Author of Torture Memos Admits Some Techniques Were Not Approved By DOJ
Thursday 15 July 2010
by: Jason Leopold, t r u t h o u t | Report

Jay Bybee. (Photo: U.S. Government)
Jay Bybee, who as a senior Justice Department lawyer signed two memos in 2002 authorizing CIA interrogators to torture “war on terror” prisoners, told a congressional panel that more than a half dozen other brutal methods were used by the CIA without legal approval.
In a closed-door interview with members of the House Judiciary Committee on May 26, Bybee said his Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) did not allow the CIA to use diapering, water dousing, blackout goggles, extended solitary confinement, daily beatings, forcing a detainee to defecate on himself, hanging a detainee from ceiling hooks or subjecting prisoners to loud music or noise.
Bybee, who is now a federal appeals court judge in San Francisco, did sign off on a variety of other torture techniques, including the near-drowning experience of waterboarding. Prolonged diapering was included in a list of torture techniques that the OLC initially approved in 2002, but it was removed possibly because it might have resulted in a lengthy legal review.
Some of the techniques, including diapering, were permitted by CIA Director George Tenet and other senior agency officials despite the lack of clear OLC sign-off in 2002. Diapering and other abuses, such as water dousing, were cleared by the OLC later after Bybee left to become a federal judge.
In an investigative report published by Truthout on April 17, intelligence officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said Abu Zubaydah, the first high-value detainee captured after 9/11, was subjected to repeated sessions of "water dousing" prior to the issuance of the August 2002 torture memos. At the time interrogators used it on Zubaydah, water dousing was described by intelligence officials knowledgeable about Zubaydah's torture as spraying him with extremely cold water from a hose while he was naked and shackled by chains attached to a ceiling in the cell he was kept in at a black-site prison.
Water dousing was believed to have played a part in the November 2002 death of Gul Rahman, a detainee who was held at an Afghanistan prison known as The Salt Pit. He died of hypothermia hours after being doused with water and left in a cold prison cell. The OLC did not approve the use of water dousing as an interrogation technique until August 2004.
Bybee’s statements to the committee appeared to be an attempt to shift the blame for some illegal torturing onto the CIA.
“If the CIA departed from anything that it told us here, if it had any other information that it didn’t share with us or if it came into any information that would differ from what they told us here, then the CIA did not have an opinion from OLC,” Bybee said, according to the transcript of his interview released by the Judiciary Committee on Thursday.
Moreover, Bybee said his OLC memos prohibited the “substantial repetition” of harsh techniques, such as waterboarding. Justice Department documents and a report released by the CIA's Inspector General state that two high-value detainees, Zubaydah and self-professed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, were waterboarded 83 times and 183 times in the course of a single month.
In 2005 one of Bybee’s successors, Steven Bradbury, permitted several of the torture tactics to be used in combination. The application of the torture techniques alone and in various patterns appears to have amounted to a form of human experimentation.
Last month, the international doctors’ organization, Physicians for Human Rights, released a report that said waterboarding was monitored in early 2002 by CIA medical personnel who collected data about how detainees responded to the torture technique. The data was then used in Bradbury's 2005 torture memo advising CIA interrogators how to refine the practice.
The doctors’ report also noted that CIA medical personnel obtained experimental research data by subjecting more than 25 detainees to a combination of torture techniques as a way of understanding "whether one type of application over another would increase the subjects' susceptibility to severe pain."
That medical analysis then informed "subsequent [torture] practices," the report said.
Criticizing Yoo
In the congressional interview, Bybee also was harshly critical of his former colleague John Yoo, the principal author of the torture memos as well as other opinions asserting that President George W. Bush could exercise unlimited powers as commander in chief during the "war on terror."
Bybee said Yoo had become far too close to the White House and thus compromised his ability to provide objective legal advice.
Bybee said Yoo was “at the White House on a regular basis” and was responsible for all of the discussion with the Bush administration on matters relating to torture. Bybee said Yoo never disclosed to him that he had been participating in top-secret White House “war planning.”
Last year, a report released by the inspectors general of the CIA, National Security Agency, Justice Department and Defense Department said Bush justified his warrantless wiretapping in the United States by relying on Yoo’s theories of unlimited presidential wartime powers and started the spying operation even before Yoo issued a formal opinion.
Bybee was quoted in that report as saying that Yoo was “the White House’s guy” on national security issues and complained that Yoo was “read into” the secret details of the classified Presidential Surveillance Program, while Bybee, was kept out of the loop.
In his interview with the Judiciary Committee, Bybee said he was concerned that “John was involved with the White House in a number of apparently war-planning things” that Bybee “was not aware of” at the time. Yoo, now a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley, did not respond to email queries for comment.
Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-New York) chairman of the subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Rights, said Yoo’s “close relationship” with Bush’s White House “warrants further investigation.”
Despite the widespread criticism of the legal quality of the torture memos, Bybee still defended the work. “We might have been clearer in some places,” Bybee said. “But, in terms of the analysis, I am going to stand by the memo.”
Bybee’s May 26 interview with the House Judiciary Committee was treated as a closely guarded secret. Yet, it was unclear why Rep. John Conyers (D-Michigan) committee chairman, decided to conduct the interview privately rather than have Bybee testify publicly. Bybee’s status as a sitting federal judge may have been a factor.
A May 4 letter Conyers sent to Bybee's attorney, Maureen Mahoney, released with Bybee's interview transcript, indicates the Judicary committee reached an agreement with Mahoney to have Bybee speak to the committee privately. Conyers' letter refers to an April 27 letter Mahoney sent the committee, which appears to center around the Judiciary Committee's interest in interviewing Bybee. A copy of the April 27 letter was not included in the batch of supporting documents Conyers' office released Thursday.
Conyers' May 4 letter to Mahoney said, "Although Committee staff and I do not agree with the characterizations in your April 27 letter, the Committee is willing to proceed as described below." Conyers then goes on to state, "...As with most such Committee interviews, [Bybee's] interview will not be announced publicly in advance…"
Bybee sat down with committee members about three months after the Justice Department’s internal watchdog, the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), issued a long-awaited report on the legal advice that Bybee and Yoo provided to the White House on so-called “enhanced interrogation techniques.”
That report concluded that the legal advice that Yoo and Bybee gave the White House warranted stern punishment, including a recommendation to their state bar associations for possible disbarment.
In the OPR report, Yoo was found to have "committed intentional professional misconduct when he violated his duty to exercise independent legal judgment and render thorough, objective, and candid legal advice."
Bybee was said to have "committed professional misconduct when he acted in reckless disregard of his duty to exercise independent legal judgment and render thorough, objective, and candid legal advice."
But the judgment was softened by career prosecutor David Margolis, who was put in charge of the final recommendations. Margolis said he was "unpersuaded" by OPR's "professional misconduct" conclusion and changed the “misconduct” findings to “poor judgment,” thus avoiding the referral to state bar associations.
Lost Emails
OPR investigators said their probe was hampered by the fact that Yoo’s emails from July 2002 through August 5, 2002, were deleted and "reportedly" not recoverable. Bybee said he could not recall whether he took steps to make sure Yoo preserved his emails as required by federal law.
Justice Department rules for preserving records state that "the unlawful removal or destruction of federal records" can result in "criminal or civil penalties, fines and/or imprisonment."
Conyers and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, as well as the good-government group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, have asked the Justice Department and the National Archives to investigate the document destruction.
Conyers said Thursday that Bybee’s revelations during the May 26 interview are “highly relevant to the pending criminal investigation into detainee abuse.”
Bybee’s “testimony reveals that many brutal techniques reportedly used in CIA interrogations were not authorized by the Justice Department – the author of these legal memos has now admitted this on the record,” Conyers said. “I have provided the Committee’s interview to the Justice Department and directed my staff to cooperate with any further requests for information.”
Last August, Attorney General Eric Holder expanded the mandate of John Durham, a US Attorney from Connecticut who has spent more than two years investigating the destruction of 92 interrogation videotapes, to include about a dozen cases of torture that had been previously closed by Justice Department attorneys for unknown reasons.
Durham was authorized to conduct a preliminary review of those cases to determine if there is evidence that warrants a full-scale criminal inquiry.
Rep. Nadler, who questioned Bybee, said the “disclosures heighten the need for a special counsel to investigate the development and implementation of interrogation policies following the 9/11 attacks and, once again, I call upon the Department of Justice to ensure justice and accountability for these potentially grave abuses of executive power.”
The Obama administration has refused to allow the Justice Department to launch a full-fledged investigation into the Bush administration’s torture policies and has also pressured Congress not to hold public hearings delving into the matter.
President Obama said last year that “those who [carried] out their duties relying in good faith upon the legal advice from the Department of Justice” should not be subject to prosecution.
Holder added, “with regard to those members of the intelligence community who acted in good faith and in reliance with Justice Department opinions that were shared with them, it is not our intention to prosecute those individuals."
However, Bybee’s testimony, in which he acknowledges that abusive techniques were used that OLC did not approve, changes the picture since it suggests that interrogators were not relying upon the legal memos when they abused some detainees.
Rev. Richard Killmer, executive director of the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, said, “the fact that the CIA used forms of torture not allowed by even the flawed OLC memos demonstrates the need for [Durham] to thoroughly investigate the CIA’s use of torture."
