Category: History

  • Checks and Balances

    Civics 101: The United States of America is a Constitutional Republic, set up as a federation, with the federal government divided into three branches with separated, enumerated powers, and additional specific limits on the exercise of those enumerated powers.

    I think that single sentence is a fair synopsis of the intention of the framers of the Constitution, but what did they mean by that? And what does it mean today in practice?

    First we have to understand some of the terms in use:

    Sovereignty is the authority of a state to govern itself independent of any outside source of authority. In a monarchy the king is sovereign and all authority ultimately comes from the crown.

     

    A Republic is form of government in which the sovereignty lies with some portion of the citizenry, not in a Monarch. A Republic is not necessarily democratic; the portion of the citizenry holding the sovereign power may be a small minority, but it can be democratic, if the portion of the citizenry holding sovereignty is extensive.

     

    A constitution is a framework law, supreme over all other laws in the state, and which sets limits on those other laws and establishes the procedures for their creation and enforcement.

    A Constitutional Republic is a state that has a republican form of government subject to the limitations, procedures, and powers set out in a constitution.

     

    A Federation is a sovereign conglomerate state made up of other states, provinces, or administrative districts which either retain, if the federation was from the bottom up with sovereign states coming together, or are granted, if the federation was from the top down with a sovereign state dividing itself, some portion of, but less than all, sovereignty.

     

    Enumerated powers are limited sovereignty. In a government of enumerated powers the State is sovereign only with regard to those areas enumerated in some list; the remainder of the sovereignty resides elsewhere.

     

    The General Police Power, is the largest component of sovereignty. It is the authority of a government to declare various actions criminal and set forth punishments for those acts in order to promote the morality, safety and health of the populace. As such it is limited only by the power and whim of the sovereign. Libertarians generally regard the General Police Power with disfavor, preferring enumerated police powers limited to policing direct harms to the person, property, or liberty of another, but historically the General Police Power has extended to any objective desired by the sovereign.

    In 1787 a Constitutional Convention was called into session and created the system of government that persists (however weakly) to this day. The framers of the United States Constitution were attempting to sail between the Scylla of the newborn Nation dividing into 13 completely independent polities and the Charybdis of a centralized Leviathan. The 13 States were sovereign and the prior federation under the Articles of Confederation explicitly recognized that sovereignty. The federal ‘government’ under the articles had almost no independent authority to act and it acted more as a standing conference of the States than as a sovereign power. It rapidly became clear that something more was needed to prevent the 13 States from going their own ways, although it is less clear that such a separate development would have been the disaster feared at the time.

    The Federal Government that came out of that convention had sovereignty over matters set out in Article 1, section 8:

    1: The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

    2: To borrow Money on the credit of the United States;

    3: To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

    4: To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;

    5: To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

    6: To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;

    7: To establish Post Offices and post Roads;

    8: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

    9: To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court;

    10: To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations;

    11: To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;

    12: To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

    13: To provide and maintain a Navy;

    14: To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

    15: To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

    16: To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

    17: To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;—

    And

    18: To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.

    The very next section of Article 1, makes it abundantly plain that the power of the Federal Government is limited to the enumerated powers and is not general, and that it is subject to other additional limits even when being used according to a section 8 power:

    1: The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to the Year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a Tax or duty may be imposed on such Importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each Person.

    2: The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

    3: No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.

    4: No Capitation, or other direct, Tax shall be laid, unless in Proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken.

    5: No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State.

    6: No Preference shall be given by any Regulation of Commerce or Revenue to the Ports of one State over those of another: nor shall Vessels bound to, or from, one State, be obliged to enter, clear, or pay Duties in another.

    7: No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law; and a regular Statement and Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time to time.

    8: No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.

    Further there is no mention of the most important portion of sovereignty, the General Police Power. This is made explicit in the 1st through 8th and 10th Amendment:

    Article [I] (Amendment 1 – Freedom of expression and religion)
    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    Article [II] (Amendment 2 – Bearing Arms)
    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    Article [III] (Amendment 3 – Quartering Soldiers)
    No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.

    Article [IV] (Amendment 4 – Search and Seizure)
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Article [V] (Amendment 5 – Rights of Persons)
    No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

    Article [VI] (Amendment 6 – Rights of Accused in Criminal Prosecutions)
    In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.

    Article [VII] (Amendment 7 – Civil Trials)

    In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.

    Article [VIII] (Amendment 8 – Further Guarantees in Criminal Cases)
    Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

    Article [X] (Amendment 10 – Reserved Powers)
    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

    And the fact that even the States were not to possess an unlimited General Police Power is made clear by the specific limitations on the States found in Article 1, section 10 and Article IV:
    Section 10

    1: No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.

    2: No State shall, without the Consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing it’s inspection Laws: and the net Produce of all Duties and Imposts, laid by any State on Imports or Exports, shall be for the Use of the Treasury of the United States; and all such Laws shall be subject to the Revision and Controul of the Congress.

    3: No State shall, without the Consent of Congress, lay any Duty of Tonnage, keep Troops, or Ships of War in time of Peace, enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power, or engage in War, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay.

    Article IV (Article 4 – States’ Relations)
    Section 1
    Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.

    Section 2
    1: The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.

    2: A Person charged in any State with Treason, Felony, or other Crime, who shall flee from Justice, and be found in another State, shall on Demand of the executive Authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the State having Jurisdiction of the Crime.

    3: No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in Consequence of any Law or Regulation therein, be discharged from such Service or Labour, but shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due.

    Section 3
    1: New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.

    2: The Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States; and nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to Prejudice any Claims of the United States, or of any particular State.

    Section 4
    The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence.

    and the text of the 9th Amendment:
    The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

    The General Police Power is the power to regulate behavior in general and not with regard to some specific enumerated power. The Federal Government does not have this. The States do, subject only to limits found in their several constitutions, the Articles above, and under the doctrine of incorporation, the Bill of Rights.

    So far everything I have discussed has centered around the Article I powers and the limits thereon, since Article I, sets out only the Legislative power and form of Congress, why have I not discussed the Judicial or Executive branch in my discussion of the extent of Federal Authority? Quite simply because, all of the power to initiate action by Government is vested in the Legislative body. The Executive and Judicial branches are concerned with implementing and enforcing laws. The laws that are to guide their actions are meant to come from the Congress. I plan to discuss the other branches further in future pieces, but when talking about the enumeration of powers and limits on their exercise it is the legislative power that is the driver.

    So the bulk of Federal Authority is vested in Congress, and that authority is specifically limited by explicit prohibitions on actions, as well as being generally limited to the enumerated powers, but the structure of Congress is in itself another check on Federal authority. The framer’s biggest difficulty in balancing the need to preserve the States as sovereign entities with the need for a centralized authority to make us a Nation in more than name, was in determining how to select and shape the legislature. It was decided to create a bicameral legislature, each body having certain exclusive powers, but both bodies assent being needed to pass general legislation.

    This Congress was loosely modeled after the British Parliament, with the House of Representatives serving as the equivalent to the House of Commons, and the Senate an even looser equivalent to the House of Lords.

    The House was given the sole authority to initiate the exercise of the power to raise revenue, either by taxation or borrowing, and the power to initiate impeachments of officers of the other branches. The Senate was given the power of advising the Executive on treaties and appointments of officers, and the more significant power of consenting to such treaties and appointments, without which the treaty or appointment fails, and additionally the power of trying impeachments. The assignment of powers reflects the founders view of the House as being the People’s voice in the Government and the Senate being the States’ voice.
    The Great Compromise, sometimes called the Connecticut Compromise because Connecticut delegates Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth proposed and fought for it, is what finally brought the framers through the channel between Scylla and Charybdis. It provided that the States would each have two Senators, appointed by the State Legislature and serving a six year term. House terms were deliberately kept short at 2 years in order to try and keep the representatives easily subject to replacement if they acted in opposition to the will of the People.

    The general plan was that the House was to be the democratic body and the Senate the more aristocratic. The power of the purse was left to the people (subject to the specific prohibition of Article I section 9:4 which was meant to prevent exactly the sort of “loot the rich” tax schemes we are suffering today), because any money spent was coming from the people. The combination of a ban on direct taxes on any terms except equal payment from each person, with turning the budget over to the popularly elected House was meant to enforce fiscal responsibility. The XVIth amendment broke this system and gave the mob the power to vote themselves largess at the expense of various minority groups, and spending has steadily climbed ever since.

    The power of impeachment was also given to the House, but the power of trying impeached officers was given to the Senate. Splitting the power to remove officials between the democratic House and the aristocratic Senate was intended to simultaneously prevent the elites from protecting their own, and to prevent the passions of the mob from removing good officials for not catering to popular demands.
    The power of advice and consent was given to the Senate. This was a bit of a compromise intended to give the States, which were surrendering their power to enter treaties to the new Federal Government, input into, and veto power over foreign agreements. The XVIIth amendment broke this compromise and did a great deal of harm to our system in the name of democracy.

    Basically the framers set up a Government in shackles. It was capable of decisive action in moments where the various parts of the country were aligned and much more restrained when they were not. Much of our history since has been a series of loosenings of those shackles, for the most part to our detriment.

  • Gold Standards II – The Colt/Browning 1911

    1911 Patent Drawing

    The Greatest 20th Century Martial Sidearm

    Resolved:  The Colt/Browning 1911 pistol is the standard by which all autoloading pistols must be judged.  Now that that’s established, I’ll proceed to tell you about this magnificent sidearm and how it came to be the gold standard of autoloading handguns.

    John Browning

    It should come as no surprise that the DaVinci of firearms was involved in the genesis of the 1911.  Browning’s reputation as a gun designer was well established long before he started in on autoloading pistols, having produced such outstanding pieces as the 1894 Winchester (a gold standard in its own right) and the first commercially successful, mass-produced pump shotgun, the 1897 Winchester.

    He started in on autoloading pistols with the tiny FN Browning M1900 in .32ACP, a pipsqueak of a little blowback pistol.  But in that same year, he also designed the short-recoil operated Colt Model 1900 in .38ACP, and it was that pistol that would become the grandfather of a great line of martial pistols.

    The Precursors

    The Colt 1900

    After two years the Colt 1900 and its .38ACP cartridge were modified and improved somewhat, splitting into three designs:  The 1902 Sporting Model, the 1902 Military Model and the 1903 Pocket Hammer Model.  All three were chambered for the .38ACP, but in 1905 a final model in this line appeared, the Model 1905 with a 4 7/8” barrel chambered for a short, rimless .45 caliber cartridge that would become the immortal .45ACP.

    In 1899 the U.S. War Department had been seeking an autoloading pistol design to replace the anemic M1892 revolver and its .38 Colt cartridge.  Tested were the Luger in 7.65mm, the C96 Mauser, the Mannlicher M1894 and the Colt M1900.  This early Colt has some issues with trigger linkages that adversely affected reliability in the aptly named “torture tests” of the day, and so the War Department purchased 1,000 DWM Lugers as an experiment.

    This experiment didn’t last.  The U.S. Army, Navy and Marine Corps had learned some important lessons in the Spanish-American War and the Philippine-American War that convinced the War Department to once more pursue a major-caliber autoloader.

    During that latter conflict, the troops facing stoned Moro warriors encased in rawhide armor found the .38 Colt revolvers lacked stopping power, but when the Army imported some M1873 Colt single-actions in the grand old .45 Colt, things changed; a tribesman with a couple of .45 Colt in his chest generally lost all interest in matters martial then and there.

    The War Department quickly sourced a stopgap, buying a lot of the big, rugged Colt New Service double-action revolvers in .45 Colt and deeming them the M1909 revolver; meanwhile the testing of autoloaders went on.  By this time the mind of Browning had fixed the shortcomings of the M1900 series pistols and had produced something vastly better.

    The 1911.

    The 1911

    The first round of service testing reduced the field of alternatives to three:  The Savage, the DWM Luger, and the new Browning/Colt M1911.  In one of the final tests, both Colt and Savage pistols were fired six thousand times over the course of two days.  When the guns grew too hot to hold, they were dunked in a bucket of water to cool them, and the firing went on.

    The Savage had 37 malfunctions over the course of the test; the Colt, none.  In short order the War Department had adopted their first primary issue autoloading handgun, the Colt M1911.

    The original 1911 had some ergonomic flaws.  The sights were somewhat rudimentary, at least by today’s standards (although better than the near-non-existent rear sight of the issue Luger.)  The hammer spur was long and low enough that it frequently dug into the web of the firing hand, especially if the shooter (like me) had big hands.  The thumb safety was small and easy to miss, and the trigger was too long for a shooter (unlike me) with short fingers.

