Using political grand juries to jail political
dissidents
By Chelsea Manning
Letter from
Chelsea Manning to Judge Anthony Trenga
Exhibit 1 to Chelsea and
her legal team’s Motion for Reconsideration of
Sanctions (Scribd)
(SparrowMedia)
May 28, 2019
Dear Judge Trenga,
October 16, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
During the contempt hearing
on May 16, 2019, this Honorable Court directed me to
take the opportunity during my confinement to
reflect on my principles with respect to the
institution of grand juries in the United States.
This letter responds to that directive.
During the hearing, you stated that there exists
“no dishonor” in providing evidence to a grand jury.
You suggested that codification of grand juries in
the text of the U.S. Constitution provided ample
justification for this institution. In response to
my suggestion of “preliminary” or “committal”
hearings, you expressed skepticism over whether such
publicly held hearings served the same purpose
without damaging innocent people accused of crimes.
These arguments are raised frequently in
discussions about the problems with grand juries.
They are certainly not novel to me. Over the last
decade, I frequently considered these and many other
arguments while forming my opinions about the grand
jury process. After spending the last two weeks
reflecting on my decision not to testify before this
grand jury, I wish to present my position in a more
careful and complete manner than an impromptu
colloquy can provide. After working with lawyers and
researchers, I can also now cite specific sources
that support my position.
First, I shall compare grand juries in their
earliest form, including the ideals and practical
problems they sought to address, to grand juries as
they currently operate. Second I want to clarify
that while my objection to grand juries emphasizes
their historical use against activists, I also view
grand juries as an institution that now undermines
due process even when used as intended.
The drafters of the U.S. Constitution, despite
their many flaws, possessed a sophisticated
understanding of modern political theory. The
framers did not set out to short-circuit due process
protections. Obviously, to a contemporary reader, we
now understand the many flaws and compromises in the
Constitution, and see some as inherently cruel and
indefensible: legal human slavery; the legalizing of
subordinate civil status for women; segregation; and
the disenfranchisement of those who did not own land
come to mind.
Some such practices might have struck
contemporaries of the Constitution as “normal” or
“necessary,” but with the passage of time, and
through the tireless work of millions of people
taking bold and dangerous action, they are now
obsolete. I am certainly not alone in thinking that
the grand jury process, which at one time acted as
an independent body of citizens along the lines 2 of
a civilian police review board, slowly transitioned
into the unbridled arm of the police and prosecution
in ways that run contrary to the grand jury’s
originally intended purposes. (1)
The 5th Amendment provides many of our most
cherished procedural safeguards, concepts
foundational to our criminal legal system, including
‘due process,’ a prohibition on double jeopardy, and
the right against compelled self-incrimination. The
grand jury is also enshrined in the fifth amendment,
however, prior to the recent publicity surrounding
the Mueller investigation, most Americans only knew
two things about the grand jury.
First, people hear that a grand jury could indict
a ham sandwich. Early grand juries acted
independently, as investigations by citizens. Now,
the grand jury process means the prosecutor decides
what the grand jurors see – and what they don’t see.
The grand jury imagined by the drafters of the fifth
amendment – which did not involve a prosecutor –
bears no resemblance to what we see today, where
more than 99.9% of indictments sought are granted.
Second, we learn another, more sinister thing
about grand juries: they don’t indict law
enforcement. For example, in Dallas over a stretch
of several years, more than 80 police shootings came
before grand juries. Only one returned an
indictment. (2) Grand juries have protected police
officers since the slave patrols. They were used to
indict abolitionists, but not people capturing and
re-enslaving people seeking freedom from bondage.
They were used to indict reconstructionists, while
actively protecting lynch mobs. Both the ‘ham
sandwich’ statement and selective indictment happen
because of grand jury secrecy.
Also, a prosecutor’s presentation of a case is
shaped by their own ideas and goals. There does not
need to be any misconduct or bad intent on the part
of a prosecutor to influence the grand jurors in a
way that destroys their independence. If you look at
legal scholarship about the history of the grand
jury, you can see how today’s grand juries are
unrecognizable from English and early American ones.
