Source: Human Rights Watch
Senate Should Scrutinize James Comey’s Record on Detainee Abuse
(Washington, DC) – United States
Senate Judiciary Committee members considering James Comey for the next
director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) should question
him on his apparent approval of legal memos authorizing torture, Human
Rights Watch and six other human rights and civil liberties groups said
in a letter today to committee members.
While serving as deputy attorney general from 2003-2005, Comey wrote
that he “concurred” with two legal memoranda that approved the use of
waterboarding, prolonged sleep deprivation, and other forms of torture
and ill-treatment.
“The Bush administration’s ‘torture memos’ sought to evade the clear
prohibitions against torture under US and international law,” said Andrea Prasow,
senior counterterrorism counsel at Human Rights Watch. “The Senate
Judiciary Committee should closely question James Comey about his
apparent endorsement of some of those memos.”
The FBI is the lead federal agency in interrogating suspects and is
responsible for investigating allegations of torture by government
officials. Before voting on Comey’s confirmation, the Senate should
fully examine his past and current views on the use of torture and other
forms of abuse against people in US custody.
In 2004, the Office of the Legal Counsel, which provides legal advice to the executive branch, wrote a memo addressed to Comey that upheld a 2002 “torture memo”
that arguably approved the use of waterboarding and other forms of
torture against Abu Zubaydah, an alleged close aid of Osama Bin Laden.
Comey also “concurred” with a 2005 Office of the Legal Counsel memo
that authorized interrogation methods such as cramped confinement,
wall-standing, water dousing, extended sleep deprivation, and
waterboarding, despite recognizing these techniques as “simply awful” and recommending against their use in combination.
“Comey was at the center of the Justice Department when important
decisions were being made about torture,” Prasow said. “The public has a
right to know what positions he took, and the Judiciary Committee
should demand full disclosure of his role during the confirmation
process.”