Chapter 3
United States v. John M. Poindexter
Navy Vice Adm. John M. Poindexter was appointed as President Reagan's national security adviser on December 4, 1985, succeeding Robert C. McFarlane, whom Poindexter had served under as deputy for two years. Poindexter's White House career ended November 25, 1986, when he was forced to resign in the wake of the public disclosure of the Iran/contra diversion.
Poindexter, Lt. Col. Oliver North and McFarlane were the three individuals Attorney General Edwin Meese III identified on November 25, 1986, as knowledgeable of the diversion. Poindexter's supervision of North and his own participation in the Iran and contra operations were early focuses of Independent Counsel's investigation.
As in the case against North, criminal evidence against Poindexter had to be gathered quickly before he was compelled to testify on Capitol Hill in the summer of 1987 under a grant of limited immunity. Otherwise, the prosecution of Poindexter was likely to be challenged on the grounds that it was derived from or in some way influenced by his immunized congressional testimony.
On March 16, 1988, Poindexter was indicted on seven felony charges arising from his involvement in the Iran/contra affair, as part of a 23-count multi-defendant indictment. He was named with North, retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord and Albert Hakim as a member of the conspiracy to defraud the United States Government by effecting the Iran/contra diversion and other acts.
After the cases were severed and two of the original charges dismissed, Poindexter was tried and convicted in April 1990 of five felonies, including: one count of conspiring to obstruct official inquiries and proceedings, two counts of obstructing Congress, and two counts of false statements to Congress.1 U.S. District Judge Harold H. Greene sentenced him to a six-month prison term. In November 1991, Poindexter's convictions were overturned on appeal. In December 1992, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case.
1 The Poindexter case was tried by Associate Counsel Dan K. Webb, Christian J. Mixter, Howard M. Pearl, and Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter joined the National Security Council staff in June 1981, following a distinguished naval career that included battleship command and high-ranking Pentagon posts. In October 1983 he became deputy to National Security Adviser McFarlane; among his subordinates was North. During Poindexter's one-year tenure as national security adviser, which began in December 1985, he oversaw the Iran/contra operations in which North was directly involved.
In November 1986, as the secret operations were becoming publicly exposed, Poindexter became the senior Administration official responsible for briefing the President's other top advisers about the Iran arms sales. In a series of White House meetings with other officials and members of Congress throughout the month, he repeatedly laid out a false version of the transactions that distanced President Reagan from the legally questionable 1985 arms shipments made through Israel, particularly the November 1985 HAWK-missile transaction.
Although Poindexter was the spokesman, he was not alone responsible for knowing the facts. Virtually every other senior official, including President Reagan, who heard his version of the arms sales in briefings throughout November 1986 had reason to believe it was wrong. Yet no one, according to contemporaneous notes of those briefings, spoke up to correct Poindexter.
Poindexter along with North and others in November 1986 attempted to shred and alter the paper trail reflecting their Iran/contra activities. Among other things, Poindexter destroyed the only existing signed presidential covert-action Finding that was intended to authorize retroactively CIA involvement in the November 1985 HAWKs shipment.
Poindexter and North were less successful in eradicating the computer-message trail of their Iran/contra activities. Poindexter and North often communicated through a special channel that Poindexter, a computer expert, had set up on the NSC computer system. This channel, known as ``Private Blank Check,'' allowed Poindexter and North to relay messages to each other without their being routed through channels in which others on the NSC staff could screen them.
Between November 22 to 29, 1986, North deleted from his computer file 736 messages, and Poindexter deleted 5,012 messages during the same period.2 Despite these deletions, the White House routinely saved back-up tapes containing all data in the system for two weeks to protect against inadvertent loss. When the Iran/contra affair was exposed in late November 1986, the White House Communications Agency, which manages the NSC computer system, retained the back-up tapes dating from November 15. Investigators, therefore, were able to retrieve copies of all messages that were in the Poindexter-North computer files in mid-November 1986 before most of the deletions occurred. These computer messages became important evidence in both the Poindexter and North trials.
2 Williams, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter admitted to many of his activities before the Select Committees in July 1987 under a grant of testimonial immunity, which prevented his admissions from being used against him in any criminal proceeding. Because President Reagan did not testify in that forum, Poindexter was called to answer the question that dominated the hearings: Did the President know about and approve the diversion of the Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras? Poindexter answered no, ``the buck stops here with me.'' 3 He said he deliberately withheld the information from President Reagan because ``I wanted the President to have some deniability so that he would be protected. . . .'' 4
3 Poindexter, Select Committees Testimony, 7/15/87, p. 95.
4 Ibid., p. 101.
Facing a criminal trial, Poindexter confronted a different dilemma: It was no longer a question of protecting the President but defending himself against five felony charges. Before Congress, Poindexter's most significant testimony corroborated President Reagan's repeated denials of awareness of the Iran/contra diversion. In the courtroom, Poindexter mounted a higher-authorization defense, attempting to convince the jury that the President had approved his actions, including those that resulted in criminal charges. Instead of taking the stand in his own defense, however, he called President Reagan to testify.
Pre-Trial Proceedings
U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell in June 1988 ordered that the multi-defendant case against Poindexter, North, Secord and Hakim be severed.5 Following severance, Poindexter's case was transferred to Chief Judge Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr., and then to Judge Greene, who presided over further proceedings.
5 For a more detailed description of the severance of the multi-defendant case, see North chapter.
All of Poindexter's substantive challenges to the validity of the indictment were dismissed before trial. The remaining important issues concerned: (1) the preservation of the conspiracy charge; (2) the resolution of classified-information disputes; (3) the resolution of issues related to Poindexter's immunized congressional testimony, under the ruling known as Kastigar; and (4) the defendant's successful effort to secure trial testimony from former President Reagan.
