Washington Has Been Obsessed With Punishing
Secrecy Violations — Until Hillary Clinton
By
Glenn Greenwald
July 06, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"-
Secrecy
is a virtual religion in Washington. Those
who violate its dogma have been punished in
the harshest and most excessive manner – at
least when they possess little political
power or influence. As has been
widely noted, the Obama administration
has prosecuted more leakers under the 1917
Espionage Act than all prior
administrations combined. Secrecy in DC
is so revered that even the most banal
documents are reflexively marked classified,
making their disclosure or mishandling a
felony. As former CIA and NSA Director
Michael Hayden
said back in 2000, “Everything’s secret.
I mean, I got an email saying ‘Merry
Christmas.’ It carried a top secret NSA
classification marking.”
People who leak to media outlets for the
selfless purpose of informing the public –
Daniel Ellsberg, Tom Drake, Chelsea Manning,
Edward Snowden – face decades in prison.
Those who leak for more ignoble and
self-serving ends – such as
enabling hagiography (Leon
Panetta,
David Petreaus) or ingratiating oneself
to one’s mistress (Petraeus) – face career
destruction, though they are
usually spared if they are sufficiently
Important-in-DC. For low-level,
powerless Nobodies-in-DC, even
the mere mishandling of classified
information –
without any intent to leak but merely
to, say, work from home – has
resulted in criminal prosecution, career
destruction and the permanent loss of
security clearance.
This extreme, unforgiving, unreasonable,
excessive posture toward classified
information came to an instant halt in
Washington today – just in time to save
Hillary Clinton’s presidential
aspirations. FBI Director James Comey, an
Obama appointee who served in the Bush DOJ,
held a press conference earlier this
afternoon in
which he condemned Clinton on the ground
that she and her colleagues were “extremely
careless in their handling of very
sensitive, highly classified information,”
including Top Secret material.
Comey also detailed that
her key public statements defending her
conduct – i.e., she never sent
classified information over her personal
email account and that she had turned over
all “work-related” emails to the State
Department – were utterly false; insisted
“that any reasonable person in Secretary
Clinton’s position . . . should have known
that an unclassified system was no place for
that conversation”; and argued that she
endangered national security because of the
possibility “that hostile actors gained
access to Secretary Clinton’s personal
e-mail account.” Comey also noted that
others who have done what Clinton did “are
often subject to security or administrative
sanctions” – such as demotion, career
harm, or loss of security clearance.
Despite all of these highly incriminating
findings, Comey explained, the FBI is
recommending to the Justice Department that
Clinton not be charged with any crime.
“Although there is evidence of potential
violations of the statutes regarding the
handling of classified information,” he
said, “our judgment is that no reasonable
prosecutor would bring such a case.” To
justify this claim, Comey cited “the context
of a person’s actions” and her “intent.” In
other words, there is evidence that she did
exactly what the criminal law prohibits, but
it was more negligent and careless than
malicious and deliberate.
Looked at in isolation, I have no particular
objection to this decision. In fact, I agree
with it: I don’t think what Clinton did rose
to the level of criminality, and if I were
in the Justice Department, I would not want
to see her prosecuted for it. I do think
there was malignant intent: using a personal
email account and installing a home server
always seemed to be designed, at least in
part, to control her communications and hide
them from FOIA and similar disclosure
obligations. As The New York Times
noted in May about a highly
incriminating report from the State
Department’s own Auditor General: “emails
disclosed in the report made it clear that
she worried that personal emails could be
publicly released under the Freedom of
Information Act.”
Moreover, Comey expressly found that –
contrary
to her repeated statements – “the FBI
also discovered several thousand
work-related e-mails that were not in the
group of 30,000 that were returned by
Secretary Clinton to State in 2014.” The
Inspector General’s report similarly, in the
words of the NYT, “undermined some
of Mrs. Clinton’s previous statements
defending her use of the server.” Still,
charging someone with a felony requires more
than lying or unethical motives; it should
require a clear intent to break the law
along with substantial intended harm, none
of which is sufficiently present here.