    After the new pistol received its baptism of fire in the Great War, Colt made some changes based on the experiences of service members who used the pistol in the field.

    New and Improved! The 1911A1.

    The 1911A1

    In 1924, Colt engineers brought out a revision of the War Department’s .45.  The 1911A1 had improved sights, a shorter trigger and a lengthened grip safety spur to address that nasty hammer bite.  The Great War had revealed that the 1911 tended to shoot low in rapid-fire instinctive shooting, so the 1911A1 had an arched mainspring housing to address this tendency by making the muzzle hold naturally a tad higher.

    In this form the 1911A1 served until 1984 as the primary service sidearm for all branches of the U.S. military, a 73-year run, unprecedented in U.S. military history.  The Colt 1911 proved its mettle in battlefields all over the world.  The old slab-sides wasn’t as pretty as a Luger or as finely fitted as the Sig P-210 but it had three great qualifications for a martial pistol:  It was rugged, reliable and tough.  I’ve never handled or fired a Savage Model 1907, but I own a Luger, not a DWM as tested by the War Department but rather a 1938 piece made at the Mauser-Werke in Oberndorf.  The Luger is a beauty and one of the most naturally pointing pistols I’ve ever handled, but it’s fussy about dirt, finicky about ammo and, with its original, serial-numbered magazine, jams at least once in every mag full of ammo.  I love the Luger for its style, but I wouldn’t have wanted to be the miserable Nazi bastard whose life depended on the damn thing; if keeping my hide unperforated was in question, I’d take a homely old 1911 over the Luger any day of the week.

    Dad with his 1911, in 1945.

    I confess a nostalgic fondness for the M1911A1.  When I was a young fellow just out of my initial entry training, I was assigned to an Infantry battalion as a Company Aidman; as part of my field gear I was issued an old leather holster with “US” stamped on the flap and, to fill it, an M1911A1 pistol of a vintage that meant my father could very easily have carried the same sidearm in 1944-46 during his tenure in Uncle Sam’s colors.  A year later I was on the battalion bullseye pistol team when we won the Division pistol championship.

    My old 1911A1 was somewhat the worse for wear, but man did that thing shoot and shoot and shoot.

    The Commercial Models

    This is where the gold standard status of the 1911 design really shows.

    Colt sold the 1911 as the Government Model, chambering it not only in the .45 ACP but also in the .38 Super and 9mm Parabellum.  But after World War 2, the company began branching out.

    In 1949, Colt brought out the Colt Commander, which may have been the first major-caliber dedicated CCW piece.  The first Commander had an aluminum frame, a shorter slide and a 4 ¼” barrel.  In 1970, Colt added the “Combat Commander” with the same barrel/slide and a steel frame, at which time the original was renamed the “Lightweight Commander.”

    In 1970 Colt introduced the Series 70 in all Government Model variations, with a collet barrel bushing and some other internal improvements; this is probably the best 1911 Colt ever made.  Ten years later the Series 80 was produced, which added an internal firing-pin safety – this on a gun that already had two mechanical safeties, three if you count the external hammer.  Also added as a half-cock notch on the hammer.  The Series 80 was somewhat underwhelming to hardcore shooters, as the added gunk on the lockwork reduced the original design’s rugged simplicity.

    Both versions were also available in the Gold Cup match pistol trim.  If you want to do some serious bullseye shooting, you won’t find anything much better suited than a Series 70 Gold Cup.

    Beginning in the late Seventies, Colt found they had some competition.  Such upstarts as Springfield Armory, Federal Ordinance and Detonics began making fine pistols on the 1911 pattern.  In 1985, a company called Para-Ordnance introduced the first 1911 featuring a double-stack, 14-round magazine – and things just got more and more complicated after that.

    In today’s market for autoloading sidearms, the 1911 pattern still, after a hundred and eight years, still dominates.

    Today

    At present I own one 1911 myself, a simple mil-spec replica of the 1911A1 with Series 70 Colt lockwork, made by Armscor in the Philippines and imported by Rock Island Armory.  This was admittedly a nostalgia purchase, as I also bought a replica US flap holster to carry it, but that affordable (about $400) 1911A1 copy is much like the original; rugged and powerful.  I had a few feeding problems until I switched to Kimber magazines, and now it will feed empty cases and reliable shoots any ammo I care to feed it.  Rock Island Armory imports fancier versions of the same gun, and I am told that they are solid and reliable in whatever livery you choose to try.

    It would be more difficult today to name the gun companies that don’t make a 1911.  Smith & Wesson gave in to the inevitable some years ago and began building their own version of a 1911; ditto for Ruger.  Remington began building 1911s some years back.  Loyal sidekick Rat has one, a Remington 1911 R1 Carry, and it’s a fine shooter, although the trigger is a bit heavier than I’d prefer.

    My old buddy Dave has a Les Baer longslide, a 6” barreled, dedicated 1911 target gun; it’s so damn well made that you’d have to work at it to not shoot it well.

    Kimber, Springfield Armory, Randall, Olympic Arms, Sig-Sauer, Taurus, Dan Wesson, High Standard, and many more – all have bowed to the demands of the market and began making 1911-pattern pistols.  Forget about a gun designer wondering how his autoloader will measure up to the 1911; most of them now are just building 1911s and having done with it.

    The Colt/Browning 1911 is a rare kind of design from a rare kind of designer; simple, tough, solid.  In its original form it is reliable as the morning sunrise; with its original .45ACP cartridge it packs enough wallop to finish most tasks with authority.  The 1911 is as near an immortal pistol design as you’re likely to find and will probably last throughout this 21st century – making it, as resolved, the gold standard of autoloading sidearms.

  • Chapter 7 – Congress Acts: 10 U.S.C. §1107

    More can and must be done, however, to rebuild trust, to avoid repeating past mistakes, and to prevent future health consequences similar to those experienced during and after the Gulf War. Our troops must be assured that when we send them into battle, they will be protected by the best military technology, the best leaders, and the best medicine. Protection also means proper education and training, as well as provision of critical information, including information about investigational new drugs that may be administered to our troops for their protection against chemical and biological threats.[i]

    At the end of multiple hearings on Gulf War Syndrome and many inquiries into the DoD’s use of experimental and investigational drugs during the Gulf war, in 1997 Congress (finally) decided that enough was enough. Representative Patrick Kennedy (D, RI), introduced a bill on the floor of Congress to provide some small measure of protection for service members. In its original form, the bill imposed three requirements on the DoD: either prior to, or within 30 days of, administering an investigational new drug, the DoD would have to inform military members that

    1. The drug being administered is investigational;
    2. The reasons why the drug is being administered;
    3. The potential side effects of the drug, including side effects resulting from interactions of the drug with other drugs or treatments being administered to the individual.

    Representative Kennedy’s remarks made clear that the bill was the direct result of inquiries into the Gulf War and what he perceived as a DoD cover-up of possible chemical exposures of U.S. troops. He noted that the trust between soldiers and the government

    “has been called into question. One need merely read newspaper articles surrounding the Persian Gulf war to see what I mean. On February 28, the New York Times ran an article entitled: ‘Pentagon Reveals It Lost Most Logs on Chemical Arms;’ ‘Missing From Two Sites: Gulf War Veterans Now Raise Questions of Cover-Up or Criminal Incompetence.’”[ii]

    Mr. Kennedy went on to cite another article that revealed that the Army had been warned by the CIA five years prior (to the article) about the possible exposure of troops to chemical agents and that the DoD had claimed that it only became aware of the exposures the prior year. Additionally, Kennedy referenced the DoD and FDA negotiations that took place prior to the Gulf War regarding a waiver of informed consent detailed in the previous chapter. He criticized the DoD for failing to comply with the conditions the FDA had set forth in order to grant the waiver of informed consent that the DoD legally needed and had negotiated in order to use both pyridostigmine bromide and botulinum toxoid on troops. Oddly enough, however, Kennedy then seemed to concede that the DoD could now use investigational drugs without informed consent because “[u]nfortunately, for our troops, the threat of chemical and biological weapons have become an increasing reality[.]” Mr. Kennedy seemed to believe that, at the least, “the men and women who served in the Gulf War had a right to know that the vaccines administered to them were investigational” and that “[t]he same service members had a right to know about the side effects of the investigational drugs.”[iii] As an author’s note, I feel compelled to add that Representative Kennedy did swear an oath to “defend the Constitution of the United States of America against all enemies foreign and domestic” and “to bear true faith and allegiance to the same.” Which can only mean that either (a) Kennedy believed that it is perfectly fine for the U.S. government to experiment on its troops, or (b) he doesn’t know very much about the Constitution. (‘Both’ is also an acceptable and likely answer).

    To his credit, however, Kennedy did introduce the bill in order “to ensure that in the future our troops are informed of investigational drugs, and to help ensure that our service members can and will trust their government.”[iv] The legislation received some discussion on the floors of both the Senate and the House, always with reference to the Congressional investigations surrounding Gulf War Illness and the mistakes made with pyridostigmine bromide.[v] Finally, as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 1998 (from October 1997 to October 1998), Mr. Kennedy’s proposed bill became 10 U.S.C. §1107. In something that couldn’t be made up, within a year of this bill being approved and becoming law, Secretary of Defense William Cohen announced that he would begin the inoculation of all U.S. military personnel with the anthrax vaccine.

    As this vaccination program was kicking off, the Senate Armed Services committee was already calling high-ranking DoD officials to explain how the program was going to work in light of the Persian Gulf experience and even the then recent deployment of troops to Bosnia. In fact, members of the committee pointed to the Presidential Advisory Committee’s review of the DoD’s efforts in Bosnia and pointed out that they were deemed “an abysmal failure.”[vi] This committee even addressed the issue of how the DoD proposed to handle the administration of clinical protocols in accordance with FDA regulations. It is important to note that here the DoD was acknowledging that it had to comply with clinical protocol requirements of the FDA if it administered a drug in such a way as to render it an investigational new drug. An FDA official opined that “we [the FDA] believe that they [DoD officials] understand… [the need to comply with IND procedures]. We believe that they have the capability of complying with all of our IND rules and regulations.  As to whether they will comply in the next deployment situation, obviously we can’t predict that.”[vii]

    The Acting Secretary of Defense for Health affairs, Gary Christopherson, tried to assuage the concerns of committee members by admitting that the Bosnia experience[1] was a “situation where we believed we ought to be able to do an IND and do it well, it still did not come off 100 percent. It did not meet their standards. It did not meet our standards in there.”[viii] He went on to add that the DoD and the FDA were engaged in a “conversation” to improve their compliance with the FDA’s regulations. In a bit of backpedaling, Mr. Christopherson implied that there was some kind of agreement between the FDA and DoD that there would not need to be full compliance with the requirements of the Nuremberg Code, the FDA’s regulations, and the DoD’s own internal regulations. He offered that “[t]he one thing that I think both FDA and we have come to somewhat – not necessarily a conclusion, but close to – is that in real combat situations it’s very difficult if not impossible to do a full investigative new drug protocol.” This did not seem to arouse much comment from any of the Senators, despite the clear implication that DoD was not going to comply with the requirements for informed consent for an IND procedure. One other question not raised (of course) was how combat would be defined. Even if the DoD were granted a waiver for combat exigencies, would Bosnia and other peacekeeping operations fit the justification given for the Gulf War?

    At the same time that the Senate hearings were going on and the anthrax program (AVIP) was going forward, the FDA was also trying to determine if the interim rule that it had published to allow DoD to use investigational drugs without informed consent should become a final rule. That rule, granting the DoD waiver, was still “on the books” as the interim rule pending finalization. The FDA solicited comments by October 29, 1997. This means that (legally speaking) as late as autumn of 1997, the DoD still had a waiver from the FDA’s requirements of informed consent. The language of the rule was broad and did not specifically exempt just those two products, although that was the agreement reached in 1990. Now, as the DoD was preparing to use another investigational drug in Bosnia and not doing it particularly well, the FDA was asking whether or not the DoD should be allowed to maintain the waiver. This produced some interesting exchanges in committee hearings in Congress. In 1996, the Director of the FDA brought forward Ms. Mary Pendergast, a doctor at the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), to answer the question about this rule.

    REP. NETHERCUTT:  So your conclusion five years later is that waiving the Informed consent requirements is acceptable?

    PENDERGAST: Yes, basically. It’s not the preferred option, but there are some products that you cannot ethically test. . .