Preserving and Narrowing the Conspiracy Charge
Problems with classified information led to the dismissal of the central conspiracy charges before the North trial, and similar problems were expected to arise in the case against Poindexter. On June 20, 1989, Independent Counsel moved to eliminate the original broad conspiracy charges based upon the supply of the contras and the diversion and to substantially narrow the charge of conspiracy to violate other substantive criminal statutes, forbidding false statements and obstruction. After filings and oral argument, the court granted the Government's motion.
The charge was refocused on the illegal act of conspiring with North and Secord to conceal activities from Congress. Independent Counsel argued successfully that this narrowing of the conspiracy charge would minimize the classified-information problems that plagued the North prosecution.
Classified Information Issues
The Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA) allowed the trial court effectively to resolve issues involving the use of classified documents and testimony in Poindexter. Judge Greene's supervision of the CIPA process and fruitful negotiations between counsel for the Government and Poindexter resolved most disputes with a minimum of delay.
In contrast to North, there was no prolonged or significant litigation concerning the form or scope of Poindexter's CIPA notices to the court to disclose classified information at trial. Between November 27, 1989, and March 13, 1990, Poindexter served 11 such notices, including eight that listed classified documents he wanted to use at trial, two describing possible classified testimony, and one focused solely on information he wanted to elicit at the deposition of President Reagan.
Judge Greene ordered that all differences over classified information be negotiated between the parties before being brought before the court. Judge Greene held six closed CIPA hearings before the trial began and supplemented those with several shorter hearings during trial. Most of his rulings on the relevance and admissibility of classified information, and on the adequacy of substitutions proposed by the Government, were made from the bench.
Taken together, Poindexter's CIPA notices listed approximately 1,200 documents, only a small fraction of which were ultimately introduced at trial. Most classified information was covered by Government stipulations to certain facts and other unclassified substitutions. This allowed the trial to proceed smoothly, without the conflicts that complicated North or the case against former CIA station chief Joseph F. Fernandez, which was dismissed due to classified-information problems.6
6 See Fernandez chapter.
Kastigar Proceedings
Poindexter was compelled under a grant of use immunity to testify in 1987 before the Select Committees investigating Iran/contra. As did the other Iran/contra defendants who gave immunized testimony before Congress, Poindexter moved to dismiss the indictment on the theory that it violated the standards enunciated in Kastigar v. United States,7 arguing that his immunized testimony was used against him in the Grand Jury and at trial. This argument proved unsuccessful on the trial level but ultimately prevailed in the Court of Appeals.
7 406 U.S. 411 (1972).
Before their trials were severed, Poindexter moved jointly with North and Hakim, who also had received immunity to testify before Congress, to have the charges against them dismissed on the ground that the evidence against them was tainted by their immunized testimony. Judge Gesell denied that motion. However, in deference to defense claims that they would use one another's possibly exculpatory immunized testimony, Judge Gesell in June 1988 severed the trials.
Poindexter renewed his Kastigar motion before Judge Greene in August 1989. After briefing and argument,8 the court ordered that two evidentiary hearings be held. At the first, the court heard testimony from Associate Counsel Dan K. Webb and Howard M. Pearl concerning their exposure to Poindexter's immunized testimony before joining the Office of Independent Counsel. Webb and Pearl joined the OIC staff in 1989 and had not, before their appointments, been subject to OIC's procedures to insulate itself from Poindexter's immunized testimony. Judge Greene found their exposure to Poindexter's testimony to be insignificant and allowed both attorneys to participate in the trial.
8 The Poindexter case was tried before the Court of Appeals ruled in North that witness hearings were necessary to permit the trial of an immunized defendant.
The second set of court hearings concerned trial witnesses, whose testimony may have been tainted by Poindexter's immunized testimony. Judge Greene accepted Judge Gesell's earlier review of Grand Jury witnesses and declined to re-examine his findings. He also refused to dismiss the indictment on the basis of potential grand juror exposure to the immunized testimony.
Regarding trial witnesses, the court took extensive measures to ensure that Poindexter's immunized statements were not used against him. The court ordered the Government to make an ex parte submission (later disclosed to Poindexter) of all statements made by potential trial witnesses before Poindexter gave his immunized testimony before Congress in July 1987. The court found that all of the proposed testimony of most of the potential witnesses had been memorialized before Poindexter appeared publicly on July 15, 1987, and therefore was not tainted.
As for those witnesses whose expected trial testimony would not be limited to the evidence OIC had sealed with the court prior to Poindexter's immunized testimony, Judge Greene required additional information. He concluded that the Government had failed to establish that five of its potential witnesses were free of taint and ordered them to appear at a pre-trial hearing. Two of the three witnesses who ultimately appeared at trial credibly affirmed that their anticipated testimony would not be influenced in any way by Poindexter's immunized testimony; the third, North, refused to do so.
North stated at the pre-trial hearing that he was unable, with respect to any subject, to distinguish what he had personally done, observed or experienced from what he had learned from watching Poindexter's immunized testimony.9 As for Poindexter's destruction of the December 1985 presidential covert-action Finding -- important evidence in the obstruction of Congress -- North acknowledged that he had seen Poindexter destroy a piece of paper but insisted that he did not know it was a Finding until Poindexter stated that fact in his immunized testimony before Congress.
9 North Testimony, Poindexter Pre-trial Hearing, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
The court rejected North's pre-trial testimony as not believable. North, the court found, ``appears to have been embarked at that time [at the hearing] upon the calculated course of attempting to assist his former colleague and co-defendant . . . by prevaricating on various issues . . .'' 10
10 Opinion, Poindexter, 3/8/90, p. 9.
In a separate post-trial ruling, the court added that as far as the destruction of the Finding was concerned, North's testimony at his own trial about the event was inconsistent with his claim that he could not remember it independent of Poindexter's immunized testimony. The court found it ``inherently incredible'' that North did not remember ``his participation in an event he witnessed first hand and that was as dramatic, indeed historic, as the tearing up of an extremely rare Presidential Finding.'' 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
The Reagan Subpoena
One of the most notable aspects of the Poindexter case was the defendant's successful attempt to call former President Reagan to testify at his trial by videotaped deposition.