Doubts Linger
Still, Brent Mickum, an attorney who represents several high-profile Guantanamo prisoners, said he does not believe Bybee’s revelations will result in an investigation or a congressional hearing.
“Everything I know about our government, everything I know about the CIA, Department of Defense and the DOJ tells me they cannot be trusted,” Mickum said. “They simply do not tell the truth. When they are caught in a lie they change their story. We do not have a judicial system that will allow us to take a hard look at what been done and we have a Congress that has been asleep at the wheel.”
Mickum added that Bybee’s revelations were not surprising to anyone who had followed the torture scandal.
“Judge Bybee has made clear in his testimony that there were techniques employed that were not approved. I have known that for years,” Mickum said. “What was done to my client [Abu Zubaydah] was vastly worse than what was approved in the [Bybee] memo. But I can’t talk to you about that because the government hamstrings us by abusing the classification system and prevents me from telling you exactly what was done to [Zubaydah].
“My client was tortured before [Bybee’s] memo came out. My client was interrogated in ways that were not approved of by OLC and interrogated in ways that exceeded the OLC memo. I believe my client was tortured months and months before this [August 2002 OLC] memorandum ever came out. They knew he was tortured and they set about creating a record to make it appear he had not been tortured.”
In the torture memo, Bybee asserted that Zubaydah "is one of the highest ranking members of the al-Qaeda terrorist organization" and someone who "has been involved in every major terrorist operation carried out by al-Qaeda." The memo also called Zubaydah "one of the planners of the September 11 attacks."
Bybee indicated that he approved the harsh interrogation as necessary to thwart pending attacks on US interests, which the CIA claimed Zubaydah knew about. The US government has since backed off its claims about Zubaydah’s importance, now portraying him more as a travel agent for al-Qaeda than as a mastermind.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





Comments
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Bybee, like Gonzales, like
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 16:27 β Liced-christ (not verified)Bybee, like Gonzales, like Rove, like W, are a bunch of repressed gay men with twisted minds and ugly hearts. Once you twist the emotional aspect of a human being, the possibilities for living lies becomes enormous. The possibilities for sick and twisted views becomes limitless. As Alan Watts once noted in Does It Matter: we have, in the West, especially in the USA, a massive epidemic of "repressed homosexuals," especially in the military. Watts further noted that these guys should learn the art of f@cking each other; getting it out of their systems would avoid Watts' final prediction as a lucidly brilliant social thinker, philosopher and psychologist: "We are destroying ourselves through the repression of homosexuality (accurate paraphrase or direct quote here). Bybee is the mirror image of John Roberts and Alito: another married "homosexual"(that's the word the right wing likes to use) posing as a straight character. There are millions of reborn Republicans just like these phony nutcases.
Great article, Jason. The
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 16:32 β Jeff Kaye (not verified)Great article, Jason. The quote by Mickum is heart-rending in the sense that it demonstrates with what cold indifference the government has placed obstacles in the ways of justice, or in seeking transparency in truth about the crimes of the self-same government. I suppose one should not be surprised.
Conyers and Nadler act on these issues with all the speed of refrigerated molasses. Still, the onus on prosecutions does shift back to the Obama administration/Justice Dept. to act upon this clear proof of torture.
I didn't see a link to the actual interview transcript or documents in the article. Here it is for those interested: http://judiciary.house.gov/issues/issues_Bybee.html
CORRECTED VERSION: Bybee,
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 16:39 β Liced-christ (not verified)CORRECTED VERSION:
Bybee, like Gonzales, like Rove, like W, are a bunch of repressed gay men with twisted minds and ugly hearts. Once you twist the emotional aspect of a human being, the possibilities for living lies becomes enormous. The possibilities for sick and twisted views becomes limitless. As Alan Watts once noted in Does It Matter: we have, in the West, especially in the USA, a massive epidemic of "repressed homosexuals," especially in the military. Watts further noted that these guys should learn the art of f@cking each other; getting it out of their systems (so that we) would avoid Watts' final prediction as a lucidly brilliant social thinker, philosopher and psychologist: "We are destroying ourselves through the repression of homosexuality (accurate paraphrase or direct quote here). Bybee is the mirror image of John Roberts and Alito: [just] another married "homosexual"(that's the word for gays the right wing likes to use so it's aptly used here) posing as a straight character. There are millions of reborn Republicans just like these phony nut-cases.

Thanks so much, Jeff! And
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 17:05 β Jason LeopoldThanks so much, Jeff! And for the link! It wasn't available yet when this story went live. Mickum has clearly seen quite a bit. I think he speaks for many people.