    REP. NETHERCUTT:  Okay. I’m trying to get to now. . . as to why you feel it’s acceptable to do that.

    PENDERGAST: If there is another war —

    REP. NETHERCUTT: Which is prospective.

    PENDERGAST: Yes. If there is another war and if there is a circumstance where the military might need to give prophylactic treatment to its troops, then we would create simply the framework that would give them the opportunity to come to the FDA to ask for permission to waive informed consent. It’s not saying that we would waive it during peacetime; it’s not that we would automatically waive it, rather, we would create a framework that would permit them to ask for permission.

    KESSLER: I think the presumption is, if it is at all possible, you get informed consent. That certainly is my personal position.[ix]

    In this exchange, the head of the FDA, Dr. Ronald Kessler, asserts that informed consent would not be waived during peacetime at the same time that the FDA has on the books an interim rule that allows the DoD to waive informed consent, not just for combat, but also for the “the immediate threat of combat.”[x] How immediate would the threat have to be and what level of combat would it have to be? One can only envision that the DoD would get to make both of these determinations; certainly the FDA is not going to question a military officer’s determination that combat is imminent or immediate or of sufficient ferocity to be deemed combat.[2] Thus the rule is really no rule at all in terms of limiting the application of when the DoD can waive informed consent.

    In a 1997 Congressional hearing on Bioethics, this issue also came up by Dr. Arthur Caplan, a professor of Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania. He offered quite simply that “the handling of the waiver with respect to the troops was unethical.”[xi] His opinion was that even with the waiver of prior informed consent, the DoD should have informed troops after the fact, if nothing else; that “the Defense Department – and those military agencies have not – did not do what they needed to do to after the fact inform people when they were exposed to innovative or experimental substances.”[xii]

    His second point of contention was that “there’s still been no formulation of a policy about what we do with respect to research on our troops. We don’t have it today. We didn’t have it six years ago. And I find it incredible that we have not had more than an interim rule to guide us with respect to research in the military.” At the time he said this, the FDA’s interim waiver rule for 50.23(d) was still in effect. Another doctor looked back even further and questioned the underlying assumption of the waiver, which, unfortunately, more people have not done.

    BENJAMIN WILFOND: I think I was not convinced this morning that they ever gave a clear reason why it was not feasible to have given – asked for consent in the first place. I mean, presumably if you ask the soldiers: You may be exposed to nerve gas. This medication may help you, but we really don’t know and would like to do a project. Would you like to participate? Most of them would probably say yes.[xiii]

    Some discussion ensued and there was the usual deference about the “quick” mustering up of forces, but Dr. Wilfond continued to question the assumption: “my point is that there’s still no – it’s not clear that they couldn’t have done it ahead of time either.”[xiv]

    This is an important issue that seems to get swept away amidst the rhetoric and large questions, but it is a particularly pragmatic point but deserves some attention. Every member of the Armed forces has, at one time or another, stood in line awaiting some inoculation. There is absolutely no explanation by these people in Congress why – if a member of the Armed Forces has to stand in line to get the shot – there would not be sufficient time to obtain the member’s informed consent? Even if the requirement for written consent were waived, if medical records have to be annotated anyway, how much more difficult would it be for the corpsman or medical personnel to hand a sheet out to everyone as they are standing in line? Or, how hard would it be to include a standard medical brief along with all of the other briefs that servicemembers have to receive when deploying, during which the ranking surgeon explains that this is the only possible treatment for the known threat. As both Doctor Wilfond and another doctor pointed out in their testimony to the Congressional committee:

    CAPLAN:  We took a lot of testimony at the Presidential Advisory Committee on this matter, and it was summed up fairly well by one of our people who came to testify to us who said, if someone is shooting very large bullets at you which may be filled with biological weapons, the likelihood of your refusing an antidote is zero.[xv]

    This may or may not be true: indeed, my own informal surveying concludes quite the opposite. The troops will take the known risks of being shot over the unknown risks of (yet another) DoD boondoggle with unproven chemicals being shoved into one’s body (a point to which I will return in detail later in this book). Despite these committee hearings, most of which had an FDA  representative attending and concurring in the recommendations of others, the FDA had still not issued a new rule to replace the interim waiver rule from the Gulf War in late 1998. By this time, Congress had held so many hearings on the issue of informed consent and military members that it moved from the committee level onto the floor of Congress.

    Representative Christopher Shays, a vocal opponent to the waiver granted to the FDA, rose as the speaker pro tempore in the House on June 16, 1998. He pointed out that there had been 13 hearings in three and-a-half years looking into Gulf War Illness. During this time, various agencies had testified in order to “try to get a handle on the problems that our Gulf War veterans have faced when they returned home. Out of the 700,000 that have returned, almost 100,000 have had some types of physical problems to deal with and have sought to have their illnesses be dealt with by the Department of Veterans Affairs.”[xvi] Mr. Shays noted that after 11 hearings, there had been a number of findings and recommendations made, among them that

    “the VA and the Pentagon did not properly listen to sick Gulf War veterans in terms of the possible causes of their illness[;] [that] there is no credible evidence that stress or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder caused the illnesses reported by many Gulf War veterans[; and] that Congress should enact legislation establishing the presumption that veterans were exposed to hazardous materials known to have been present in the Gulf War theater.”[xvii]

    Most importantly, Congressman Shays recommended that “the FDA should not grant a waiver of informed consent requirements allowing the Pentagon to use experimental or investigational drugs unless the President signs off and approves.[xviii] This recommendation would become the cornerstone of a new version of Representative Patrick Kennedy’s first, more modest legislation. Interestingly, all it really did was seek a return to the “common rule” set forth in the Department of Defense’s own regulations, the Department of Health and Human Services regulations, the FDA’s regulations (prior to the waiver), the Nuremberg Code, and the federal statute passed which codified the Nuremberg Code. All of these regulations and laws have always stated that “the informed consent of the subject is absolutely essential” and all of them stated a presumption that “informed consent is feasible except . . .” in certain limited circumstances, usually when the subject was incompetent or incapable of giving consent or in a life threatening situation where the subject could not consent.[xix] As an example, the DoD’s own regulations state, unequivocally:

    Except as provided elsewhere in this policy, no investigator may involve a human being as a subject in research covered by this policy unless the investigator has obtained the legally effective informed consent of the subject or the subject’s legally authorized representative. An investigator shall seek such consent only under circumstances that provide the prospective subject or the representative sufficient opportunity to consider whether or not to participate and that minimize the possibility of coercion or undue influence. The information that is given to the subject or the representative shall be in language understandable to the subject or the representative. No informed consent, whether oral or written, may include any exculpatory language through which the subject or the representative is made to waive or appear to waive any of the subject’s legal rights, or releases or appears to release the investigator, the sponsor, the institution or its agents from liability for negligence.[xx]

    The FDA and DHHS regulations are identical, almost word-for-word. Additionally, the same regulation goes on to assure the subject that the only way that informed consent could be waived is if an appropriate Institutional Review Board, composed of doctors and other experts and members of the given community, determined that

    • The research involves no more than minimal risk to the subjects;
    • The waiver or alteration will not adversely affect the rights and welfare of the subjects;
    • The research could not practicably be carried out without the waiver or alteration; and
    • Whenever appropriate, the subjects will be provided with additional pertinent information after participation.[xxi]

    This language is hard to reconcile with the policy in the Gulf war that Mr. Shays noted that “our troops were ordered to take an experimental drug referred to as PB . . . It was used . . . as an experimental drug to do something it was not designed to do. Our troops did not have the option to decide whether or not to do this. They were under order. If they did not live by their order, they would be prosecuted by the military.”[xxii] Congressman Shays, looking back at that moment, probably had no idea that his words actually foreshadowed what was to come under the anthrax vaccination program that had just begun in April of 1998. Notwithstanding his intent to prevent just such occurrences – the threat of forced/coerced inoculation – embodied in the legislation that was to pass later that year, courts-martial were already beginning for those who would try to exercise the very rights being re-issued to them under the new version of 10 U.S.C. §1107.

    The 1998 version of 10 U.S.C. §1107 was passed as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 1999, in October 1998. The differences between the 1997 version and the 1998 version are startling and important to note, not only for their legal effect, but for what they reveal about the rational for making the changes. The original (1997) 10 U.S.C. §1107 required the Secretary of Defense to provide written notice to service members of the use of an investigational new drug or a drug unapproved for its applied use “unless the Secretary of Defense determines that the use of written notice is impractical because of the number of members receiving the investigational new drug or drug unapproved for its applied use, time constraints, or similar reasons.”[xxiii]  This means that the Secretary of Defense had almost unfettered discretion to determine that written notice was not feasible. The only condition or enforcement mechanism was that the Secretary was supposed to provide Congress a written explanation if written notice was not used. The 1998 version, however, in sharp contrast, would strike that language out (from “unless” to the end), thus eliminating anything except written notice.  The new version would then add one significant paragraph, (f) and change the current (f), the definitions section, to (g). The new paragraph, unchanged since 1998, reads as follows:

    (f) Limitation and Waiver.—

    1. In the case of the administration of an investigational new drug or a drug unapproved for its applied use to a member of the armed forces in connection with the member’s participation in a particular military operation, the requirement that the member provide prior consent to receive the drug in accordance with the prior consent requirement imposed under section 505(i)(4) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 355(i)(4)) may be waived only by the President. The President may grant such a waiver only if the President determines, in writing, that obtaining consent–

    (A) is not feasible;

    (B) is contrary to the best interests of the member; or

    (C) is not in the interests of national security.

    2. In making a determination to waive the prior consent requirement on a ground described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (1), the President shall apply the standards and criteria that are set forth in the relevant FDA regulations for a waiver of the prior consent requirement on that ground.

    This portion of the statute vests the decision to use or not use investigational drugs with one person and one person alone, the President of the United States. While the President appoints a cabinet member, the Secretary of Defense, to be his representative on military affairs, this law specifically lifts the power to make these decisions out of the Secretary’s hands and placed it squarely on the President.

    3. The Secretary of Defense may request the President to waive the prior consent requirement with respect to the administration of an investigational new drug or a drug unapproved for its applied use to a member of the armed forces in connection with the member’s participation in a particular military operation. With respect to any such administration –

    (A) the Secretary may not delegate to any other official the authority to request the President to waive the prior consent requirement for the Department of Defense; and

    (B) if the President grants the requested waiver, the Secretary shall submit to the chairman and ranking minority member of each congressional defense committee a notification of the waiver, together with the written determination of the President under paragraph (1) and the Secretary’s justification for the request or requirement under subsection (a) for the member to receive the drug covered by the waiver.

    The crucial portion of this new law is that only the President could waive the requirement for informed consent. Furthermore, even if the Secretary wishes to request a waiver, he cannot delegate that request, putting him- or herself on the hook, as well, if something were to go wrong. The President could also only grant the waiver in writing, and then the Secretary has to submit a copy of the waiver and his justification for requesting it in writing to both the House and Senate Committees involved that have cognizance over military affairs AND appropriate the money for such operations.

    This section thus vests political liability for the decision to waive informed consent with the President. Second, it provides Congress with the weapon to veto the Presidential decision with its mightiest tool – control over the appropriations to conduct such an operation. While there is still an ongoing battle over the two provisions of the Constitution that vest control of the military in two different branches of government,[3] ultimately Congress could win such a battle by denying the funding for any military operation under its plenary power to appropriate money. Perhaps the most important aspect of the statute comes from the enabling public law. The National Defense Authorization Act for FY 1999, which passed and enacted the second version of 10 U.S.C. §1107, contained two notes that would affect any existing waivers of the requirement for informed consent. The first paragraph (paragraph (2) of the 1998 act) explains that the new paragraph (f) applies to any new operation involving service members. The second of these two clauses addressed the possible “grandfathering” of any pre-existing waivers and states that

    (3) <10 USC 1107 note> A waiver of the requirement for prior consent imposed under the regulations required under paragraph (4) of section 505(i) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (or under any antecedent provision of law or regulations) that has been granted under that section (or antecedent provision of law or regulations) before the date of the enactment of this Act for the administration of a drug to a member of the Armed Forces in connection with the member’s participation in a particular military operation may be applied in that case after that date only if

    (A) the Secretary of Defense personally determines that the waiver is justifiable on each ground on which the waiver was granted;

    (B) the President concurs in that determination in writing; and

    (C) the Secretary submits to the chairman and ranking minority member of each congressional committee referred to in section 1107(f)(4)(C) of title 10, United States Code (as added by paragraph (1)) –

    (i) a notification of the waiver;

    (ii) the President’s written concurrence; and

    (iii) the Secretary’s justification for the request or for the requirement under subsection 1107(a) of such title for the member to receive the drug covered by the waiver.