The original grand jury was more than an
investigator; they were supposed to protect citizens
not just from unjust indictments but from unjust
laws. In England, grand jurors who even allowed a
prosecutor to come into the grand jury room were
seen as having violated their oath. (3)
I am positive that the founders never intended
the grand jury to function like those we see today.
If grand juries were actually independent bodies
that nullified unjust laws or their unjust
application, to determine whether it was really in
the public interest to decide who should be made
“infamous” under the law, I would feel differently.
Reading the history of grand juries, I have read of
how during the American Revolutionary war, grand
jurors refused to indict tax resisters against the
crown, because while it was technically illegal, the
grand jurors recognized that what made it a criminal
act was a law imposed by an authority that most of
them by that time did not recognize (4).
Nonetheless, the grand jury once provided a modicum
of due process, at least to the class of people to
whom due process was made available.
In 2019, the federal grand jury exists as a
mockery of the institution that once stood against
the whims of monarchs. It undermines the Fourth
Amendment’s protections against unreasonable search
and seizure, and the Fifth Amendment’s guarantees of
due process. Today’s grand juries do not safeguard
such fundamental rights, and they are easily subject
to abuse.
Secret proceedings lend unearned legitimacy to
prosecutorial decisions that protect the powerful
against accountability and over-punish the
marginalized. It is not surprising that members of
the defense bar are generally unsupportive of grand
jury proceedings. Even the Department of Justice
released a report acknowledging that “grand juries
are notorious for being ‘rubber stamps’ for the
prosecutor for virtually all routine criminal
matters.” (5) Moreover, because prosecutors
can compel people to show up and testify or produce
documents to the grand jury without having to show
probable cause, their unmonitored subpoena power
functions to let them side-step the Fourth
Amendment’s protections against unreasonable
searches and seizures.
Imagine a world in which you were not a judge and
were not connected to judges and prosecutors
personally. If you or a loved one has charges
brought before a grand jury, charges of which you or
they were innocent, would you believe for one moment
that the grand jury might not indict? What rights,
specifically, would you consider safeguarded by the
fifth amendment’s provision for a grand jury?
Consider that it is more than six times as likely
that you will be struck by lightning than that a
federal grand jury will decline to indict. I object
to grand juries even when used in the ways that are
typically understood to be legitimate.
The ability of grand juries to be abused or used
for political ends is entrenched and perpetuated by
the fact that jeopardy doesn’t attach with a grand
jury, so prosecutors can repeatedly bring the same
changes. Even though there are some laws that say
prosecutors must either show they have new evidence
or that it is in the public interest to extend or
reconvene a grand jury, this is hardly an obstacle.
For instance, Thomas Jefferson had to convene three
separate grand juries in order to indict Aaron Burr
for sedition – but he was able to continue to
convene those grand juries until he obtained that
indictment.
Additionally, in the Antebellum South, grand
juries routinely indicted anti-slavery activists for
sedition, while those in the North sometimes refused
— but charges would re-presented to new grand juries
until they stuck. In 1968, a San Francisco Grand
Jury was asked by Mayor Alioto to investigate the
Black Panther Party. They refused, and the foreman
gave a press conference about political overreach.
Unfortunately, in 1969, a new grand jury began an
investigation.
These examples run to the political, but grand
jury shopping is something that can be done with any
kind of case. Grand juries can also be used to
coerce defendants to give up their trial rights and
take pleas, both by threatening to indict for more
severe charges than are warranted (which we know can
be done easily), or by threatening to call a
defendant’s loved ones before a grand jury as
witnesses. The very threat of the secret proceeding
is in itself terrifying to people. The secrecy of
grand jury proceedings fuel paranoia and fear,
running contrary to our ideals of open courts and
stoking our disdain for secret testimony. I find,
when I explain the secrecy of grand juries, people
are often truly shocked that they are
constitutional, and frequently compare them to the
Court of Star Chamber.