Poindexter first sought presidential and vice presidential notes from OIC as part of his pre-trial discovery requests. In a pre-trial hearing on September 6, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys told the court that presidential notes would reflect that Poindexter informed the President of his denials to Congress in 1986 of NSC activity in support of the contras, and that the notes would ``show what the President was told about what was being done to support the contras in Central America, and the President's consent and ratification and approval of that activity.'' 12 In seeking vice presidential notes, Poindexter's attorneys told the court that ``anytime he [Bush] missed a meeting, Admiral Poindexter briefed him on it afterwards.'' 13
12 Robinson, Poindexter Pre-trial Hearing, 9/6/89, p. 18.
13 Ibid., p. 19.
The court, before making a decision on whether to compel OIC to produce these documents, on September 11, 1989, directed Poindexter to file an ex parte memo explaining precisely how these documents would assist his defense.14 It required from Independent Counsel a legal memorandum concerning its responsibility to produce presidential and vice presidential documents not in OIC's possession.
14 Opinion, Poindexter, 9/11/89, p. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Condamner les criminels condamnés aux Etats-Unis
Automatically translated into French thanks to WorldLingo
Chapitre 3
Etats-Unis v. John M. Vice
Adm de marine de Poindexter. John M. Poindexter a été nommé en tant que conseiller de sécurité nationale du Président Reagan le 4 décembre 1985, réussissant Robert C. McFarlane, que Poindexter avait servi dessous de député pendant deux années. La carrière de la Maison Blanche de Poindexter a fini le 25 novembre 1986, quand il a été forcé de démissionner à la suite de la révélation publique de l'Iran/contre la déviation.
Poindexter, lieutenant. Colonne Le nord et le McFarlane d'Oliver étaient l'Attorney General Edwin Meese III de trois individus identifié le 25 novembre 1986, comme bien informé de la déviation. La surveillance de Poindexter du nord et sa propre participation en Iran et contre des opérations étaient les centres tôt de la recherche de l'avocat-conseil indépendant.
Comme dans le point de droit contre le nord, l'évidence criminelle contre Poindexter a dû être recueillie rapidement avant qu'il ait été obligé de témoigner sur Capitol Hill en été de 1987 sous une concession d'immunité limitée. Autrement, la poursuite de Poindexter était susceptible d'être défiée parce qu'elle a été dérivée de ou d'une manière quelconque influencée par son témoignage congressionnel immunisé.
Le 16 mars 1988, Poindexter a été accusé sur sept frais de crime résultant de sa participation en Iran/contre l'affaire, en tant qu'élément d'un acte d'accusation de multi-défendeur de 23 comptes. Il a été appelé avec le nord, commandant retiré de l'Armée de l'Air. Générateur. Richard V. Secord et Albert Hakim en tant que membre de la conspiration à frauder le gouvernement des Etats-Unis en effectuant l'Iran/contre la déviation et autre agit.
Après que les cas aient été divisés et deux des frais originaux ont été écartés, Poindexter a été essayé et condamné en avril 1990 de cinq crimes, incluant : un compte de conspiration pour obstruer des enquêtes et des démarches officielles, deux comptes d'obstruer le congrès, et deux comptes de rapports faux à Congress.1 États-Unis Juge Harold H. de zone. Greene l'a condamné à une limite de six mois de prison. En novembre 1991, les convictions de Poindexter ont été retournées sur l'appel. En décembre 1992, les États-Unis Cour suprême refusée pour passer en revue le cas.
1 le cas de Poindexter a été essayé par des avocats-conseils Dan K. d'associé. Webb, chrétien J. Mixter, Howard M. Perle, et Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter a joint le personnel du Conseil de sécurité nationale en juin 1981, suivant une carrière navale distinguée qui a inclus la commande de cuirassé et les poteaux du haut rang du Pentagone. En octobre 1983 il est devenu député au conseiller McFarlane de sécurité nationale ; parmi ses subalternes était du nord. Pendant la tenure d'une année de Poindexter en tant que conseiller de sécurité nationale, qui a commencé en décembre 1985, il a surveillé l'Iran/contre les opérations dans lesquelles le nord a été directement impliqué.
En novembre 1986, pendant que les opérations secrètes devenaient publiquement exposées, Poindexter est allé bien au fonctionnaire aîné d'administration responsable de donner des instructions d'autres conseillers supérieurs du président au sujet des ventes d'armes de l'Iran. Dans une série de réunions de la Maison Blanche avec d'autres fonctionnaires et membres du congrès tout au long du mois, il a à plusieurs reprises présenté une version fausse des transactions qui ont distancé le Président Reagan des 1985 cargaisons des armes légalement incertaines faites par l'Israel, en particulier la transaction de Faucon-missile du novembre 1985.
Bien que Poindexter ait été le porte-parole, il n'était pas seul responsable de savoir les faits. Pratiquement chaque autre haut fonctionnaire, y compris le Président Reagan, qui a entendu que sa version des ventes d'armes dans les briefings tout au long du novembre 1986 a eu la raison de la croire avaient tort. Pourtant personne, selon les notes contemporaines de ces briefings, rai jusqu'à Poindexter correct.
Poindexter avec le nord et d'autres en novembre 1986 essayés pour déchiqueter et changer la traînée de papier reflétant le leur Iran/contre des activités. Entre autres, Poindexter a détruit la seule conclusion présidentielle signée existante de secret-action qui a été prévue pour autoriser rétroactivement la participation de CIA dans l'expédition de fauconx du novembre 1985.
Poindexter et nord étaient moins réussis en supprimant la traînée d'ordinateur-message du leur Iran/contre des activités. Poindexter et nord ont souvent communiqué par un canal spécial que Poindexter, un informaticien, avait établi sur le système informatique de NSC. Ce canal, connu sous le nom de « contrôle blanc privé, » Poindexter permis et nord pour transmettre par relais des messages entre eux sans leur étant conduits par les canaux en lesquels d'autres sur le personnel de NSC pourraient les examiner.