    Thus, the statute not only looked forward to future operations, it also reached back and effectively wiped out the existing interim FDA rule and waiver that the FDA still had not changed. The FDA would update its regulations in May 1999, incorporating all of the requirements of 10 U.S.C. §1107, some 7 months after the passage of the act and some eight plus years after it issued an “interim” rule for Desert Storm.

    Endnotes

    [1] In the Bosnia deployment, the DoD vaccinated troops against a tickborne encephalitis with an investigational drug.

    [2] This is not a game of semantics, either. Our predecessor veterans in Vietnam, having spent time in the “Arizona Valley” near Da Nang or serving near the DMZ, might not characterize the role of our troops in Bosnia as “combat”, yet any time a bullet flies from a hostile rifle, there is the possibility for death and harm. The FDA is certainly not going to gainsay the military in such matters.

    [3] The Constitution, in Art. I, §2, names the President as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. Art. II, §8 grants Congress the power to make rules for the land and naval forces, to raise armies, and the power to make all necessary rules in carrying out its duties under Art II.

    [i] 143 Cong. Rec. E 637, April 10, 1997 (remarks of Representative Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island).

    [ii] Id. See also https://www.nytimes.com/1997/02/28/us/pentagon-reveals-it-lost-most-logs-on-chemical-arms.html

    [iii] Id.

    [iv] Id.

    [v] See, e.g., 143 Cong. Rec. H. 9137 (Oct. 23, 1997).  Section 766 of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 1998 contained this bill under the subtitle Persian Gulf Illness (Subtitle F).

    [vi] U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Holds Hearings on the Nomination of Togo West to be Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs and U.S. Biologic Vaccines for Gulf War Veterans.  Statement of Senator Rockefeller.  March 17, 1998.

    [vii] Id.  Testimony of Mr. Randolph Wykoff, Associate Commissioner for Operations, Food and Drug Administration.

    [viii] Id.  Testimony of Mr. Gary Christopherson.

    [ix] Testimony before the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies, (March 12, 1996).

    [x] 21 C.F.R. 50.23(d) (1990).

    [xi] House Government Reform Committee and Subcommittee on Human Resources Holds a Hearing on Biomedical Ethics, (May 8, 1997).

    [xii] Id.

    [xiii] Id.

    [xiv] Id.

    [xv] Id.

    [xvi] 144 Cong. Rec. H. 4616 (June 16, 1998).

    [xvii] Id.  Remarks of Congressman Shays.

    [xviii] Id. (emphasis added)

    [xix] See 32 CFR 216.107, 46 CFR Part 45, 21 CFR 50.23(d), 50 USC 1520a and The Nuremberg Code.

    [xx] 32 CFR 219.116 (2001).  These regulations have been in place since 1991.

    [xxi] Id.

    [xxii] 144 Cong. Rec. H. 4616 (June 16, 1998).

    [xxiii] 10 USC 1107 (1997).

  • Grievance Drinking: Part 1

    Apparently people are easily offended.  While it is not necessarily a new idea, to be outraged is to be fashionable, and nobody wants to be accused of being unfashionable.

    This is my review of Brewery Terreux Sour in the Rye

    Neither offends me, does that make me an asshole? Or does that just make me an adult?

    The first place we find it is in this Time article that discusses the outrage native Marshall Islanders feel for a beer known as Bikini Atoll by the Manhattan Project Brew Company out of Dallas.   One thing to point out about this particular beer company is their theme of naming beer after things related to nuclear weapons–hence the name Manhattan Project Beer Co.

    If you are unfamiliar with the history behind the Manhattan Project, here is a link…then go ahead and find a wooden plank for which to strike yourself in the face for not knowing what the Manhattan Project is.  It actually IS something they still teach in school…

    The company, which takes its name from the WWII research and development project that produced the first nuclear weapons and has named other beers “Necessary Evil” and “Plutonium-239,” noted that they would take “no further action in this matter.”

    Which is the action they should take on this.  If somebody is offended by what is on the label or cares that why somebody might be offended by it, simply don’t purchase it.  Unfortunately it never is that simple, and the Republic of the Marshall Islands is demanding an apology from the company in question.  Here’s the thing, I am confident the current generation of Americans doesn’t actually know what the Bikini Atoll is.  They probably just assume it has something to do with the swimsuit—and to be fair they’d be right.

    Not my photo of a woman in a bikini in 1953.

    That said, 2/3 of  the same generation in question doesn’t know what Auschwitz was.  I am very confident I could ask a random person where the US tested atomic weapons and they’d probably just say New Mexico—and to be fair they’d be right.  Instead of being outraged at the cultural insensitivity of a now little known historical fact perhaps they should instead realize how obscure their story is and be happy that somebody recognized the tragedy for what it is.

    Unfortunately, this beer is not available to me locally so I am unable to try it for myself.  Being a Gose, I am nearly certain it will offend my senses.  This one by Brewery Terraux does not disappoint in that regard.  It is needlessly sour.  Likely made in a manner that I assume government scientists would create if they were given nearly unlimited resources and told to create something that will be sold in grocery stores catering to high income customers, and commits the largest possible atrocity while fitting conveniently within the confines of a single bomber.

    The use of rye does not make it any more palatable, or enjoyable for me in any way.  Brewery Terreux Sour in the Rye 2.2/5

  • Gold Standards I – The Model 12 Winchester

    The Perfect Repeater

    Resolved:  The pre-64 Model 12 Winchester is the standard by which all pump shotguns must be judged.  Now that that’s established, I’ll proceed to tell you about this magnificent shotgun and how it came to be the gold standard of pump shotguns.

    My Black Diamond Trap Gun.

    Full disclosure:  I’m not impartial.  I own three Model 12s – a 1940 12-gauge field gun, a 1941 16-gauge field gun, and a 1942 12-gauge Black Diamond trap gun.  The sequential years are nothing more than a happy coincidence.

    John Browning

    It should come as no surprise that the DaVinci of firearms was involved in the genesis of the Model 12, as he was with so many American sporting and martial arms.  But his involvement in this case is limited to a precursor of the Model 12.

    The story begins in 1887.  In that year, Winchester determined to build and sell a repeating shotgun.  They turned to John Browning, who had developed the company’s outstanding 1886 lever rifle the year before, along with the Winchester 1885 falling-block single-shot rifle.

    Browning had already produced a successful lever-action rifle for Winchester, and while he advocated a pump-action for a shotgun, Winchester’s official position at that time was that they were a lever gun company, and by God they’d have a lever-action shotgun.  Browning came through, producing the 1887 lever gun, the first mass-produced repeating shotgun by a major manufacturer.

    But the 1887 lever gun was big, clunky, and it’s drop-block lever action required a long throw.  It was offered in 10 and 12 gauge but was only strong enough for black-powder shells, at a time when higher-performance smokeless powder loads were just beginning to become available.

    Sales were lackluster.  Double guns still handled better than the heavy lever gun and offered much faster second shots and quick reloads.  Browning politely reminded Winchester of his stated position on the pump-action for shotguns.  Winchester finally agreed that the brilliant designer may have had a point.

    The Model 93/97

    John Browning Winchester Model 1893 1897 US Patent 441390

    In response, Browning designed the black-powder-only 1893 pump shotgun, which was quickly refined into the 12- and 16-gauge, smokeless-powder-capable Model 1897.  The first variant of the ’97 offered in 1897 was a solid-frame 12 gauge, followed in 1898 by the takedown version in 12-gauge and the takedown 16 gauge in 1900.

    Sales of the new gun were brisk, which probably earned Winchester’s management a “told you so” or two from John Browning.  In fact, Browning liked the new shotgun enough that he retained one as his personal shotgun, using it on ranges and in the game fields until he died in 1926.

    The 1897 had a few interesting features.  The six-shot tubular magazine remains pretty typical for pump-guns made today, but the external hammer and lack of an additional safety probably wouldn’t fare well in today’s market – although I would opine, as I have repeatedly, that a gun with an external hammer doesn’t require an additional safety.

    Another feature the 97 had was the lack of a trigger disconnect.  This device disconnects the trigger when the action is cycled, thus requiring the trigger to be released and pressed again for follow-up shots.  The 97, like most pump-guns designed in the early 20th century, was a “slam-fire” gun – one could hold the trigger down and cycle the action, firing a new round ever time the slide slammed home.  This isn’t a terribly accurate way to fire a shotgun, but I will admit if can be great fun; when I was a young fellow, I used to experiment in this technique with my Dad’s old Stevens pump, which had the same capacity.  I never learned to hit much that way but burned up a fair amount of shells until the Old Man saw me dumping magazines of cheap field loads into the dirt bank we used as a backstop and, fearing damage to his gun by the rough use, put a stop to my experimenting.

    The ’97 was in production until 1957, a sixty-year run.  During both World Wars, the U.S. Army and Marine Corps used 97s to good effect in combat, the old guns with their slam-fire ability, six-shot magazines, 18” barrels, heat shrouds and bayonet lugs making good “trench brooms” in Great War France as well as good last-ditch jungle weapons in such places as Guadalcanal and Bougainville in the Pacific during Great War Part Two.

    Today Chinese manufacturer Norinco makes a copy of the 1897 Winchester, supposedly made exactly to original specs but, based on examples I’ve examined, certainly not to original standards.  My estimation of these guns is that one might make a decent tent pole or boat anchor, but they are not stout enough to make a decent pry bar.  If you’re looking for an external-hammer pump shotgun, skip the Chinese knockoffs and find an old Winchester.

    In the grand scheme of things, however fine and successful a gun as the 97 was, was only the prequel to the Perfect Repeater.

    Winchester’s T.C. Johnson

    The Model 12, exploded.

    There are few cases in which another designer has taken one of John Browning’s designs and improved it, but in 1912, Winchester engineer Thomas Crossley (T.C.) Johnson pulled it off.

    Starting with the 1897, Johnson retained the take-down action mechanism, the six-round tubular magazine and the slam-fire capacity.  The changes were primarily to the receiver.  Johnson designed an enclosed receiver with an internal hammer, with the magazine loading from the bottom of the receiver and spent shells ejected through a port on the right side of the receiver.  The feed system was also redesigned; where the 97 had used a big, heavy lifter to not only feed new rounds into the chamber but to also lock the bolt closed, the new gun used a much lighter shell lifter and instead locked the bolt closed with a lug that locked solidly into the top of the receiver.  The receiver itself was machined from a billet of forged steel, making for a gun of immense strength for the time, perfectly capable of handling the new smokeless powder ammo.

    Thus, was born the final configuration of the pump-action shotgun, which form persists even today.

    Perhaps because the Model 97 was already being produced in 12 and 16 gauge, the Model 1912, as it was then known, was initially introduced only in 20 gauge, with 12- and 16-gauge versions being introduced in late 1913.  The 16-gauge guns were built on the 20-gauge frame, making them an ideal compromise between “thump” and handling; my own 16-gauge is light, fast, a joy to handle, but with standard 2 ¾” shells puts out an appreciably larger shot charge than a 20.

    Winchester’s marketing department were quick to promote the new pump-gun, labeling it “The Perfect Repeater,” which to my estimation is a pretty accurate description.  A variety of Model 12s were produced, including lightweight versions and “Heavy Duck” guns that fired the very first 3” 12-gauge shells.  Trap and Skeet versions were also produced, as were the fancy Pigeon Grade guns, featuring engraving, silver and/or gold inlays, and AAA+ walnut stocks and fore ends.

    Like the 97 before it, the Model 12 also went to war, in trench gun trim, serving alongside the 1897 Winchester as well as the Stevens 520A and the Ithaca 37 in both World Wars as well as Korea and Vietnam.  The government also bought standard versions for marksmanship training; those guns were fitted with big, ugly Cutts Compensators.  The Old Man, when he ran a skeet range on an Army airfield in Victorville, California in late 1945 and early 1946, ran a lot of rounds through the range’s Model 12s and the accompanying Remington 11as.

    It was in the game fields, though, that the Model 12 really shone.  The combination of the enclosed, forged and machined receiver, the take-down action and the magazine capacity made the Model 12 very popular among bird and small-game hunters.  The gun was well-made, reliable, strong enough to handle heavy loads and tough enough to withstand bad weather, rain, damp, snow, you name it.

    A 1942 Winchester shotgun ad.

