June
5, 2008 - Issue 279 |
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State
and Local Prosecutors Can Take Down Bush Think Piece By David Swanson BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator |
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Former prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi’s new book “The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder” is not just a particularly good addition to the ten-foot high stack of rants against Bush’s crimes and abuses of power. It’s also an argument that state and local prosecutors have the necessary jurisdiction to try Bush for murder and for conspiracy to commit murder, at least once he’s out of office. This is not a scheme
based on some harebrained theory that Bush faked the suicide of a former
staffer. In fact, this scheme is based on nothing more than universally
accepted facts. Bush chose to send US troops into “In other words, if
Bush personally killed an American soldier, he would
be guilty of murder. Under the law, he cannot immunize himself
from his criminal responsibility by causing a third party to do the killing.
He’s still responsible. George Bush cannot sit safely in his Oval Office
in Did Bush have “malice
aforethought”? Yes, according to Bugliosi. We convict people of murder for driving 100 mph
through a school zone and hitting a child, or for blowing up a building
while unaware that someone is inside. These are cases where the murderer
does not know he is committing murder but where he is reckless enough
to take an unreasonable risk of doing so. In Bush’s case, he absolutely
knew that invading “A robber, for instance, was convicted of first degree murder under the felony-murder rule where, as he was leaving the store in which he had robbed the owner, he told the owner not to say a word or he’d be harmed, and fired into the ceiling to scare the owner. The shot, after two or three ricochets, pierced the head of the owner, killing him. In fact, the felony-murder rule applies even where the defendant is not the killer! There have been cases where the proprietor of the store fired at a robber, missed him and hit and killed a customer. And the robber was convicted of first degree murder of the customer.” Bugliosi
missed an opportunity here to further strengthen his case by noting that
in the act of ordering the invasion of Bugliosi
notes that there is no statute of limitations for murder. Bush could be
prosecuted by any future federal prosecutor who had the nerve to do so
and could do so while keeping his or her job. But Bugliosi
writes that a state attorney general or any district attorney in any city
or county could bring a murder charge against Bush for any soldiers from
that state or county who lost their lives in “I would be more than happy, if requested, to consult with any prosecutor who decides to prosecute Bush in preparation of additional cross-examination questions for him to face on the witness stand. I believe the cross-examination would be such that they’d have to carry the arrogant son of privilege off the stand on a stretcher.” I know the same offer
to assist stands from former federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega,
author of “ Bugliosi
argues that such trials could only take place once Bush is out of office,
but is uncharacteristically weak in his explanation of why. Bugliosi
thinks it was a mistake to allow the Paula Jones case to take time away
from The question, in any case, is where we can find (or elect) one or two or a dozen prosecutors willing to stand up to the biggest murderer of our age? We need a project to identify the most likely combinations of prosecutors and gold star families, and work together with those families to urge prosecution. We are working on this at http://convictbushcheney.org Why do I call Bush
the biggest murderer of our age for a mere 4,000 murders, not counting
his neglect prior to Katrina and 9-11, his exacerbation of global warming,
his opposition to workplace safety standards or medical research, etc.?
I have in mind, of course, the over 1 million Iraqis who have died as
a result of his invasion of Bugliosi concludes his book with an excellent analysis of what happened on 9-11 and how the media and the public have responded. His account of how often Bush was warned prior to 9-11 and how little (nothing) he did in response is very well done, but includes at least one glaring error (at least glaring to those of us privileged to get our own briefings on these things from Ray McGovern). George Tenet did indeed, as Bugliosi recounts, tell the 9-11 Commission on April 14, 2004 that he did not speak with Bush for the whole month of August, 2001. But a CIA spokesperson called reporters that same evening to claim that Tenet had “misspoken” and that Tenet had briefed Bush on August 17th and 31st. In his book, At the Center of the Storm, (2007) Tenet refers to the August 17th meeting as a follow-up to the August 6th memo on Bin Laden. A White House press release suggests that Tenet was also in Crawford a week later, on August 24th. President Bush, addressing a group of visitors to Crawford on August 25, told them: “George Tenet and I, yesterday, we piled in the new nominees for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the Vice Chairman and their wives and went right up the canyon.” Bugliosi notes in his book that more evidence will continue to pile up. His claim, like so many others’, is only that the evidence he has compiled is more than sufficient to put Bush away for life. On that point, if you read this book, I think you’ll agree there can be no doubt whatsoever. BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, David Swanson, is co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org coalition and a board member of Progressive Democrats of America. His website is www.davidswanson.org. Click here to contact Mr. Swanson. |
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