Entre le 22 au 29 novembre 1986, le nord a supprimé de ses messages du fichier électronique 736, et Poindexter a supprimé 5.012 messages pendant le même period.2 en dépit de ces suppressions, les bandes par habitude sauvées de support de la Maison Blanche contenant toutes les données dans le système pendant deux semaines pour se protéger contre la perte négligente. Quand l'Iran/contre l'affaire a été exposé dans le défunt novembre 1986, l'agence de communications de la Maison Blanche, qui contrôle le système informatique de NSC, a maintenu les bandes de secours datant à partir du 15 novembre. Les investigateurs pouvaient, donc, rechercher des copies de tous les messages qui étaient dans les fichiers informatiques de Poindexter-Nord dans le mi novembre 1986 avant que la plupart des suppressions se soient produites. Ces messages d'ordinateur sont devenus évidence importante dans le Poindexter et des épreuves du nord.
2 Williams, témoignage d'essai de Poindexter, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter admis à plusieurs de ses activités avant que les comités choisis en juillet 1987 sous une concession d'immunité testimoniale, qui a empêché ses admissions d'être employé contre lui dans la démarche criminelle. Puisque le Président Reagan n'a pas témoigné du fait le forum, Poindexter s'est appelé pour répondre à la question qui a dominé les auditions : Le président a-t-il su et est-ce qu'approuver la déviation des ventes d'armes de l'Iran procède aux contras ? Poindexter a répondu au non, « les arrêts de mâle ici avec moi. » 3 qu'il a dits il a délibérément retenu l'information au Président Reagan parce que ``j'ai voulu que le président eût un certain deniability de sorte qu'il soit protégé. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, témoignage choisi de comités, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Faisant face à une épreuve criminelle, Poindexter a confronté un dilemme différent : Ce n'était plus une question de protéger le président mais se défendre contre cinq frais de crime. Devant le congrès, le témoignage le plus significatif de Poindexter démentis répétés du Président Reagan corroboré de la conscience de l'Iran/contre la déviation. Dans l'auditoire de tribunal, Poindexter a monté une défense de haut-autorisation, essayant de convaincre le jury que le président avait approuvé ses actions, y compris ceux qui ont eu comme conséquence les frais criminels. Au lieu de prendre le stand dans sa propre défense, cependant, il a appelé le Président Reagan pour témoigner.
Démarches Pre-Trial
États-Unis Juge Gerhard A. de zone. Gesell a en juin 1988 commandé que la caisse de multi-défendeur contre Poindexter, nord, Secord et Hakim soit severed.5 après séparation, le cas de Poindexter a été transféré au juge en chef Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr., et juger alors Greene, qui a présidé démarches d'excédent d'autres.
5 pour une description plus détaillée de la séparation de la caisse de multi-défendeur, voir le chapitre du nord.
Tous les défis substantifs de Poindexter à la validité de l'acte d'accusation ont été écartés avant épreuve. Les questions importantes restantes sont concernées : (1) la conservation de la charge de conspiration ; (2) la résolution des conflits de la classifier-information ; (3) la résolution des questions liées au témoignage congressionnel immunisé de Poindexter, selon régner connu sous le nom de Kastigar ; et (4) l'effort réussi du défendeur de fixer le témoignage d'essai de l'ancien Président Reagan.
La préservation et le rétrécissement des problèmes de charge
de conspiration avec des informations secrètes ont mené au renvoi des frais centraux de conspiration avant l'épreuve du nord, et on s'est attendu à ce que des problèmes semblables surgissent dans le point de droit contre Poindexter. Le 20 juin 1989, les avocats-conseils indépendants se sont déplacés pour éliminer les larges frais originaux de conspiration basés sur l'approvisionnement en contras et déviation et pour rétrécir sensiblement la charge de la conspiration pour violer les autres statuts criminels substantifs, rapports faux menaçants et obstruction. Après des classements et argument oral, la cour a accordé le mouvement du gouvernement.
La charge a été refocalisée sur l'acte illégal de la conspiration avec le nord et le Secord pour cacher des activités du congrès. Les avocats-conseils indépendants ont argué du fait avec succès que ce rétrécissement de la charge de conspiration réduirait au minimum les problèmes de la classifier-information qui ont infesté la poursuite du nord.
Les questions classifiées de l'information que
les procédures classifiées de l'information agissent (CIPA) ont permis à la cour d'essai efficacement de résoudre des questions comportant l'utilisation des documents et du témoignage classifiés dans Poindexter. Jugez la surveillance de Greene du processus de CIPA et les négociations fructueuses entre les avocats-conseils pour le gouvernement et le Poindexter résolus la plupart des conflits avec un minimum de retardent.
Contrairement au nord, il n'y avait aucune prolongée ou le litige significatif au sujet de la forme ou de la portée des notifications du CIPA de Poindexter à la cour de révéler a classifié l'information à l'épreuve. Entre les 27 novembre 1989 et 13 mars 1990, Poindexter a servi 11 telles notifications, y compris le témoignage huit que les documents classifiés énumérés il ont voulu employer à l'épreuve, deux classifié possible décrivant, et une concentrée seulement sur l'information qu'il a voulu obtenir au dépôt du Président Reagan.
Jugez Greene a commandé que toutes les différences que l'excédent a classifié l'information soient négociées entre les parties avant d'être apporté devant la cour. Jugez Greene a tenu six auditions clôturées de CIPA avant l'épreuve a commencé et a complété ceux avec plusieurs auditions plus courtes pendant l'épreuve. La plupart de ses actes sur la pertinence et l'admissibilité d'informations secrètes, et sur l'adéquation des substitutions proposées par le gouvernement, ont été faites à partir du mettre hors jeu.