The Court of the Star Chamber existed in England
from the 15th to 17th centuries. This court lacked
the same procedures as normal courts, and often
pursued political and religious dissidents, and
others who “sinned” against the crown. It lacked
evidentiary standards and proceeded on rumor and
hearsay. It imposed all kinds of arbitrary
punishments, except the death penalty. In 1641,
Parliament abolished the Court of Star Chamber as a
dangerous relic of the past for its brutality and
capriciousness. The grand jury was once a
progressive and protective replacement for things
like the Star Chamber, but in its current
incarnation it bears far more resemblance to the
Court of the Star Chamber than to its intended role
as a bulwark against arbitrary state power. Apart
from the fact that the grand jury itself does not
impose punishments, the biggest difference between
the grand jury and the Court of the Star Chamber is
that Star Chamber proceedings were in fact largely
open to the public.
I am not alone in objecting to the grand jury as
a dangerous relic that has evolved in ways that
increase its power without increasing its
protections. This is not even a partisan issue. For
instance, even the Cato Institute has made
statements critical of the grand jury:
Prosecutors defend their actions by reminding
everyone that legislators have approved the
procedures. Legislators defend what they have done
by reminding everyone that the courts have approved
the procedures. Judges defend what they have done by
reminding everyone that prosecutors and legislators
are free to do otherwise—and that the people seem
content since they have not revolted against the
elected officials who run the system. Citizens, in
turn, too often assume that someone in the
government is looking out for their welfare,
including their constitutional rights. No one takes
responsibility for the fact that constitutional
rights are slipping away. (6)
During the hearing on the 16th, you pointedly
asked me whether I had taken an oath to uphold the
constitution. What is more important than my
willingness to blindly follow that document is my
commitment to its general principles of due process
and fundamental rights. I refuse to participate in a
process that has clearly transformed into something
that violates the spirit if not the letter of the
law. Since I reject the grand jury process, I am
totally ready to propose alternatives to it and
point out that such alternatives already exist.
Only two common law systems of justice use the
grand jury: the United States and Liberia. Even
within the United States, half of the states have
dispensed with the use of grand juries. While they
reliably end with indictments, they do not reliably
end with justice. While the grand jury is anomalous
in the world, other countries are nevertheless able
to prosecute people, demonstrating that there are
alternatives to the grand jury.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
While the United States is one of two
countries to maintain a grand jury
system, countries that used to have
grand juries include England, Scotland,
Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand,
South Africa, France, Belgium, Japan and
Sierra Leone. In those countries, grand
jury proceedings have been replaced by
an open and adversarial “preliminary” or
“committal” hearing system.
Additionally, the United States
military, through the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §801 et seq,
sets forth procedures for preliminary
hearings, rather than grand juries,
providing service members with
significantly more protections than the
average person.
Preliminary hearings throw open the doors to the
best of all disinfectants: sunshine. Nearly every
country that used grand juries replaced it with
these hearings, which save time and expense, don’t
criminalize refusal to comply with prosecutorial
whims, and better equip all parties to prepare for
fairer and more balanced inquiries into the truth of
matters. There exists no shortage of due process and
nothing prevents a witness who wishes to remain
anonymous from speaking to law enforcement or the
prosecution. A common justification for grand jury
secrecy is to preserve the reputation of those
investigated. First of all, as noted, almost nobody
investigated by a grand jury is not indicted.
Moreover, in countries that have preliminary
hearings, people have an opportunity to defend
themselves, and simply being investigated does not
end in ruin.
Now, I want to address my specific concerns about
the ways in which grand juries can be used
politically.
Across the world and throughout history, it has
been common practice to incarcerate or even kill
dissidents and political rivals on the mere
suspicion of being a member of an opposition group.
While in the United States we are perhaps less overt
in our persecution of dissidents most of the time,
the grand jury subpoena combined with compulsory
immunity gives unrestrained powers to U.S.
prosecutors to oppress activists and their
communities. Generally, people have no obligation to
cooperate with law enforcement investigations. But
in the context of a grand jury subpoena, people who
refuse to talk about their first amendment beliefs
and associations can be locked away via contempt.
