Special Counsel. He tied himself into a pretzel trying to maintain independence.
I find Flood’s
jibe that Mueller “indulged in creative departures from governing law” by declining
either to prosecute or to decline to prosecute offensive. More importantly, it’s also clearly wrong--in
the case of a sitting president. Flood
says that under the Special Counsel regulations, prosecutors are to speak
publicly through indictments. He
neglects to add that Mueller cannot
under OLC policy speak through an indictment about a
sitting president. Flood’s argument here is circular. Since the letter is political, it may also be
designed to confuse.
Flood opines that “it has been suggested that the Report was written with the intent of providing Congress with some kind of ‘road map’ for congressional action,” as if that were inappropriate or impermissible. He goes on to say that, “If that was in fact the SCO’s [Special Counsel's Office] intention, it too serves as additional evidence of the SCO’s refusal to follow applicable law.” I would argue the contrary is more likely the case and perfectly permissible, given Section 9-27.220, Grounds for Commencing or Declining Federal Prosecution, set out in the Justice Department Manual outlining its Principles of Federal Prosecution (emphasis added):
The attorney for the
government should commence or recommend federal prosecution if he/she believes
that the person's conduct constitutes a federal offense, and that the
admissible evidence will probably be sufficient to obtain and sustain a
conviction, unless (1) the
prosecution would serve no substantial federal interest; (2) the person is
subject to effective prosecution in another jurisdiction; or (3) there exists an adequate non-criminal
alternative to prosecution.
A prime
example of exception (3) is the congressional impeachment process as provided in
the Constitution. It would not surprise me
to find in Vol. II that Mueller relied on this section when he outlined the raw
evidence and created the "road map" Flood decries.
Flood goes
onto say how transparent and forthcoming the President was in cooperating with the Special Counsel, even though he
could have asserted executive privilege, and preserving it for future
reference, while omitting to mention that members of the President’s Campaign deleted
text messages, used encryption, destroyed evidence, lied, etc., as Muller notes
in Vol. I. It's become apparent that Flood’s
clear purpose in the letter was to intimidate and cut off any further investigation
of obstruction, telling the House in no uncertain terms that they will get nothing from the Administration. We’re seeing that play out right now with
members of the Administration and others connected to it refusing to comply with congressional subpoenas.
One final observation. The opening sentence of Flood's letter says
he is memorializing his concerns about the form
of the Report. He doesn't express
concerns about its contents, other than to lament that the evidence hasn’t been
subjected to adversarial testing—a false concern. In other words, Flood doesn’t dispute the
evidence that the President obstructed justice.
He just doesn’t like the form of the Report. Interesting.
This constitutional crisis is
headed for the Supreme Court. To quote
the President, “We’ll see what happens."
Keep it
real!
Marilyn

You should be a political reporter!
ReplyDeleteSarah would pull my press pass immediately!
DeleteYou don‘t have to be a WH reporter. In any case, I hope the members of the Supreme Court read your thoughts here before they make any decisions about the constitutional crisis.
DeleteThere are those much more capable than I working on it. Let’s hope we don’t have another liberal vacancy on the Court.
DeleteMarilyn, thank you so much for helping me to navigate this jungle, or shall I say morass… I'm very much looking forward to you comments to Mueller Report II.
ReplyDeleteMarion
I wish I could say “my pleasure,” but it’s a very troublesome situation.
Delete