Prises ensemble, les notices du CIPA de Poindexter ont énuméré approximativement 1.200 documents, seulement une petite fraction dont ont été finalement présentés à l'épreuve. La plupart des informations secrètes ont été couvertes par des conditions de Government à certains faits et à d'autres substitutions non classifiées. Ceci a permis à l'épreuve de procéder sans à-coup, sans conflits qui ont compliqué le nord ou le point de droit contre l'ancienne station Joseph en chef F. de CIA. Fernandez, qui était dû écarté à la classifier-information problems.6
6 voient le chapitre de Fernandez.
Des démarches Poindexter
de Kastigar ont été obligées sous une concession d'immunité d'utilisation de témoigner en 1987 devant les comités choisis étudiant l'Iran/contre. De même que l'autre Iran/contre les défendeurs qui ont donné le témoignage immunisé devant le congrès, Poindexter déplacé pour écarter l'acte d'accusation sur la théorie qu'elle a violé les normes déclarées dans Kastigar v. Les Etats-Unis, 7 arguant du fait que son témoignage immunisé a été employé contre lui dans le jury grand et à l'épreuve. Cet argument a prouvé non réussi au niveau d'essai mais a finalement régné dans la cour des appels.
les 7 406 États-Unis 411 (1972).
Avant que leurs épreuves aient été divisées, Poindexter s'est déplacé en commun avec le nord et Hakim, qui également avait reçu l'immunité pour témoigner devant le congrès, pour avoir les frais contre eux a écarté pour la raison que l'évidence contre eux a été corrompue par leur témoignage immunisé. Le juge Gesell a nié ce mouvement. Cependant, par la déférence pour la défense réclame qu'ils emploieraient probablement le témoignage immunisé justificatif de chacun, juge que Gesell ont en juin 1988 divisé les épreuves.
Poindexter a remplacé son mouvement de Kastigar avant juge Greene en août 1989. Après le briefing et l'argument, 8 la cour ont commandé que deux auditions probatoires soient tenues. Au premier, la cour a entendu le témoignage des avocats-conseils Dan K. d'associé. Webb et Howard M. Perlez au sujet de leur exposition au témoignage immunisé de Poindexter avant de joindre l'Office des avocats-conseils indépendants. Webb et perle ont joint le personnel d'OIC en 1989 et ne l'ont pas eu, avant leurs rendez-vous, été sujet aux procédures d'OIC pour s'isoler du témoignage immunisé de Poindexter. Jugez Greene a trouvé leur exposition au témoignage de Poindexter pour être insignifiant et a permis aux deux mandataires de participer à l'épreuve.
8 le cas de Poindexter ont été essayés devant la cour des appels régnés dans le nord que les auditions de témoin étaient nécessaires pour permettre l'épreuve d'un défendeur immunisé.
Le deuxième ensemble d'auditions de cour est concerné les témoins d'essai, dont le témoignage a pu avoir été corrompu par le témoignage immunisé de Poindexter's. Un examen plus tôt de Gesell de juge admis par Greene de juge des témoins de fortune grands et refusé pour examiner de nouveau ses résultats. Il a également refusé d'écarter l'acte d'accusation sur la base de l'exposition grande potentielle de juré au témoignage immunisé.
Concernant les témoins d'essai, la cour a pris des mesures étendues de s'assurer que les rapports immunisés de Poindexter n'ont pas été employés contre lui. La cour a commandé le gouvernement pour faire une soumission ex de parte (plus tard révélée à Poindexter) de tous les rapports faits par les témoins d'essai potentiels avant que Poindexter ait donné son témoignage immunisé devant le congrès en juillet 1987. La cour a constaté que tout les témoignage proposé de la plupart des témoins potentiels avait été memorialized avant que Poindexter soit apparu publiquement le 15 juillet 1987, et donc n'a pas été corrompu.
Quant à ces témoins dont ont prévu que le témoignage d'essai ne serait pas limité à l'évidence OIC avait scellé avec la cour avant le témoignage immunisé de Poindexter, l'information additionnelle requise par Greene de juge. Il a conclu que le gouvernement n'avait pas établi que cinq de ses témoins potentiels étaient exempts de traces et leur avait passé commande à apparaître à une audition pre-trial. Deux des trois témoins qui finalement sont apparus à l'épreuve credibly ont affirmé que leur témoignage prévu ne serait pas influencé de quelque façon par le témoignage immunisé de Poindexter's ; le troisième, nord, refusé pour faire ainsi.
Nord indiqué à l'audition pre-trial qu'il ne pouvait pas, en ce qui concerne n'importe quel sujet, distinguer ce qu'il avait personnellement fait, observé ou éprouvé de ce qu'il avait appris d'observer le testimony.9 immunisé de Poindexter quant à la destruction de Poindexter de la conclusion présidentielle de secret-action du décembre 1985 -- évidence importante dans l'obstruction du congrès -- Le nord a reconnu qu'il avait vu Poindexter détruire un morceau de papier mais insistée sur le fait qu'il n'a pas su lui était une conclusion jusqu'à ce que Poindexter ait déclaré ce fait dans son témoignage immunisé devant le congrès.
9 témoignage du nord, audition Pre-trial de Poindexter, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
La cour a rejeté le témoignage pre-trial du nord comme non crédible. Le nord, la cour trouvée, ``semble avoir été embarqué à ce moment-là [à l'audition] sur le cours calculé d'essayer d'aider son anciens collègue et Co-défendeur. . . par la tergiversation sur de diverses questions. . . opinion 10
, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. du '' 10. 9.
Dans une poteau-épreuve séparée régnant, la cour a ajouté qu'en ce qui concerne la destruction de la conclusion, le témoignage du nord à sa propre épreuve au sujet de l'événement était contradictoire avec sa réclamation qu'il ne pourrait pas se rappeler l'indépendant du témoignage immunisé de Poindexter. La cour l'a trouvé « en soi incroyable » que le nord ne s'est pas rappelé « sa participation à un événement qu'il était témoin de première main et cela était comme dramatique, en effet historique, en tant que déchirer d'une conclusion présidentielle extrêmement rare. » 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
La citation une
de Reagan des aspects les plus notables du cas de Poindexter était la tentative réussie du défendeur d'appeler l'ancien Président Reagan pour témoigner à son épreuve par le dépôt enregistré en vidéo.
