June 27, 2007
Private: Durbin: Recently Confirmed Judge "Misled" Senate on Detainee Policy
Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, sent a letter yesterday to Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. Circuit which accuses the recently confirmed appeals judge of misleading the Senate on his involvement in crafting Bush Administration detainee policy while he was a White House lawyer:
Dear Judge Kavanaugh:
Yesterday the Washington Post published a lengthy article about Vice President Cheney's role in the policymaking process of the Bush Administration. In this article, you are reported to have participated in a "heated" White House meeting in 2002 about whether U.S. citizens who had been declared enemy combatants should be given access to lawyers. The information in this article was confirmed today by a report on National Public Radio.
These reports appear to contradict sworn testimony you gave to the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 9, 2006 at your nomination hearing. At that hearing, I asked you about the role you played, as one of the President's top White House lawyers, in the selection of William Haynes, a controversial nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and proponent of permissive policies with regard to torture.
I asked: "What did you know about Mr. Haynes's role in crafting the Adminstration's detention and interrogation policies?"
You testified: "Senator, I did not – I was not involved and am not involved in the questions about the rules governing detention of combatants – and so I do not have the involvement with that."
In light of the Washington Post and National Public Radio reports, your sworn testimony appears inaccurate and misleading. You participated in a critical meeting in which the Administration made a decision on whether to extend access to counsel to detainees, an issue that is clearly a "rule governing detention of combatants." By testifying under oath that you were not involved in this issue, it appears that you misled me, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the nation.
Therefore, I request that you provide the Senate Judiciary Committee with an explanation for this apparent contradiction.
In addition, I request that you disqualify yourself in all pending and subsequent cases involving detainees and enemy combatants. Your lack of candor at your nomination hearing suggests you cannot approach these cases with impartiality and an open mind.
Durbin added that he feels "perilously close to being lied to" in Judge Kavanaugh's testimony. Judge Kavanaugh's first case as a member of the D.C. Circuit was a case involving Guantanamo detainees.