    By the mid-20th century, though, the very success of the Model 12 had resulted in some competition.  One notable pump-gun of mid-century, the Stevens 520/520A, also came from the mind of John Browning, but those guns were primarily aimed at the economy market and almost all were built in private-label trim for such outlets as Sears-Roebuck and Montgomery Wards.  As such, they didn’t make many inroads into Winchester’s sales of Model 12s.

    All that changed in 1950, with the introduction of the Remington 870, and a near-immortal pump-gun in its own right.  But the 870, while also tough and reliable, was cheaper to produce and sold at a lower price than the Model 12.  The 870 was a bargain for shooters, while the Model 12, with its forged, milled receiver and considerable hand-fitting, was becoming too expensive to produce.  The introduction of more economical yet still reliable and tough pump-guns like the aluminum-framed Mossberg 500 furthered the trend; hand-fitted guns like the Model 12 were becoming too costly for most shooters.

    In 1964, during the infamous Winchester reorganization, the company’s management decided that the Model 12 cost too much to build; the grand old gun was not a good gamble for the modern market.  Production of the Model 12 ceased that year, although a few guns still made their way out of Winchester’s Custom Shop.  Mikoru in Japan made a few guns on the Model 12 specifications bearing the U.S. Repeating Arms and Browning labels, but after 1964, mass production of the original Winchester Model 12 ended.

    Today

    If you’re looking to pick up an original pre-64 Model 12 today, there are plenty available, but you should be aware of a few precautionary notes:

    1. Early guns had short chambers. In the first few years, 12-gauge guns had 2 5/8” receivers, while 16-gauge models had 2 9/16” chambers. It can be harmful to gun and shooter to fire 2 ¾” shells in these guns.
    2. In the 1920s many Model 12s were produced with nickel steel barrels. These guns are all clearly marked on the barrel, “NICKEL STEEL,” and are still very fine guns; but be advised, if the finish is badly worn, these guns don’t reblue easily.  There was a very specific process involved; back when Winchester was still Winchester, one could send nickel steel guns in for refinishing and the company would do a very fine job.  The attempts I’ve seen since then, done by third parties, have had… well, mixed results.
    3. Both the 1897 and Model 12 Winchester shotguns have notoriously thin barrel walls. This will not be an issue unless your desire to have a gun cut for choke tubes.  Most outfits simply won’t touch an old Model 12; Carlson, for example, will tell you to not even send the gun in for evaluation.  I have had two Model 12s cut for tubes by Briley, the only outfit I’m aware of that will touch this job; the tubes provided are frighteningly thin.  I bet I could crush one flat between thumb and forefinger, although I won’t try; I have fired quite a few rounds through both 12 and 16 with these tubes, however, with no issues whatsoever.

    The market in pump shotguns today is an embarrassment of riches.  But you have to wonder, every time a gun company engineer comes up with a new pump-gun design, has to ask himself, somewhere in the deep recesses of his mind, “How will this compare to the Model 12?”

    For longevity, for fit and finish, for reliability, for flawless function, and, yes, for beauty, the Model 12 Winchester remains The Perfect Repeater – the gold standard, the gun by which all other pump shotguns are measured.  I don’t see that fact changing any time soon.

  • Violins of Hope

    A couple of years ago my mom asked if I would be interested in building a workbench for the Violins of Hope display that came to Nashville in 2018. The symphony (where she volunteers) organized it with the library.  Sure, why not. I like to build stuff and after meeting with those heading the project I had absolutely no idea what to build for them. So I did what I do best. I build something and hope they like it.

    A brief background in the Violins of Hope project from the Wikipedia page- “The Violins of Hope collection is a collection of Holocaust related string instruments in Tel Aviv, Israel. The instruments serve to educate and memorialize the lives of prisoners in concentration camps through concerts, exhibitions and other projects. The collection is owned by father and son team Amnon and Avshalom Weinstein, who are both violin makers.”

    My task was to replicate a luthier’s (fancy talk for violin maker) workbench like the ones the Weinsteins have at their workshop in Israel. Since money was tight (non-existent actually) I didn’t get to fly to Israel and visit their workshop. Instead I got to look at a few photos, and go from there. The only problem with the photos is they don’t really show the workbench. Instead they show the master craftsmen and the astounding number of violins in their shop. And really, does anyone want to see their workbench? Well, me actually. I figured it would look something like this –

    Next, I got to thinking about workbench theory – size, use, material, sturdiness, etc. This involved lots of research on the internet, of which only a small portion was beneficial. So I started with material and research on which woods are native to Israel, but are also available here in the United States and narrowed it down to cypress, cedar, and pine. Cypress is too nice, cedar is too fragrant and didn’t seem like the right choice so I picked pine. Easy enough. Home Depot here I come.

    I didn’t take as many pictures of this project like I normally would, but it started with giving everything a nice sanding. Not to make it smooth, but to get rid of the logos and stamps that were visible. Nothing says old workbench like a new Weyerhauser logo. Also, I figured nails would give it a nice detail, and I ran the 2x4s through the table saw to remove the rounded edges. This would make each board nice and square and make the bench look like it was made quickly using the cheapest materials around. After all, your time and money is spent on your projects not your workbench. Unless you are actually doing the old style woodworking with hand planes, bench dogs, and stuff like that. Then you want a sturdy bench. I don’t do that and I don’t think that is needed to build and repair violins.

    I used some screws to attach the legs to the frames in case it needed to be disassembled. Now I just needed to make it look old by darkening the wood.

    The museum curators wanted to be able to hang stuff from from the back so I attached this old sheet of pegboard I had laying around. 

    And then it was time to put a few coats of poly on it.

    And the final product…

    It went on display at the downtown branch of the Nashville library for a good 2 or 3 months. Lots of visitors came to see the display…

    …but also to look at the violins the Weinsteins have repaired.

    They made a little picture book and the workbench made it in…

    There is one violin that has a swastika and a Heil Hitler scribed inside of it that the owner likely didn’t know was in there. It was only discovered when the Weinsteins took it apart to repair it.  Did whoever do that wake up that morning and think about how he could be a dick that day? Christ, what an asshole. 

    The Nashville Symphony held a meet and greet for local luthiers that donated a bunch of the odds and ends for the display and the Weinsteins came and spoke at it. Afterwards I was riding in the elevator with the Weinsteins and the elder asked who made the workbench. We had a brief, but fun conversation about it and I felt honored that it was appreciated.

  • Chapter 4 – Judicial Remedies in Our Republic?

    The bar created by Chappell – a judicial exception to an implied remedy for the violation of constitutional rights – surely cannot insulate defendants from liability for deliberate and calculated exposure of otherwise healthy military personnel to medical experimentation without their consent, outside of any combat, combat training, or military exigency, and for no other reason than to gather information on the effect of lysergic acid diethylamide [LSD] on human beings.

    No judicially crafted rule should insulate from liability the involuntary and unknowing human experimentation alleged to have occurred in this case. Indeed, as Justice Brennan observes, the United States military played an instrumental role in the criminal prosecution of Nazi officials who experimented with human subjects during the Second World War, and the standards that the Nuremberg Military Tribunals developed to judge the behavior of the defendants stated that the ‘voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential … to satisfy moral, ethical and legal concepts.’ If this principle is violated the very least that society can do is to see that the victims are compensated, as best they can be, by the perpetrators. I am prepared to say that our Constitution’s promise of due process of law guarantees this much.[i]

    United States v. Stanley, 483 U.S. 669, 709-10 (1987)(O’Connor, J., dissenting)(some citations omitted).

    There are both moral and legal arguments to be made for the proposition that the actions detailed in Chapters 1 and 2 should be allowed. To be explicit, I am speaking of the idea that the Government – the State – has (1) a right to the compelled obedience of its citizens, and (2) the right to the lives of its citizenry in defense of the State. Historically, this has been the default state of affairs for most of what we know of recorded human history. The anthropological and archaeological record strongly suggests that from Africa to Asia to Europe to South and North America, the general organization of human beings has almost always involved a leader, chosen usually by some combination of martial prowess and/or political savvy, with rule enforced upon the rest of the tribe/culture/society through several mechanisms, including cultural/social pressure, including religion, and force. Regardless of the variations, the underlying idea has always been that the people owe their allegiance to the ruler and the larger culture. They could be conscripted to fight in the King’s, Pharoah’s, Queen’s, Caesar’s, The Great Khan’s, Czar’s, Napoleon’s, Comrade Stalin’s Armies against any enemy of the homeland, and forced to march to their certain death by elephant, Russian winter, or German MG-42. The unthinkable, but unassailable, logic follows that if the State can order you to your likely death, or maybe just a group of you as a feint to cover for a larger assault somewhere else – if you can be sacrificed for the benefit of others, why can’t someone, the State, make the same calculus by doing some experiments on you? If you can be ordered into battle as a soldier where you could die, or even be subjected to the enemy’s chemical weapons, then why can’t the military hierarchy sacrifice some of you good chaps for the sake of others, eh? Isn’t this what military commanders do in battles all of the time?

    The political systems under which this is still the case – today – are too numerous to mention.

    Fortunately for United States citizens, that entire idea was explicitly rejected in the American Revolution; that is the great moment of “American Exceptionalism.” The Declaration of Independence’s most trenchant historical observation is coupled with its boldest claim: “that governments are instituted among men, [and] deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” Governments are not extensions of the Divine Will; political power does not derive through familial claim, inheritance of religious authority, or other ‘farcical aquatic ceremonies.’ At the time, it was the most radically egalitarian idea that had ever been proposed, on a par with Martin Luther’s heresy to the Catholic Church’s authority. It stripped all of the mysticism and power away from government agents of every kind; all of the King’s Men declaimed as equal to even the lowest yeoman farmer, dock worker, deckhand, or wheelwright.

    That is also what seems to have gone missing in our culture, and why even in the United States there are still people in respectable circles who feel that soldiers give up their rights when they join the military and therefore, have no grounds to complain of their treatment. This is not confined to those outside of the military, either; it is a common misperception, even among active servicemembers. If servicemembers enjoy less than the full rights that other U.S. citizens enjoy: diminished First Amendment protections, for example, because they can’t protest their Commander’s decisions, or lower “expectations of privacy” in the Fourth Amendment context (see mandatory drug testing), then the logic somewhat follows that perhaps servicemembers can be experimented upon without having any grounds for relief.

    Unfortunately for servicemembers, these arguments get additional fuel because they have more than a slight legal basis. There is a specific exemption in the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution for “those serving in the land or Naval forces.” There are legal scholars who argue that servicemembers do not enjoy the same Constitutional rights as ordinary citizens because of that specific exception to the Fifth Amendment’s grand jury requirement for an indictment. There is still some debate over whether the founders intended all other protections to apply to servicemembers or if that exemption was a recognition that servicemembers were less than full citizens. The Supreme Court has never issued a definitive ruling on whether the Bill of Rights applies to servicemembers wholesale, either. There are also two Supreme Court decisions that hold that servicemembers have no right to a trial by jury. These decisions are particularly odd because neither of the cases involved servicemembers at all. In one case, at the close of the Civil War, a man living in Indiana was tried and convicted by a military commission and sentenced to be hanged. A local grand jury found no evidence against him and was dismissed without an indictment being handed up. While in jail he petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus that eventually went to the Supreme Court. The opinion, in eloquent language, extols the virtue and necessity of the trial by jury and then in one backhanded sentence mentions that every U.S. citizen, except servicemembers, enjoys that right.[ii]

    The second decision, handed down in World War II, involved German saboteurs caught sneaking into the U.S. to commit espionage. Once again, while having nothing to do with the case, the Court manages to mention that only servicemembers have no right to a trial by jury.[iii] Ultimately, Congress fixed this with the comprehensive Uniform Code of Military Justice, which gives servicemembers the right to a trial by jury, albeit a somewhat different method of jury selection than in civilian courts. Nonetheless, these kinds of decisions and the impression they convey is that servicemembers are on a different constitutional footing than other U.S. citizens.

    The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, the highest military appeals court (subordinate only to the Supreme Court of the United States in military cases), has, in many cases, spoken in broad terms about the protections afforded to military members and has rejected the notion that particular Constitutional rights do not apply per se to military members. The court has instead held that a particular right, such as the Fourth Amendment’s protections, for example, apply ‘differently’ in the unique circumstances of the Armed Forces.[iv] In a 1995 case, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces noted that

    The administration of military justice is rooted in inherent fair play and justice that prevail under the Anglo-American system of law.  ‘In defining the rights of military personnel, Congress was not limited to the minimum requirements established by the Constitution, and in many instances, it has provided safeguards unparalleled in the civilian sector.’ The broad constitutional rights that servicemembers enjoy spring from the fundamental principle that they do not lay aside the citizen when they assume the soldier.[v]

    These kinds of statements would tend to indicate that servicemembers may enjoy the same rights as any citizen, perhaps even more, depending upon what Congress has granted… or those statements could simply could be propaganda, legal pablum for judge advocates and the small legal community around the military that even cares about such legal arcana.