Notes présidentielles présidentielles de Poindexter et vice d'abord cherchées d'OIC en tant qu'élément de ses demandes de découverte pre-trial. Dans une audition pre-trial le 6 septembre 1989, les mandataires de Poindexter ont dit à la cour que les notes présidentielles refléteraient ce Poindexter ont informé le président de ses démentis au congrès dans 1986 de l'activité de NSC à l'appui des contras, et que les notes « montreraient ce que le président a été informé sur ce qu'était fait pour soutenir les contras en Amérique Centrale, et le consentement du président et la ratification et l'approbation de cette activité. » 12 en cherchant les notes présidentielles vice, les mandataires de Poindexter ont dit la cour que « n'importe quand il [Bush] a manqué une réunion, amiral Poindexter l'ai donné des instructions là-dessus après. » 13
12 Robinson, audition Pre-trial de Poindexter, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
La cour, avant de prendre une décision dessus si contraindre OIC pour produire ces documents, le 11 septembre 1989, a dirigé Poindexter pour classer une note ex de parte expliquant avec précision comment ces documents aideraient son defense.14 qu'elle a exigé des avocats-conseils indépendants un mémorandum légal au sujet de sa responsabilité de produire les documents présidentiels présidentiels et vice pas en possession d'OIC.
14 opinion, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Condenar criminales condenados en los Estados Unidos
Automatically translated into Spanish thanks to WorldLingo
Capítulo 3
Estados Unidos v. Juan M. Vicio
Adm de la marina de guerra de Poindexter. Juan M. Poindexter fue designado como consejero de la seguridad nacional de presidente Reagan el 4 de diciembre de 1985, teniendo éxito a Roberto C. McFarlane, que Poindexter había servido debajo como diputado por dos años. La carrera blanca de la casa de Poindexter terminó el 25 de noviembre de 1986, cuando lo forzaron dimitir como consecuencia del acceso público del Irán/contra la diversión.
Poindexter, teniente. Columna El norte y McFarlane de Oliver eran el Procurador General de la República Edwin Meese III de tres individuos identificado el 25 de noviembre de 1986, como bien informado de la diversión. La supervisión de Poindexter del norte y su propia participación en el Irán y contra operaciones eran focos tempranos de la investigación independiente del consejo.
Como en el caso en contra de la evidencia del norte, criminal contra Poindexter tuvo que ser recolectado rápidamente antes de que a le obligaran que atestiguara en Capitol Hill en el verano de 1987 bajo concesión de la inmunidad limitada. Si no, el procesamiento de Poindexter era probable ser desafiado considerando que fue derivado de o de cierta manera influenciado por su testimonio del congreso inmunizado.
El 16 de marzo de 1988, Poindexter fue procesado en siete cargas del crimen que se presentaban de su implicación en el Irán/contra asunto, como parte de una acusación del multi-demandado de 23 cuentas. Lo nombraron con el norte, comandante jubilado de la fuerza aérea. Generador. Richard V. Secord y Albert Hakim como miembro de la conspiración a defraudar el gobierno de Estados Unidos efectuando el Irán/contra la diversión y otra actúa.
Después de que los casos fueran separados y dos de las cargas originales fueron despedidos, Poindexter fue intentado y condenado en abril de 1990 por cinco crímenes, incluyendo: una cuenta de conspiración obstruir investigaciones y procedimientos oficiales, dos cuentas de obstruir a congreso, y dos cuentas de declaraciones falsas a Congress.1 los E.E.U.U. Juez Harold H. del districto. Greene lo condenó a un término de seis meses de la prisión. En noviembre de 1991, las convicciones de Poindexter fueron volcadas en súplica. En diciembre de 1992, los E.E.U.U. Tribunal Supremo declinado para repasar el caso.
1 el caso de Poindexter fue intentado por los consejos Dan K. del asociado. Webb, cristiano J. Mixter, Howard M. Perla, y Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter ensambló a personal del consejo de la seguridad nacional en junio de 1981, siguiendo una carrera naval distinguida que incluyó los postes del pentágono del comando y de la alto-graduación del acorazado. En octubre de 1983 él hizo diputado al consejero McFarlane de la seguridad nacional; entre sus subordinados era del norte. Durante el arrendamiento anual de Poindexter como consejero de la seguridad nacional, que comenzó en diciembre de 1985, él supervisó el Irán/contra las operaciones en las cuales el norte estuvo implicado directamente.
En noviembre de 1986, como las operaciones secretas se exponían público, Poindexter sintió bien al funcionario mayor de la administración responsable de resumir a otros consejeros superiores del presidente sobre las ventas de armas de Irán. En una serie de las reuniones blancas de la casa con otros funcionarios y miembros del congreso a través del mes, él presentó en varias ocasiones a una versión falsa de las transacciones que distanciaron a presidente Reagan de los 1985 envíos de brazos legalmente cuestionables hechos a través de Israel, particularmente la transacción del Halcón-misil del noviembre de 1985.
Aunque Poindexter era el portavoz, él no era responsable solo de saber los hechos. Virtualmente cada otro alto funcionario, incluyendo presidente Reagan, que oyó que su versión de las ventas de armas en informes a través del noviembre de 1986 tenía razón de creerla eran incorrectos. Con todo nadie, según las notas contemporáneas de esos informes, rayo hasta Poindexter correcto.
Poindexter junto con el norte y otros procurados en noviembre de 1986 para destrozar y para alterar el rastro de papel que refleja su Irán/contra actividades. Entre otras cosas, Poindexter destruyó único encontrar presidencial firmado existente de la secreto-acción que fue pensado para autorizar retroactivo la implicación de la Cia en el envío de los halcones del noviembre de 1985.