But
this case does not exist in isolation. It
exists in a political climate where secrecy
is regarded as the highest end, where people
have their lives destroyed for the most
trivial – or, worse, the most
well-intentioned – violations of
secrecy laws, even in the absence of any
evidence of harm or malignant intent. And
these are injustices that Hillary Clinton
and most of her stalwart Democratic
followers have never once opposed – but
rather enthusiastically cheered. In 2011,
Army Private Chelsea Manning was charged
with multiple felonies and faced decades in
prison for leaking documents that she firmly
believed the public had the right to see;
unlike the documents Clinton recklessly
mishandled, none of those was Top Secret.
Nonetheless,
this is what then-Secretary Clinton said
in justifying her prosecution:
I think that in an age
where so much information is flying
through cyberspace, we all have to be
aware of the fact that some information
which is sensitive, which does affect
the security of individuals and
relationships, deserves to be protected
and we will
continue to take necessary steps to do
so.
Comey’s announcement also takes place in a
society that imprisons more of its citizens
than any other in the world by far, for more
trivial offenses than any western nation –
overwhelmingly when they are poor or
otherwise marginalized due to their race or
ethnicity. The sort of leniency and mercy
and prosecutorial restraint Comey extended
today to Hillary Clinton is simply
unavailable for most Americans.
What happened here is glaringly obvious. It
is the tawdry by-product of a criminal
justice mentality in which – as I documented
in my 2011 book With Liberty and Justice
for Some – those who wield the greatest
political and economic power are virtually
exempt from the rule of law even when they
commit the most egregious crimes, while only
those who are powerless and marginalized are
harshly punished, often for the most trivial
transgressions.
Had
someone who was obscure and unimportant and
powerless done what Hillary Clinton did –
recklessly and secretly install a shoddy
home server and worked with Top Secret
information on it, then outright lied to the
public about it when they were caught – they
would have been criminally charged long ago,
with little fuss or objection. But Hillary
Clinton is the opposite of unimportant.
She’s the multi-millionaire former First
Lady, Senator from New York, and Secretary
of State, supported by virtually the entire
political, financial and media establishment
to be the next President, arguably the only
person standing between Donald Trump and the
White House.
Like the Wall Street tycoons whose systemic
fraud triggered the 2008 global financial
crisis, and like the military and political
officials who instituted a worldwide regime
of torture, Hillary Clinton is too
important to be treated the same as
everyone else under the law. “Felony charges
appear to be reserved for people of the
lowest ranks. Everyone else who does it
either doesn’t get charged or gets charged
with a misdemeanor,” Virginia defense
attorney Edward MacMahon
told Politico last year about
secrecy prosecutions. Washington defense
attorney Abbe Lowell has
similarly denounced the “profound double
standard” governing how the Obama DOJ
prosecutes secrecy cases: “lower-level
employees are prosecuted . . . because they
are easy targets and lack the resources and
political connections to fight back.”
The
fact that Clinton is who she is undoubtedly
what caused the FBI to accord her the
massive benefit of the doubt when assessing
her motives, when finding nothing that was –
in the words of Comey – “clearly intentional
and willful mishandling of classified
information; or vast quantities of materials
exposed in such a way as to support an
inference of intentional misconduct; or
indications of disloyalty to the United
States; or efforts to obstruct justice.”
But
a system that accords treatment based on who
someone is, rather than what they’ve done,
is the opposite of one conducted under the
rule of law. It is, instead, one of
systemic privilege. As Thomas Jefferson put
it in a 1784 letter to George Washington,
the ultimate foundation of any
constitutional order is “the denial of every
preeminence.” Hillary Clinton has long been
the beneficiary of this systemic privilege
in so many ways, and today, she received
her biggest gift from it yet.
The
Obama-appointed FBI Director gave a press
conference showing that she recklessly
handled Top Secret information, engaged in
conduct prohibited by law, and lied about it
repeatedly to the public. But she won’t be
prosecuted or imprisoned for any of that, so
Democrats are celebrating. But if there is
to be anything positive that can come from
this lowly affair, perhaps Democrats might
start demanding the same reasonable leniency
and prosecutorial restraint for everyone
else who isn’t Hillary Clinton.