    The fine legal question for servicemembers, relevant to the issue about the anthrax vaccine program, is whether or not there is a Constitutional right, or other right given by Congress, to be free from forced vaccination with an unlicensed or experimental drug. The more general question of whether or not a service member can be punished if he refuses a mandatory routine vaccination was answered in United States v. Chadwell in 1965. In that case a Marine refused to take the smallpox, typhoid, paratyphoid, and influenza vaccine, on religious grounds. The Court found against him and found the order lawful. For some people, this means that the anthrax vaccine program is perfectly valid, end of story, close the book, and let’s all go home.

    Let’s not be done with it so fast, however. First, there are a number of important differences between that order and the current anthrax program. Part of it has to do with the routine nature of that vaccine, meaning that it was already being administered to the entire U.S. population, while the anthrax vaccine had now been so administered. Second, the Marine in that case refused to take the routine shot for religious reasons. Almost none of the servicemembers refusing the anthrax vaccine were relying upon religious reasons. A third important difference was that the smallpox and other vaccines were not being administered as pretreatments against chemical warfare; they were being given for the same reasons as they were being given to the nation at large.[1] Finally, there was – and still is – a massive lesson that was learned as a result of the First Gulf War in 1990-1991 that changed the legal landscape around d this exact issue.

    Prior to the Gulf War, there had never been an inoculation offered as a treatment against chemical warfare.[2] The current anthrax vaccine is a part of the new era of chemical-biological defense. In prior instances, noted in Chapter 1, when military members were harmed by the actions of other soldiers, either military doctors or their commanders, if the military would take no action to redress the wrong, private legal action appeared the only way to go. Servicemembers who learned that they had been given experimental drugs sued the government for monetary damages for their health complications as a result of the experiments performed upon them. These types of suits are called tort suits. Tort is the French word for wrong and under Anglo-American law, it is one means of legal redress for harms suffered by a citizen. Juries may award actual damages for the harm suffered and punitive damages as a punishment to the wrongdoer and as a deterrent to others who would do the same.

    A U.S. citizen can also file for damages for a Constitutional violation, pursuant to a Supreme Court case named Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1967).  In that case, Bivens alleged that FBI agents came into his apartment without a warrant or probable cause, searched his house from one end to the other, arrested him and ultimately charged him with narcotics violations. He sued in district court for damages for the violation of his constitutional rights. The courts below dismissed his suit on the grounds that he had no cause of action, but the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately held that he could sue government agents for the violation of his civil rights. Today, there is a specific statute that allows citizens to sue government agents who commit violations of their constitutional rights. See 42 U.S.C. §1983.

    There would at least appear to be a number of legal remedies available to citizens, including servicemembers, if they can prove some legal harm, either in a regular civil suit with injunctive relief or damages, or if there is a Constitutional violation under Bivens or §1983. This would be true, but for a legal concept known as sovereign immunity and the Feres doctrine.

    The Feres doctrine is named for a famous Supreme Court case[vi]  and relies upon a concept in British law known as sovereign immunity. The syllabus at the beginning of Feres explains the concept this way:

    While the political theory that the King could do no wrong was repudiated in America, a legal doctrine derived from it that the Crown is immune from any suit to which it has not consented was invoked on behalf of the Republic and applied by our courts as vigorously as it had been on behalf of the Crown. As the Federal Government expanded its activities, its agents caused a multiplying number of remediless wrongs – wrongs which would have been actionable if inflicted by an individual or a corporation but remediless solely because their perpetrator was an officer or employee of the Government. Relief was often sought and sometimes granted through private bills in Congress, the number of which steadily increased as Government activity increased.[vii]

    In short, the general principle was that no one could sue the Crown because the government creates or grants the rights of its citizens. Despite our Revolution to be free of British rule, in the earliest years of our republic, our courts took their cue from decisions in the British courts. A simple way of explaining this is that if an ordinary citizen ran over a child due to his own negligence, he would be liable in tort law, and perhaps criminally. Contrariwise, if a government agent driving a government truck did the same thing, there would be no relief for the parents if they sued in court. The only way to get relief in the early years was for a citizen to get his or her representative to put a private bill before either the state or federal legislature and for that body to consent to be sued. Eventually, the United States Congress passed the Federal Tort Claims Act as a comprehensive response to some of the arbitrary and unfair results produced when government agents caused serious harm to citizens. The Federal Tort Claims Act sought to relieve some of these inequities. It spells out who can sue the federal government and under what circumstances. In some cases, it even delineates what the maximum amount is that can be received for certain harms.

    The Feres decision actually involved three distinct cases, but the Supreme Court combined them for one decision, named after the lead case. In one of the other cases, a soldier in the army had abdominal surgery. Eight months later, an additional surgery removed a thirty by eighteen-inch towel labeled “Medical Department U.S. Army” from his stomach. His suit against the Army doctor for negligence was denied by the Supreme Court, whereas it would have been what lawyers affectionately call a “slam dunk” if it had been in the civilian context of medical malpractice. The Feres case held that military members were not within the class of persons covered by the Federal Tort Claims Act.  This means, in short, that military members cannot sue the government for harms suffered while on active duty by the tortious conduct of other servicemembers, no matter how egregious the wrongdoing.[viii]

    There have been many subsequent cases, law review articles, and much philosophical debate, questioning both the logic and the viability of the Feres doctrine.  In fact, there have been a number of bills introduced in Congress to overturn the Feres doctrine.[ix] The case quoted at the opening to Chapter 2, United States v. Stanley, is worth reconsidering as it addresses both the Feres doctrine and the ability of servicemembers to sue for civil rights violations (a Bivens claim in the military context, first announced by in a case called Chappel v. Wallace).

    The Feres case, like most cases, is subject to either a broad or a narrow interpretation and can be differentiated on a factual basis or on the basis of its legal holding, that is, the legal principle which applies to the given set of facts. The Feres court held that “the Government is not liable under the Federal Tort Claims Act for injuries to servicemen where the injuries arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to service.”[x] The legal justification for this was that servicemembers were not within the class of persons allowed to sue under the Federal Tort Claims Act. In U.S. v. Stanley, though, Master Sergeant Stanley was experimented upon, given LSD without his knowledge or consent, and these experiments were subsequently covered up by those in the Army who had administered the drug to him. Being slipped a mickey, as the old saying goes, doesn’t seem to quite fall within ‘arise out of’ or ‘in the course of’ activities of the military. Notwithstanding the 1977 hearings, during which members of the Senate noted that “the Justice Department and the Courts have their proper role to play”, a bare (5-4) majority of the Supreme Court found that MSgt Stanley had no grounds for relief, either under the Federal Tort Claims Act or under a Bivens claim for violations of his Constitutional (civil) rights.  The Court held that

    the reasoning . . . that the special factors counseling hesitation – the unique disciplinary structure of the Military Establishment and Congress’ activity in the field – extend beyond the situation in which an officer-subordinate relationship exists, and require abstention in the inferring of Bivens actions as extensive as the exception to the FTCA established by Feres and United States v. Johnson.  We hold that no Bivens remedy is available for injuries that ‘arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to service.’[xi]

    And yet, there it is, stated as if it were a fact, that being unknowingly experimented upon is now an activity ‘aris[ing] out of or… in the course of’ one’s service; the Feres doctrine barred MSgt Stanley’s tort action and his claim for the violation of his civil rights.

    The fact that the Court found against MSgt Stanley on the tort claim is perhaps not surprising given previous cases involving the Feres doctrine. What is especially shocking is that Chappel v. Wallace involved fairly clear racial discrimination and the Supreme Court had no trouble finding that racial discrimination was so terrible that the Court would intervene and allow intervention and relief from the courts, but being experimented upon without one’s consent, like a lab animal? No problem at all!

    The fact that the Supreme Court found that MSgt Stanley had no (military) Bivens’ claim is tragic, because it means that servicemembers’ most fundamental rights may be violated wantonly and they have no redress in the civil courts of this country.[3] This holding does have one further point to it. The Court, in finding that there were special factors counseling hesitation, apparently believed that the right of informed consent is of a Constitutional stature. Logically speaking, this is a necessary prerequisite for a Bivens’ claim: that there had to have been the violation of a Constitutional right. If not, there would have been no Bivens’ claim at all and MSgt Stanley’s claim would have been summarily dismissed, which is not what the Court did. Instead, the Court found that the Bivens’ claim could not go forward because of the ‘special factors’ that give the Court pause – namely military discipline – but not that there was no Bivens’ claim stated.

    Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, in her dissent in Stanley, took a different approach and found, quite simply, that “conduct of the type alleged in this case is so far beyond the bounds of human decency that as a matter of law it simply cannot be considered a part of the military mission.”[xii] Unfortunately, what Justice O’Connor and the American doctors at Nuremberg recognized as “conduct beyond the bounds of human decency” now had a new get-out-of-jail fee card in the majority’s lens: as long as it can be tied to the military mission. Less than three years later, on the eve of the Gulf War, it was to be repeated on a larger scale, this time not only with the aid of doctors, but with lawyers, replete with waivers, lobbying, and in the Nineties, public affairs officers! With decisions such as Feres and Stanley in hand, servicemembers would again be prevented from turning to the courts for relief and the law of unintended consequences would again rear its ugly head.

    Endnotes

    [1] In an interesting aside, the Supreme Court has found that the state can compel ordinary citizens to take a vaccine in a case called Jacobsen v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905).

    [2] I treat this more fully in Chapter 6 on 10 U.S.C. §1107.

    [3] The Supreme Court left open the very slight possibility of injunctive relief or declarative judgments for servicemembers.  An important point in current military-legal affairs

    [i] United States v. Stanley, 483 U.S. 669, 709-10 (1987)(O’Connor, J., dissenting)(some citations omitted).

    [ii] See In re Milligan

    [iii] Ex Parte Quirin,

    [iv] Both the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces have mentioned this “different” application of Constitutional rights.  See, e.g., Greer v. Spock, 424 U.S. 828 (1976); U.S. v. McCarthy, 38 M.J. 398 (C.M.A. 1993).

    [v]  U.S. v. Manuel, 43 M.J. 282, 286 (C.A.A.F. 1995).

    [vi] Feres v. United States, 340 U.S. 135, 139-40 (1950).

    [vii] Id.

    [viii] Id.  The soldier’s name was Jefferson.

    [ix] Deborah Funk, Bill Would Let Service Members Sue Over Medical Malpractice, Marine Corps Times, Aug. 27, 2001, p. 20.

    [x] Feres, at 136.

    [xi] Stanley, at 688-89 (internal citations omitted).

    [xii] Stanley, at 709.

  • Profiles in Toxic Masculinity IV: Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis

    Appearances Can Be Deceiving

    To the right you can see just another bronze bust of just another old dead white guy.  No big deal, right?  Museums the world over have millions of ‘em.

    This isn’t just any old dead white guy immortalized in bronze.  This is Cato the Younger or, as his contemporaries knew him, Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis, a Stoic, scion of the late Roman Republic, a famously incorruptible statesman, advocate for liberty (or at least what passed for it in those days) and the latest in our examples of Toxic Masculinity.

    His Maculate Origin

    Born in 95BC in the city of Rome, Cato quickly grew into a stubborn, willful child.  The Greek-became-Roman-citizen Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus (Plutarch) chronicled several events from the young Cato’s life, including his refusal to support the Marsi in the Social War – in spite of having been dangled out a window by his ankles, said dangle having been carried out by the leader of the Marsi, one Quintus Poppaedius Silo.  This was Cato’s first public display of ballsiness and, while it is not our place to question Plutarch’s chronicling of these events, it’s important to note that Cato would have been around four years old at this time.

    During the dictatorship of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, the dictator often sought out the then-fourteen-year-old Cato and his brother Caepio for conversation, despite Cato’s outspoken opposition to the dictator.  Cato’s tutor Sarpedon cautioned Cato about his opposition, noting that Sulla had taken a free hand in executing Roman nobles that opposed him; Cato replied by asking for a sword, after which Sarpedon somehow managed to curtail the boy’s public excursions.