Poindexter y el norte eran menos acertados en la supresión del rastro del computadora-mensaje de su Irán/contra actividades. Poindexter y el norte se comunicaron a menudo a través de un canal especial que Poindexter, especialista en computadoras, había instalado en el sistema informático de NSC. Este canal, conocido como el “cheque en blanco privado,” Poindexter permitido y norte para retransmitir mensajes el uno al otro sin su siendo encaminado a través de los canales en los cuales otros en el personal de NSC podrían defenderlos.
Entre del 22 al 29 de noviembre de 1986, el norte suprimido de sus mensajes del fichero electrónico 736, y Poindexter suprimió 5.012 mensajes durante el mismo period.2 a pesar de estas canceladuras, el respaldo rutinariamente ahorrado blanco de la casa graba contener todos los datos en el sistema por dos semanas para proteger contra pérdida inadvertida. Cuando el Irán/contra asunto fue expuesto en el último noviembre de 1986, la agencia blanca de las comunicaciones de la casa, que maneja el sistema informático de NSC, conservó las cintas de reserva que fechaban a partir del 15 de noviembre. Los investigadores, por lo tanto, podían recuperar las copias de todos los mensajes que estaban en los ficheros informáticos del Poindexter-Norte en el noviembre de 1986 mediados de antes de que la mayor parte de ocurrieran las canceladuras. Estos mensajes de la computadora se convirtieron en evidencia importante en el Poindexter y los ensayos del norte.
2 Williams, testimonio de ensayo de Poindexter, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter admitido a muchas de sus actividades antes de que los comités selectos en julio de 1987 bajo concesión de la inmunidad testimonial, que evitó que sus admisiones fueran utilizadas contra él en el procedimiento criminal. Porque presidente Reagan no atestiguó en que el foro, Poindexter fue llamado para contestar a la pregunta que dominó las audiencias: ¿El presidente sabía alrededor y aprobar la diversión de las ventas de armas de Irán procede a los contras? Poindexter contestó a no, “las paradas del buck aquí con mí.” 3 que él dijo él retuvo deliberadamente la información de presidente Reagan porque ``quisiera que el presidente tuviera algún deniability de modo que lo protegieran. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, testimonio selecto de los comités, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Haciendo frente a un proceso penal, Poindexter enfrentó un diverso dilema: Era no más una cuestión de proteger al presidente pero de defenderse contra cinco cargas del crimen. Antes de congreso, el testimonio más significativo de Poindexter negaciones repetidas de presidente Reagan corroborado del conocimiento del Irán/contra la diversión. En la sala de tribunal, Poindexter montó una defensa de la alto-autorización, procurando convencer al jurado que el presidente hubiera aprobado sus acciones, incluyendo los que dieron lugar a cargas criminales. En vez de tomar el soporte en su propia defensa, sin embargo, él llamó a presidente Reagan para atestiguar.
Procedimientos Pre-Trial
los E.E.U.U. Juez Gerhard A. del districto. Gesell pidió en junio de 1988 que la caja del multi-demandado contra Poindexter, norte, Secord y Hakim sea severed.5 después de la separación, el caso de Poindexter fue transferido al principal juez Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr., y entonces juzgar a Greene, que presidió otros procedimientos del excedente.
5 para una descripción más detallada de la separación de la caja del multi-demandado, vea el capítulo del norte.
Todos los desafíos substantivos de Poindexter a la validez de la acusación fueron despedidos antes de ensayo. Las ediciones importantes restantes trataron: (1) la preservación de la carga de la conspiración; (2) la resolución de la clasificar-información disputa; (3) la resolución de las ediciones relacionadas con el testimonio del congreso inmunizado de Poindexter, bajo decisión conocida como Kastigar; y (4) el esfuerzo acertado del demandado de asegurar el testimonio de ensayo de presidente anterior Reagan.
Preservar y enangostar los problemas de la carga
de la conspiración con la información clasificada condujeron al despido de las cargas centrales de la conspiración antes del ensayo del norte, y se esperaba que los problemas similares se presentaran en el caso en contra de Poindexter. El 20 de junio de 1989, los consejos independientes se movieron para eliminar las amplias cargas originales de la conspiración basadas sobre la fuente de los contras y de la diversión y para enangostar substancialmente la carga de conspiración para violar los otros estatutos criminales substantivos, declaraciones falsas de prohibición y obstrucción. Después de limaduras y de la discusión oral, la corte concedió el movimiento del gobierno.
La carga era refocused en el acto ilegal de la conspiración con el norte y Secord encubrir actividades del congreso. Los consejos independientes discutieron con éxito que el este enangostar de la carga de la conspiración redujera al mínimo los problemas de la clasificar-información que plagaron el procesamiento del norte.
La información clasificada publica
los procedimientos clasificados de la información actúa (CIPA) permitió que la corte de ensayo con eficacia resolviera las ediciones que implican el uso de documentos y del testimonio clasificados en Poindexter. Juzgue la supervisión de Greene del proceso de CIPA y las negociaciones fructuosas entre los consejos para el gobierno y Poindexter resueltos la mayoría de los conflictos con un mínimo de retrasan.
En contraste con el norte, no había haber prolongado o el pleito significativo referente la forma o al alcance de los avisos de CIPA de Poindexter a la corte de divulgar clasificó la información en el ensayo. Entre el 27 de noviembre de 1989 y 13 de marzo de 1990, Poindexter sirvió 11 tales avisos, incluyendo el testimonio clasificado posible que describía ocho que los documentos clasificados mencionados él desearon utilizar en el ensayo, dos, y uno centrado solamente en la información que él deseó sacar en la deposición de presidente Reagan.
Juzgue a Greene pidió que todas las diferencias que el excedente clasificó la información estén negociadas entre los partidos antes de ser traído antes de la corte. Juzgue a Greene llevó a cabo seis audiencias cerradas de CIPA antes del ensayo comenzó y suplió ésos con varias audiencias más cortas durante ensayo. La mayor parte de sus actos en la importancia y la admisibilidad de la información clasificada, y en la suficiencia de las substituciones propuestas por el gobierno, fueron hechos del banco.