Bybee's testimony will be
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 17:27 β Anonymous (not verified)Bybee's testimony will be used to claim only rogue personnel supposedly carried out unauthorized "enhanced interrogation techniques" amounting to torture, and will thus be further used to prevent senior officials, who were involved in torture authorization from the get go, from being held accountable. And, if even those are, a few underlings and/or those who actually carried out the torture techniques will be prosecuted, convicted and scapegoated, and most if not all of those prosecuted, if ever, will be exonerated.
Therefore, the entire matter will continue to be covered-up, whitewashed and/or excused, and the perpetrators up the chain of command will continue to be allowed impunity and not be held accountable, as usual. The U.S. government is COMPLETELY corrupt and by and large above the law, especially the Constitution, international law(s) and related U.S. law(s), except those laws that the corrupt government writes and enacts which allegedly make the unconstitutional supposedly "legal". Thus, as a country, the U.S. is doomed.
Not "authorized" by the DoJ?
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 20:31 β Rowland (not verified)Not "authorized" by the DoJ? What a shocking surprise!
Of course, Cheney knew all about it. But let's not bother the dude, what with his heart problems and all..
"We might have been clearer
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 20:41 β Anonymous (not verified)"We might have been clearer in some places," Bybee said, according to a copy of the 283-page interview transcript released Thursday by the House Judiciary Committee. "But, in terms of the analysis, I am going to stand by the memo."
Bybee ought to be forcibly and immediately impeached. How did he get a judgeship after rulings like his?
so, what happens now? this
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 23:00 β Anonymous (not verified)so, what happens now?
this piece of garbage needs to be removed from the bench, disbarred, and prosecuted - in any order -
lives in Henderson, NV - his neighbors probably think he is a human being.
When I read stuff like this
Thu, 07/15/2010 - 23:04 β Anonymous (not verified)When I read stuff like this I wonder where I am, the USA or War time Germany. I for one am disgusted by
this behavior and even more disturbed by the fact that the culprits in this scenario are basically all war criminals. It is also sickening that this kind of stuff does not receive the public attention it needs because Democratic politicians have no spine and are willing to betray the pursuit of justice for momentary political benefit. Since I am a military person I also wonder where the loyalty of our representatives has gone. We'll
bear the brunt of our enemies animosity not the guys on the hill. Semper Fi and thank you for making our job more dangerous.
Any U.C. Berkeley Boalt Hall
Fri, 07/16/2010 - 01:57 β Anonymous (not verified)Any U.C. Berkeley Boalt Hall law school alums
willing to do anything about their alma mater
harboring an arch war criminal?
Bybee and and his ilk,
Fri, 07/16/2010 - 02:53 β Liced-christ (not verified)Bybee and and his ilk, Gonzales, etc., are contemporary Nazis. There's absolutely no question in my mind about this. After all, was Nazism the wearing of a swastika, or the adherence to certain principles about human nature and the role of Germans within that Aryan scheme of things. The Republicans of the USA today represent the same kind of social Darwinism we saw in the Goebbels propaganda film, where the stronger insect conquers the weak, an example meant to convey how superior military strength is the final statement about politics and international and domestic rule. Hitler and Bybee would have gotten on like friendly colleagues in the single urge to conquer and dominate. This cockroach, an insult to the legal community of this nation's heritage, should be convicted of violating the Geneva Conventions and Nuremberg Guidelines. But then again, this is GW Bush's America. This is exactly what contemporary American politics embodies. The USA is more Nazi, more infiltrated with Nazi principles and propaganda, via the conservative Republican and Democrats, than Nazi Germany ever was, even at its height.
Bybee accusing Yoo of being
Fri, 07/16/2010 - 09:43 β morgan1 (not verified)Bybee accusing Yoo of being too close to the President. Bybee broke the law as demanded by Bush to make torturing legal by any means. Yoo merely went farther. Neither show any guilt or shame about what they did and both (As well as several dozen others) should be facing charges for war crimes and criminal conduct nationally. Continuing to read their excuses for approving torture is sickening.
Dear Anonymous on 7/16 at
Mon, 07/26/2010 - 17:55 β Frances in California (not verified)Dear Anonymous on 7/16 at 1:57 - Any association of Yoo with Boalt is strictly "letterhead". He's actually, physically at Chapman in Deep White Supremacist Orange County.
Good point about Bybee, Yoo,
Mon, 07/26/2010 - 17:59 β Frances in California Again (not verified)Good point about Bybee, Yoo, Gonzales and their toxic Latency . . . OH! Please don't forget Addington! The worst of the lot. W, however, is merely dyslexic; no, profoundly dyslexic: not only do written words not make sense, ideas don't either. He shut down when still a child.