During the McCarthy era, when people were
publicly interrogated about their beliefs and
associations, the public was eventually outraged,
and the McCarthy hearings are widely seen as a
disgraceful episode of modern history. This kind of
questioning, however, routinely happens under the
grand jury system. Due to the secrecy of grand
juries, the public is less aware of it, and less
outraged, and therefore, it continues without
interruption. However, this is because they are
unaware it is happening and cannot feel its effects.
The investigative grand jury as we know it was
developed in the wake of McCarthy, during the Nixon
years. It was developed purportedly to battle
organized crime, but was promptly used to subpoena
members of anti-war groups, the women’s movement,
and black liberation groups. Prosecutors issued
subpoenas in conjunction with grants of immunity, in
order to compel testimony, and routinely had
resistant activists imprisoned for contempt. For
instance, while federal agencies were investigating
the Puerto Rican independence movement, several
community organizers refused to comply out of
solidarity with their communities. They were
arrested at gunpoint for contempt of court. 6
Senator Ted Kennedy was not shy about expressing his
alarm:
“Over the past four years, under the present
administration, we have witnessed the birth of a new
breed of political animal — the kangaroo grand jury
— spawned in a dark corner of the Department of
Justice, nourished by an administration bent on
twisting law enforcement to serve its own political
ends, a dangerous modern form of Star Chamber secret
inquisition that is trampling the rights of American
citizens from coast to coast.” (7)
The tradition of using political grand juries to
jail political dissidents and activists is long. The
concept of a grand jury in which prosecutors
subpoena activists and jail them for refusing to
comply with the subpoena stands in stark contrast to
the institution contemplated in the Constitution.
The foregoing is intended to give you a better
and more nuanced understanding of my conscientious
objection to the grand jury. I understand the idea
that as a civil contemnor, I hold the key to my cell
– that I can free myself by talking to the grand
jury. While I may hold the key to my cell, it is
held in the beating heart of all I believe. To
retrieve that key and do what you are asking of me,
your honor, I would have to cut the key out, which
would mean killing everything that I hold dear, and
the beliefs that have defined my path.
Each person must make the world we want to live
in around us where we stand. I believe in due
process, freedom of the press, and a transparent
court system. I object to the use of grand juries as
tools to tear apart vulnerable communities. I object
to this grand jury in particular as an effort to
frighten journalists and publishers, who serve a
crucial public good. I have had these values since I
was a child, and I’ve had years of confinement to
reflect on them. For much of that time, I depended
for survival on my values, my decisions, and my
conscience. I will not abandon them now.
1. District Judge Edward
Becker concluded, without chagrin, that it is true,
generally, that “the grand jury is essentially
controlled by the United States Attorney and is his
prosecutorial tool” Robert Hawthorne, Inc.
v. Dir. of Internal Revenue, 406 F. Supp. 1098, 1119
(E.D. Pa. 1975)
https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/406/1098/2143411/
3.Roots, Roger,
PhD, (2010) Grand Juries Gone Wrong
Roots, Roger, Grand Juries Gone Wrong
(2011). Richmond Journal of Law & Public Interest,
Vol. 14, p. 331, 2010. Available at SSRN:
https://ssrn.com/abstract=1771994
Editor’s Note: Reference #7, which we were unable
to find an online copy of, is also mentioned in
Reference(4)
above:
Testifying before a House Judiciary
sub-committee investigating the tactics of an
ISD grand jury which had subpoenaed five
pro-Republican Irish-Americans from New York to
a grand jury in Fort [*1182] Worth, Texas, n105
Senator Edward M. Kennedy captured the essence
of the Nixonian use of the grand jury:
Over the past four years, under the present
administration, we have witnessed the birth of a
new breed of political animal — the kangaroo
grand jury — spawned in a dark corner of the
Department of Justice, nourished by an
administration bent on twisting law enforcement
to serve its own political ends, a dangerous
modern form of Star Chamber secret inquisition
that is trampling the rights of American
citizens from coast to coast.
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