    Cato had quite a few notable relations.  Among them:  His half-sister, Servilia Major, was the long-standing mistress of Julius Caesar and the mother of Marcus Junius Brutus.  At age 21 he married a woman about whom little is known but her name, Atilia; with her he had two children, his son Marcus Porcius Cato and his daughter Porcia, who would later marry the same Marcus Junius Brutus.  This connection would have significant meaning in the civil war that was to come.

    His Adventurous Career

    Not really Cato.

    On reaching majority and receiving his inheritance, Cato left the house of the uncle where he had spent his childhood.  While his inherited wealth would have allowed him a life of luxury, Plutarch tells us that the young Cato eschewed unnecessary comforts and instead dove deep into Stoic philosophy, living modestly, eating no more than necessary, drinking only (apparently a great deal of) cheap wine, wearing plain, undyed robes and even doing without shoes.  He cultivated physical endurance, exposing himself to all conditions of heat, cold and damp to better enable himself to withstand discomfort.

    Cato was 23 when the Third Punic War began in 72 BC.  (Honestly, I always thought I would have taken Spartacus’s side on that one, but still…)  He quickly volunteered to join his brother Caepio in the field.  The brothers didn’t have much impact in that war, but five years later, in 67 BC, Cato was given command of a legion in Macedon.  There he impressed his troops by sharing their food, drink and living conditions.  Cato, true to his Stoic philosophy, chose to forgo the luxuries afforded other commanders and slept among his men.  He led their marches from the front, and only left his legion when he received word of his brother, wounded and dying in Thrace.

    The death of his brother hit Cato hard.  After burying his sibling, Cato embarked on an extensive walkabout of Rome’s eastern provinces and did not return to Rome until 65 BC.

    On his return to Rome, Cato was elected quaestor, a position that put the Stoic in the position of being able to audit and, to some extent control, the state Treasury.  His strict rectitude and incorruptibility made him somewhat unpopular in this position, as he quickly moved to prosecute several nobles – including some of former dictator Sulla’s inner circle – for illegal appropriation of funds and for filing fraudulent documents.  Cato made himself plenty of enemies in this role, about which he appeared to not give even one single ounce of crap.

    In 63 BC, Cato was elected Tribune of Plebs, in which role he assisted the sitting Consul, Marcus Tullius Cicero (a good choice for another Profile in Toxic Masculinity) in squashing the Cataline Rebellion.  Once the rebellion was put down, Cato, in a display of his usual inflexibility, wanted the conspirators executed, but a Roman general named Gaius Julius Caesar insisted instead on exiling the malefactors, spreading them among several far-flung Roman settlements for “safekeeping.”

    The animosity between Cato and Caesar appears to date from this point.

    Around this time Caesar, General Gnaeus Pompey Magnus and Marcus Licinius Crassus formed a triumvirate, and began slowly consolidating power between the three of them.  Cato opposed the triumvirate at every turn.  In 61 BC, Pompey returned from a campaign in Asia and demanded both a Triumph and that the Senate postpone elections to allow him to run for Consul; Cato opposed the measure, convincing the Senate to allow Pompey only one of the two options.  Pompey chose the Consul’s chair over the Triumph, but faced with the same demand from Caesar, Cato was forced to resort to a filibuster.  Unlike today’s proceedings in our own Senate, Cato actually had to hold the floor and speak, which he did so until sunset brought an end to the proceedings.

    In time Caesar became Consul, and immediately proposed to award his veteran troops with rich farmlands in Campania.  As this province and its agriculture provided almost a fourth of the Republic’s tax revenue, Cato again took to the rostrum to oppose the measure – upon which Caesar had the Consul’s Lictors forcibly remove Cato from the Senate, an insult which Cato was not to forget.  Still not giving even one tiny little crap, Cato resolved to oppose Caesar’s ambitions at every turn.

    But the Triumvirate was on shaky ground at this point.  Caesar’s ambitions were about to bring him into conflict with his fellow triumvirs.  It turns out that Cato’s inflexibility and zeal in prosecuting Sullan nobles had brought him in conflict with a famous general, the aforementioned Gnaeus Pompey Magnus, who had been known as The Teenage Butcher for his zeal in persecuting Sulla’s enemies.  It is ironic, then, that this very general would come to be an ally of Cato’s in the coming unpleasantness.

    The solidity of Cato’s big brass pair was about to be tested.

    His One-Man War

    The Senate.

    Matters came to a head in 49 BC.  Cato was then in the Senate, a key member of a group of republican Senators known as the Optimates.  In that fateful year, Caesar was winding up his campaigns in Gaul, having defeated and taken prisoner the Celtic king/warlord Vercingetorix.  Before the Senate, Cato insisted that Caesar’s term as proconsul had ended, and with it his proconsular immunity; he demanded Caesar return to Rome as an ordinary citizen, there to face charges.

    Cato’s now-ally, Pompey, was willing to let Caesar accept continuation of his immunity along with giving up all but one of his legions and accepting governorship of one province, but Cato refused the compromise, and managed to ram through a resolution recalling Caesar.

    The conqueror of Gaul didn’t take this well.  He crossed the Rubicon with one legion and marched on Rome.  Marcus Anneus Lucanus chronicled that moment:

    Caesar crossed the flood and reached the opposite bank. From Hisparie’s Forbidden Fields he took his standards said, “Here I abandoned peace and desecrated law; fortune it is you I follow. Farewell to treaties. From now on war is our judge!”

    Caesar had indeed decided to follow Fortune, and Fortune had evidently taken him as a pet, for with one legion he drove Pompey and the Optimates out of Rome and into Greece, where at Pharsalus the outnumbered Caesar seized victory from the jaws of defeat and sent Pompey and the remnants of the Optimates fleeing.  Pompey went to Egypt, where he met execution at the hand of Ptolemey’s minions seeking to curry favor with Rome.  Cato and Quintus Metellus Scipio fled to Utica in north Africa, determined to fight to the end for the Republic.

    Utica, or what’s left of it.

    Caesar followed.

    The final battle was fought at Thapsus, where Caesar was again victorious, and against the normal custom, Caesar ordered the execution of all of Scipio’s men.  Cato was not present at the battle, having remained within Utica.  At this point even the adamant Stoic had to concede defeat.

    His Defiant Ending

    Cato, sadly, wasn’t to enjoy any happy golden years.

    Refusing a pardon from Caesar, Cato took up a sword and plunged it into his stomach.  Plutarch wrote:

    Cato did not immediately die of the wound; but struggling, fell off the bed, and throwing down a little mathematical table that stood by, made such a noise that the servants, hearing it, cried out. And immediately his son and all his friends came into the chamber, where, seeing him lie weltering in his own blood, great part of his bowels out of his body, but himself still alive and able to look at them, they all stood in horror. The physician went to him, and would have put in his bowels, which were not pierced, and sewed up the wound; but Cato, recovering himself, and understanding the intention, thrust away the physician, plucked out his own bowels, and tearing open the wound, immediately expired.

    Thus, perished the man who has been described as “The Last Citizen of Rome.”  He opposed Caesar with all of his breath, standing for the founding principles of the Republic.  Personally, he was reputed to be a prickly, difficult man, and very likely a high-functioning alcoholic (hardly a novelty in those times.)  But he was a man of principle and, unlike most pols today, was willing to stick to his principles even unto death.

    Caesar, now, his story has been told, by Plutarch, Lucanus, Livy, Shakespeare and many more.  He won his war, was assassinated by a man who had been one of his closest friends, but his adopted son Octavian seized control and became, effectively, Rome’s first Emperor.

    You could very well argue that when Cato died, the Republic died with him.

    And where is our Cato today?

  • Chapter 3 – The General Did What?

    “Hey D, you got a minute?”  I looked up from behind my computer.  I must have betrayed a look of impatience, because Justin looked back at me and said “What?”

    “I’m sorry, man. Sure, what’s on your mind?” I pushed back from my desk and Justin dropped all of his six-foot, two-hundred five pounds into a chair. Justin Constantine and I had gone to Naval Justice School together back in Newport, Rhode Island. All of the sea-services, the Navy, Marine Corps, and the Coast Guard, send their lawyers to NJS for ten weeks of training in military Administrative law, Criminal law, and Civil law, with a heavy emphasis throughout on practical application and trial advocacy. I hadn’t known Justin that well as he was a single, brand new First Lieutenant, and I was a relatively senior Captain, married with four kids, a year or two away from being on the selection/promotion board for Major. Despite that, when we found out that we both had orders for Okinawa (as did another classmate of ours) out of Justice School, I made an effort to take them both under my wing. As it turned out, Justin and I both got orders for the Defense shop and after long days as brand new criminal defense attorneys together, we also found out we shared a common love of rugby – and drinking beer – which appear together often enough to seem like co-dependent gene alleles.

    “Well, you know I got detailed to those three anthrax refusals from up North, right?” I nodded in reply. Up north referred to Camp Hansen, about an hour north from where we were at Camp Foster. While Camp Foster contained a lot of headquarters and support units, Hansen tended to have combat units like infantry battalions, an artillery regiment, and other front-line trigger-pullers. My assigned office was technically up there in the smaller Legal Services Support Team building, but I kept getting assigned cases in the south because of the fact that the Third Marine Air Wing was there and my boss always seemed to think me being a former pilot would somehow help the Marines who got into trouble in the Wing. It didn’t seem that way to me.

    I knew all about the anthrax cases up north; in fact, I had privately lobbied our boss, Major John Woodworth to give them to Justin because to that point the Boss was only giving him Administrative separation boards, no courts.

    “J.R., I know Justin is new, but he’s solid, and I have the other anthrax cases. These are a great way for him to get his feet wet and we can work on them side-by-side.” I was sitting in the one other chair in his small office in the Defense wing of the Legal Services building. I presumed to use his first name in private because we had known each other on a first name basis when we had both been Captains; I had been interning as a prosecutor at Camp Lejeune at the time, a couple of years earlier.

    The vagaries of our different career tracks made him senior to me, although we had been commissioned around the same year. In order to recruit lawyers, the Marine Corps, and all of the armed services, have to offer incentives because there the pay of a typical Marine officer is in now way comparable to what even a new attorney could get on the open market. One of the ways the military made up that deficit is through a fiction known as “constructive service.” A law student who signs up to be a judge advocate actually gets a reversion back to the date they signed up once they’ve completed training; which means that upon completion of Basic School and Justice School, a guy or gal with only months in service gets promoted to First Lieutenant and then is in zone for Captain, something that usually takes four to five years for the typically accessed officer. This occasionally creates friction within the Marine Corps’ rigid hierarchy because a Marine lawyer walking around with Captain’s bars may have 9 to 18 months of actual, real-life experience and time in the Corps, compared to a ‘regular’ line officer Captain who has been through two promotion boards, several deployments, and could have as much as eight or nine or ten years of service. After a few years it all irons itself out, but it’s a difficult row to hoe for the new attorneys, too. They’re frequently treated as ‘less than’ officers by those who know the system. JR had come in the same way, but he now had something like 8 years of actual time in, same as me, but his JA “reversion back” made him now a Major.

    “Well,” J.R. had begun in his usual southern twang, “he’s gotta mind his clients, and you gotta mind yours, but these should all wind up as Summary Court, Board waivers anyway. Help him out and let me know how it goes.”

    “Wilco, sir. Thank you.” I stood up to attention in front of his desk briefly, spun smartly on my heel and toe as if we were doing an about face on the parade deck, and marched out of his office in an exaggerated high step, to his snickering.

    Now with Justin in front of my desk, I squinted to think of the case names.

    “Stone-something, right? Not Stonehenge, but…?” I tried to remember from our last defense meeting.

    “Stonewall,” Justin supplied, either missing or ignoring the joke. I knew something was on his mind.  “I just got a call from one of my clients and checked out his story with some other sources. You’ll never believe what happened.”

    “Your guy confessed to the Kennedy shooting?” I didn’t even smile. He looked frustrated in return. “Okay, okay. I’m sorry. What happened?”

    “All three of my guys got called into a meeting with the Commanding General for Third MarDiv.” I raised my eyebrows and sat forward. It wasn’t very often that our clients got called into the Division Commander’s office for a chat. “So, of course, the Sergeant Major’s in there, the Division SJA—”

    “Colonel Favors was in there?” I asked. I was curious why the Staff Judge Advocate, a senior lawyer, for the entire Third Marine Division, would need to be in there to talk to three anthrax refusers. Justin nodded and went on. “—the regimental or battalion surgeon, and maybe one other CO, either Battalion or Company CO.” He finished and let that sink in.

