Back in May, the Department of Justice’s [tag]Office of Professional Responsibility[/tag] was prepared to launch an investigation into how and why the agency’s lawyers approved the president’s warrantless-search program. The probe came to a sudden halt, however, when the OPR discovered it had been “denied [tag]security[/tag] [tag]clearance[/tag]s for access to information about the N.S.A. program.” No clearance meant no investigation.
Even at the time, this didn’t make much sense. As Mark Kleiman explained, the DoJ officials involved in the investigation have all been subject to rigorous background checks, and even if specific individuals at the agency were deemed security risks, the NSA could exclude them instead of the entire Department of Justice.
So, how did all of this happen? We learned a key detail about the story today.
Attorney General [tag]Alberto Gonzales[/tag] said Tuesday that President [tag]Bush[/tag] personally [tag]blocked[/tag] [tag]Justice Department[/tag] [tag]lawyers[/tag] from pursuing an internal probe of the [tag]warrantless[/tag] [tag]eavesdropping[/tag] program that monitors Americans’ international calls and e-mails when terrorism is suspected. […]
Under sharp questioning from Senate Judiciary Committee chairman [tag]Arlen Specter[/tag], Gonzales said that the president would not grant the access needed to allow the probe to move forward.
“It was highly classified, very important and many other lawyers had access. Why not OPR?” asked Specter, R-Pa., referring to the Office of Professional Responsibility.
“The [tag]president[/tag] of the United States makes the decision,” Gonzales told the committee hearing.
Call me crazy, but isn’t it a little odd for the president to personally [tag]intervene[/tag] in blocking a Justice Department investigation? Especially one involving his own legally-dubious, warrantless-search program? When one talks about obstructing justice, isn’t this a rather literal example?