I’m glad to know the Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility has agreed to investigate whether political interference influenced the government’s decision to ask the tobacco industry to pay $10 billion, instead of the $130 billion previously recommended by a government expert witness. There are a lot of questions here that deserve answers.
For example, if there’s an innocent explanation for this, I’d like to hear it.
A top Justice Department official threatened to remove a government expert from its witness list if he did not water down his recommended penalties for the tobacco industry, the witness said in an interview yesterday.
Harvard University business professor Max H. Bazerman said a career trial lawyer told him senior Justice officials wanted him to change his recommendation that the court appoint a monitor to review whether it was appropriate to remove senior tobacco company management. Bazerman said the lawyer was passing along the “strong request” the week before Bazerman was to take the witness stand on May 4 in the government’s landmark racketeering case against the industry.
Bazerman refused to go along — he said he’d be lying under oath if he changed his testimony — but the fact that he was even asked is a little bizarre. The witness didn’t want to water down his recommended penalties, the career lawyers on the case didn’t him to either, but Justice Department senior litigation counsel Frank Marine and Associate Attorney General Robert McCallum Jr. apparently made the call and reportedly threatened to take Bazerman off the government’s witness list unless he changed his testimony.
To be fair, it’s important to note that Bazerman refused to make the change but was nevertheless allowed to testify. Still, he was pressured to weaken his position on sanctions, as were two other government witnesses.
There has to be a reason why. Bazerman thinks he knows.
“I want the government to behave appropriately. I can’t think of an honest, plausible reason other than political interference for what they’re doing,” he said of political appointees at Justice.