Who Answers for Government Lies?

Guest Post by Andrew Napolitano

Here is a quick pop quiz. What happens if we lie to the government? What happens if the government lies to us? Does it matter who does the lying?

Last year, the Obama administration negotiated an agreement with the government of Iran permitting Iran to obtain certain materials for the construction of nuclear facilities. It also permitted the release of tens of billions of dollars in Iranian assets that had been held in U.S. banks and that the courts had frozen, and it lifted trade sanctions. In exchange, certain inspections of Iranian nuclear facilities can occur under certain circumstances.

During the course of the negotiations, many critics made many allegations about whether the Obama administration was telling the truth to Congress and to the American people.

Was there a secret side deal? The administration said no. Were we really negotiating with moderates in the Iranian government, as opposed to the hard-liners depicted in the American media? The administration said yes. Can U.N. or U.S. inspectors examine Iranian nuclear facilities without notice and at any time? The administration said yes.

It appears that this deal is an executive agreement between President Barack Obama and whatever faction he believes is running the government of Iran. That means that it will expire if not renewed at noon on Jan. 20, 2017, when the president’s term ends.

It is not a treaty because it was not ratified by a two-thirds vote of the Senate, which the Constitution requires for treaties. Yet the Obama administration cut a deal with the Republican congressional leadership, unknown to the Constitution and unheard of in the modern era. That deal provided that the agreement would be valid unless two-thirds of those voting in both houses of Congress objected. They didn’t.

Then last week, the president’s deputy national security adviser for strategic communications, Ben Rhodes, who managed the negotiations with Iran, told The New York Times that he lied when he spoke to Congress and the press about the very issues critics were complaining about. He defended his lies as necessary to dull irrational congressional fears of the Iranian government.

I am not addressing the merits of the deal, though I think that the more Iran is reaccepted into the culture of civilized nations the more economic freedom will come about for Iranians. And where there is economic freedom, personal liberties cannot be far behind.

I am addressing the issue of lying. Rhodes’ interview set off a firestorm of criticism and “I told you so” critiques in Capitol Hill, and the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee summoned him to explain his behavior. It wanted to know whether he told the truth to Congress and the public during the negotiations or he told the truth to The New York Times last week.

He apparently dreads answering that question, so he refused to appear and testify. One wonders how serious this congressional committee is because it merely requested Rhodes’ appearance; it did not subpoena him. A congressional subpoena has the force of law and requires either compliance or interference by a federal court. Rhodes’ stated reason for not testifying is a claim of privilege.

What is a privilege? It is the ability under the law to hide the truth in order to preserve open communications. It is a judgment by lawmakers and judges that in certain narrowly defined circumstances, freedom of communication is a greater good than exposing the truth.

Hence the attorney/client and priest/penitent and physician/patient privileges have been written into the law so that people can freely tell their lawyers, priests and doctors what they need to tell them without fear that they will repeat what they have heard.

Executive privilege is the ability of the president and his aides to withhold from anyone testimony and documents that reflect military, diplomatic or sensitive national security secrets. This is the privilege that Rhodes has claimed.

Yet the defect in Rhodes’ claim of privilege here is that he has waived it by speaking about the Iranian negotiations to The New York Times. Waiver — the knowing and intentional giving up of a privilege or a right — defeats the claim of privilege.

Thus, by speaking to the Times, Rhodes has admitted that the subject of his conversation — the Iranian negotiations — is not privileged. One cannot selectively assert executive privilege. Items are either privileged or  not, and a privilege, once voluntarily lifted, cannot thereafter successfully be asserted.

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee should subpoena Rhodes, as well as the Times reporter to whom he spoke, to determine where the truth lies.

It is a crime to lie to the government when communicating to it in an official manner. Just ask Martha Stewart. One cannot lawfully lie under oath or when signing a document one is sending to the government or when answering questions from government agents. Just ask Roger Clemens. Stated differently, if Rhodes told the FBI either what he told Congress or what he told The New York Times — whichever version was untrue — he would be exposed to the indictment.

Ben Rhodes is one of the president’s closest advisers. They often work together on a several-times-a-day basis. Could he have lied about this Iranian deal without the president’s knowing it?

Does anyone care any longer that the government lies to the American people with impunity and prosecutes people when it thinks they have lied to it? Does the government work for us, or do we work for the government?

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11 Comments
Wip
Wip
May 19, 2016 9:55 am

Does anyone care? Does it even matter if anyone cares? Hahahahahahabababa, Dr. Evil rules the world.

“Despite all my rage I’m still just a rat in a cage…”

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
May 19, 2016 10:03 am

“I am not addressing the merits of the deal, though I think that the more Iran is reaccepted into the culture of civilized nations the more economic freedom will come about for Iranians.”

This would seem like good sense if there were any “civilized nations” left. If there are they are damn few and far between…

YODA_bite me (you know who)
YODA_bite me (you know who)
May 19, 2016 10:07 am

I always take the opposite position from any government official.

rhs jr
rhs jr
May 19, 2016 10:13 am

We’re from the government and we’re here to brainwash you: the Nightly News, Sensitivity Training, the latest scientific findings, the most recent poll, yada yada.

Constman54
Constman54
May 19, 2016 10:20 am

Does the government work for us, or do we work for the government?

Around 1913 the gov’t stopped working for the people and became Leviathan.

TPC
TPC
May 19, 2016 10:20 am

Long term? We all will pay for it. Revolutions happen. Especially with such a diverse and well-armed populace.

Rife
Rife
May 19, 2016 10:47 am

So,you want Iran to be bombed for Israel, right?

harry p.
harry p.
May 19, 2016 11:31 am

“Does the government work for us, or do we work for the government?”

I always like when the Judge ends with a rhetorical question…

bb
bb
May 19, 2016 12:22 pm

Harry ,here’s a rthetorical question or maybe two or three .Why do.you think you have God given rights?. I turned the bible upside down .No where does God say he gives men rights. Therefore isn’t natural rights , human Rights , Bill of rights just a figment of our imagination. Afterall with just one stroke of the pen the president could revoke all.rights.

Maybe you’re the one living in the real fantasy land.

overthecliff
overthecliff
May 19, 2016 4:47 pm

Answer: Nobody, that’s why they do it.

ursel doran
ursel doran
May 19, 2016 7:57 pm

The Bush – Cheney lies to kill 5,000 or more of our finest in Iraq, and millions of innocent locals is swept under the rug of nobody cares.
invading Afghanistan to get the opium revenue and sell $100 a gallon diesel, are so obscene as to be unspeakable. When 60 minutes lady asked Madeline Albright what was the necessity of killing 500,000 children in Iraq, she said, sad, but necessary, or words to that effect.

The lists of the serial lies in selling Obamacare is to long to list quickly.
“It is good to be the King.”

Selling FIVE percent unemployment when it is really plus twenty to keep happy days alive is one of the more blatant lies.

Comparisons to then fall of other empires loom large, as lies and frauds are not sustainable

.