    “Okay, you got me, I give up, why the fuck was the CG, Third MarDiv talking to one of your anthrax refusers?”

    “Get this, they all were sitting out in the hall or waiting area and they get called in and have a talking to from the CG about why this vaccine is completely safe, and why won’t they take this? and all this dis-information out there on the internet is just hype and conspiracy theorists and, now for the money ball, if they’ll just take this shot, all will be forgiven. No court-martial; no NJP; nothing. The whole unfortunate incident will be put behind them.” Justin had a deep, gravelly voice and everything he said tended to come out flat and monotone. A long time of hanging around him had taught me the subtle nuances of that monotone. I saw where he was heading.

    “And no one ever called you, their lawyer?” He shook his head slowly from side-to-side. I whistled slowly and rocked back in my chair. “They’ve got charges preferred already, right?”

    Justin nodded.

    “Yep.”

    There were several troubling things about that scenario from a defense counsel’s perspective. First, Commanders of units are the persons who actually create the courts in the military. They have incredible discretion to either prefer (bring) charges against a member of their unit or not, based on how they see the particular offense, after an appropriate investigation has been done. Convening Authorities also grant search warrants, select the jury pool, can grant clemency after a court-martial and lessen the sentence a judge or jury awards, although they cannot increase the punishment. As a result, charges and dispositions can vary widely from unit to unit, depending upon how serious the particular commander views the offense. Prosecutors (known as ‘trial counsel in the military) and staff judge advocates provide advice to commanders and tend to buffer some of the differences out, but there can still be wide divergence on particular charges.

    That all said, Commanders generally stay out of the process once charges have preferred in order to avoid the appearance of impropriety and subject themselves to an unlawful command influence motion or make themselves into witnesses at a motions session. There are also, for all lawyers, some fairly strict rules of professional conduct for dealing with persons who are already represented. The general practice is generally do not talk to a criminal defendant who is already represented without consulting his attorney first. It just invites trouble.

    I was a bit shocked to hear that the SJA for the Division was present while the General talked to a criminal defendant about the charges he was currently pending, without even notifying his attorney. Furthermore, the charges in the anthrax refusal cases were not even convened by a General court-martial – that is, a court created by a General officer – but instead they were brought at a Special court-martial, a lower forum convened by the Battalion commander, where the accused could receive no more than 6 months confinement, forfeiture of 2/3 pay per month for 6 months, reduction to the lowest enlisted paygrade, and a bad conduct discharge. A General Court-Martial could award any punishment authorized for the particular offense, up to and including death. Refusing a direct order or a general order would have carried ‘a nickel’ for our guys – 5 years – but the statutory cap for all special courts-martial limited their exposure.

    “And get this,” Justin went on, “I heard from my sources that the CG was basically asking them ‘why don’t they trust him’ and shit like that. One of my guys is a Sergeant and finally caved in, crying or very upset, after this long heart-to-heart, and finally agreed to take the shot, so the surgeon took him right then, on-the-spot, to medical.” Now Justin’s voice had a real edge to it. “Do you believe that?!”

    “Curiouser and curiouser,” I answered. Justin looked at me and then caught on.

    “Alice in Wonderland?” he mouthed. I nodded.

    My mind was trying to process what it meant, but more importantly, I was trying to find an angle that would help Justin’s clients. Or mine. I was stumped. I genuinely enjoyed these sessions we had in defense, frequently bouncing ideas off of one another to help focus our thinking, as long as we didn’t have conflicting cases. Justin’s thought process, I found, frequently mirrored my own.

    “Let’s ask Hites,” I said finally. Although I had over eight years on active duty, I was as new as Justin as a lawyer, and I couldn’t think of a rule or regulation that had technically been violated, so it was time to ask someone with more experience.

    Major John Hitesman graduated from the Norwich Military Academy a year before I graduated from Boston University. Like me, Hitesman had a “life” before becoming a lawyer. He had been a “grunt,” an infantry officer, stationed in Hawaii before getting picked up for the Funded Law Program, as I had. Okinawa was his first tour as a lawyer, but he had been a defense attorney there for two years. He had a phlegmatic personality, utterly unflappable in every experience I had with him. He was also one smart cookie and he and I had become friends of a sort, especially after we talked and I found out he played ice hockey at Norwich; he also had discovered a local pickup league in Naha and got me on the team. Given that we were peers, more or less, even though he had pinned on Major already and was now a field grade officer, we would alternate driving to play ice hockey together every Thursday night. I enjoyed the conversation on the rides with him almost as much as playing ice hockey. At six-foot-two, two-hundred and fifteen or so pounds, Hites also looked like a linebacker, but was an agile skater and good stick-handler. At five-six (on a tall day), I was shorter than most of the Okinawans we played against and I always appreciated playing on a line with some ‘beef.’

    When I brought John back into the office, he looked at Justin.

    “What’s going on?  Barney told me your clients got pistol whipped this weekend.” John was one of the few people who addressed me by my call sign from when I was a pilot. When I had first moved into the office next to his, I put up my framed print of an AH-1W attack helicopter my squadronmates had signed for me as a going away present. On the plate it had my name, call-sign, and a quote: “Shakespeare was Right.” Either the prosecutors or the clerks later put a picture on my office door at Camp Hansen of Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble, with “Hitesman” and an arrow pointing to Fred and “Saran” with an arrow pointing to Barney. I thought it was funny and left it up.

    “Sir, I don’t know if Captain Saran told you, but something weird happened this weekend with my clients and I’m not sure what to do about it.” Justin related the story quickly and Hites listened with his hands laced in front of his face, holding the styrofoam cup that he occasionally used to spit some tobacco juice into from the wad occupying the left side of his mouth.

    “Well, I’ll play devil’s advocate, here. Why can’t a CO call in one of his Marines and talk to him? What’s wrong with that?” Justin seemed a little put off by the question. I was, too.

    “I’m not sure,” he began, then held up his hands, “…that’s why I asked.”

    “I can think of a few,” I piped up. “He’s already represented, there are charges pending, the CG is the convening authority’s direct superior, and it all-around stinks.” Hites gave me a quick glance.

    “I might agree, but what kind of relief are you going to get? I mean, how do you frame this in a motion and what do you think one of our judges is going to say? What would you ask for?” Hitesman’s pragmatism stung me into silence. He was right. There was a long pause. He spit again, then went on.

    “I suppose you could write a letter to the SJA’s state bar because I think there may be an ethical problem that she should know about with her being in there and allowing the CA to question your clients. But then again, the JAG Instruction is only for attorneys, not Commanders, and same for the rules of professional conduct. Why couldn’t a Commander have his attorney in there as a witness? Did she ask any questions of your clients?” Hites now directed a question at Justin.

    “No, sir, I don’t think so. I think she was just in there.” Justin looked at the rug. I was still mulling over John’s point. Something about it didn’t smell right, particularly given the fact that Sergeant Terveen, one of Justin’s clients, had changed his mind about the shot under what seemed like pretty coercive conditions. The Sergeant had less than a year before he was getting out and likely decided that the hassle, and risk of losing his veteran’s benefits, probably wasn’t worth it. The other two, a Lance Corporal and a Private First Class, had stuck to their guns. That was probably more impressive than anything else about the story.

    “The only other issue is whether or not they were warned of their rights.” Hites looked at Justin who shrugged his shoulders. “If they weren’t warned, none of their statements are coming in at court, but the prosecution probably won’t use them anyway and doesn’t really need them. I’m sure they can prove your guys were given the order and didn’t take the shot, and they don’t need any subsequent statements your guys might have made in this meeting. Arguably, they knowingly violated his rights if they didn’t read him his rights and that’s an offense under the UCMJ, but that’s a stretch.” Hites waited a minute and then took a step toward the door.

    “It’s just so fucked up, though,” I said. “I mean, how coercive an environment is that? The CG himself is there telling you that everyone else is full of shit, along with the Sergeant Major, the CO, the Doc. And then the guy caves and he’s immediately given the shot while he’s still in frigging tears! That just can’t be right.” I wasn’t sure where I was going, but it all felt wrong to me.

    “It sucks, gents, but welcome to criminal defense in the USMC on the island of Okinawa.” Hitesman slapped me on the shoulder as he went by. “See ya’ Thursday, Barn. You driving this time?” I nodded a couple of times in response and murmured “mmhmm.”

    Justin looked at me after John was gone. He let out a long breath.

    “God, I just love the Marine Corps!” he said in a drill instructor voice. I hated that I didn’t have any answers.

    “Well, how’s Petty Officer Ponder’s case going?” Justin finally asked. “Did his CO ask him to come in and have a chat?” I chuckled slightly at that. But an idea had come to me.

    “Hey, you know what? I’ve got a bunch of anthrax info from Sonnie Bates’s attorney that I’m supposed to look through. Why don’t you have one of your guys submit an Individual Military Counsel request for me? Then, we can put our heads together on one case and then use what we do on that one for our other two separate cases?” Justin nodded.

    “Sure. Would likely save us time individually and let us pool our efforts. Is any of the information helpful?”

    “Yeah, I mean, it looks… thorough, but I’m not going to get my hopes up yet. I have to research what an ‘investigational drug’ is and really dig in on the statute, but it worked for Sonnie Bates, so… I don’t know, maybe it’ll work for our guys.”

    “Sure it will,” Justin deadpanned. This time I couldn’t tell if he was being sarcastic or earnest.

     

    beginning | previous | next

  • The Old Man and Immigration

    Libertarians often believe in what is de facto open borders. But let’s look at the consequences.

    Yes, we are a nation of immigrants, but our current situation is different than it was in the past. The country is suffering from immigration indigestion. The existing laws of the United States now exclude certain classes of immigrants who, we can all understand, would be most undesirable additions to our population. These exclusions have been enforced, and the results have been beneficial; but the excluded classes are extremely limited and do not by any means cover all or even any considerable part of the immigrants whose presence here is undesirable or injurious, nor do they have any adequate effect in properly reducing the great body of immigration to this country. There can be no doubt that there is a very significant and heartfelt desire on the part of the American people to restrict further, and much more extensively than has yet been done, immigration to the United States.

    I needn’t mention the economic side of the general policy of restricting immigration. In this direction the argument is unanswerable. If we have any regard for the welfare, the wages, or the standard of life of American workers, we absolutely must restrict immigration. There is no danger to American workers from the entry of skilled or trained and educated immigrants with an established occupation or pursuit, for immigrants of this class will never seek to lower the American standard of life and wages. On the contrary, they desire the same standard for themselves. But there is an appalling danger to the American wage earner from the flood of low, unskilled, ignorant, immigrant labor which has poured into the country for some years and which not only takes lower wages, but accepts a standard of life and living so low that Americans cannot compete with it. In essence, the current wave of immigrants is merely cheap competition for American workers, and a heavier drain on the welfare system. It has been well documented that reliance on foreign workers in low-wage, low-skill occupations, such as farm work, creates disincentives for employers to improve pay and working conditions for American workers. When employers fail to recruit domestically or to pay wages that meet industry-wide standards, the resulting dependence — even on professionals — may adversely affect both U.S. workers in that occupation and U.S. companies that adhere to appropriate labor standards.

    New arrivals should be limited to our capacity to absorb them into the ranks of good citizenship. America must be kept American. For this purpose, it is necessary to continue a policy of restricted immigration. It would be well to make such immigration of a selective nature with some inspection at the source, and based either on a prior census or upon the record of naturalization. Either method would insure the admission of those with the largest capacity and best intention of becoming citizens.

    To sum up, we have been called the melting pot of the world. We have experienced a situation where it looks as though we have allowed influences to enter our borders that are about to melt the pot in place of us being the melting pot. There has come about a general realization of the fact that the immigrants who have been coming to us in recent years are wholly dissimilar to native-born Americans; that they are unfamiliar and perhaps hostile to self-government, something that has taken us many centuries to acquire. America is also beginning also to feel the pain from the internal ‘foreign colonies’- those groups of aliens, either in city slums or in country districts, who speak a foreign language and live a foreign life, and who want neither to learn our English nor to share our common life. Instead, let’s keep what we have, protect and preserve what we have, make what we have the realization of the dream of those who wrote the Constitution.

     

    (yes, this is a pastiche of contemporary comments from politicians in the early 20th century with some archaisms updated. They argued that Italians, Slavs, Asians, and Jews were qualitatively different than previous immigrants. Thus did half my family perish in Hitler’s concentration camps.)