Tomados juntos, los avisos de CIPA de Poindexter enumeraron aproximadamente 1.200 documentos, sólo una fracción pequeña de los cuales fue introducida en última instancia en el ensayo. La mayoría de la información clasificada fue cubierta por las estipulaciones de Government a ciertos hechos y a otras substituciones sin clasificar. Esto permitió que el ensayo procediera suavemente, sin los conflictos que complicaron el norte o el caso en contra de la estación anterior principal José F. de la Cia. Fernandez, que era despedido debido a la clasificar-información problems.6
6 ve el capítulo de Fernandez.
Se obligó a los procedimientos
Poindexter de Kastigar bajo concesión de la inmunidad del uso que atestiguaran en 1987 ante los comités selectos que investigaban Irán/contra. Al igual que el otro Irán/contra los demandados que dieron testimonio inmunizado antes de congreso, Poindexter movido para despedir la acusación en la teoría que violó los estándares declarados en Kastigar v. Estados Unidos, 7 que discuten que su testimonio inmunizado fuera utilizado contra él en el jurado magnífico y en el ensayo. Esta discusión probó fracasado en el nivel de ensayo pero prevaleció en última instancia en el tribunal de apelación.
los 7 406 E.E.U.U. 411 (1972).
Antes de que sus ensayos fueran separados, Poindexter se movió en común con el norte y Hakim, que también había recibido inmunidad para atestiguar antes de congreso, para tener las cargas contra ellos despidió en la tierra que la evidencia contra ellos fue corrompida por su testimonio inmunizado. El juez Gesell negó ese movimiento. Sin embargo, en respeto a la defensa demanda que utilizarían uno - posiblemente el testimonio inmunizado justificativo de otra persona, juez Gesell separó en junio de 1988 los ensayos.
Poindexter renovó su movimiento de Kastigar antes del juez Greene en agosto de 1989. Después del informe y de la discusión, 8 la corte pidieron que dos audiencias evidentiary estén llevadas a cabo. En el primer, la corte oyó testimonio de los consejos Dan K. del asociado. Webb y Howard M. Aljofare referente a su exposición al testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter antes de ensamblar la oficina de consejos independientes. Webb y la perla ensamblaron a personal de OIC en 1989 y no lo tenían, antes de sus citas, sido conforme a los procedimientos de OIC aislarse del testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter. Juzgue a Greene encontró su exposición al testimonio de Poindexter para ser insignificante y permitió que ambos abogados participaran en el ensayo.
8 el caso de Poindexter fueron intentados antes del tribunal de apelación gobernada en el norte que las audiencias del testigo eran necesarias permitir el ensayo de un demandado inmunizado.
El segundo sistema de audiencias de corte se refirió a los testigos de ensayo, que testimonio se pudo haber corrompido por el testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter. El juez Greene aceptó la revisión anterior de Gesell del juez de testigos del jurado magníficos y declinó reexaminar sus resultados. Él también rechazó despedir la acusación en base de la exposición magnífica potencial del miembro del jurado al testimonio inmunizado.
Con respecto a los testigos de ensayo, la corte tomó medidas extensas de asegurarse de que las declaraciones inmunizadas de Poindexter no fueron utilizadas contra él. La corte pidió el gobierno para hacer una sumisión ex del parte (divulgada más adelante a Poindexter) de todas las declaraciones hechas por los testigos de ensayo potenciales antes de que Poindexter diera su testimonio inmunizado antes de congreso en julio de 1987. La corte encontró que todo el testimonio propuesto la mayor parte de de los testigos potenciales había estado memorialized antes de que apareciera Poindexter público el 15 de julio de 1987, y por lo tanto no fue corrompido.
En cuanto a esos testigos que esperaron que el testimonio de ensayo no fuera limitado a la evidencia OIC había sellado con la corte antes del testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter, información adicional requerida Greene del juez. Él concluyó que el gobierno no había podido establecer que cinco de sus testigos potenciales estaban libres de la corrupción y les había ordenado a aparecer en una audiencia pre-trial. Dos de los tres testigos que aparecieron en última instancia en el ensayo credibly afirmaron que su testimonio anticipado no sería influenciado de ninguna manera por el testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter; el tercer, del norte, rechazado hacer tan.
Norte indicado en la audiencia pre-trial que él no podía, con respecto a cualquier tema, distinguir lo que él había hecho personalmente, observado o experimentado de lo que él había aprendido de mirar testimony.9 inmunizado de Poindexter en cuanto a la destrucción de Poindexter de encontrar presidencial de la secreto-acción del diciembre de 1985 -- evidencia importante en la obstrucción del congreso -- El norte reconoció que él había visto Poindexter destruir un pedazo de papel pero insistido que él no sabía le era el encontrar hasta que Poindexter indicó ese hecho en su testimonio inmunizado antes de congreso.
9 testimonio del norte, audiencia Pre-trial de Poindexter, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
La corte rechazó el testimonio pre-trial del norte como no believable. Del norte, la corte encontrada, ``aparece haber sido emprendida en aquel momento [en la audiencia] el curso calculado de procurar asistir a su colega y co-demandado anteriores. . . tergiversando en varias ediciones. . . opinión 10
, Poindexter del '' 10, 3/8/90, P. 9.
En un poste-ensayo separado que gobernaba, la corte agregó que por lo que la destrucción de encontrar, el testimonio del norte en su propio ensayo sobre el acontecimiento era contrario con su demanda que él no podría recordarla independiente del testimonio inmunizado de Poindexter. La corte lo encontró “intrínsecamente increíble” que el norte no recordó “su participación en un acontecimiento que él atestiguó de primera mano y eso estaba como dramático, de hecho histórico, como el rasgado para arriba de encontrar presidencial extremadamente raro.” 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
La citación una
de Reagan de los aspectos más notables del caso de Poindexter era la tentativa acertada del demandado de llamar a presidente anterior Reagan para atestiguar en su ensayo por la deposición grabada.
Notas presidenciales presidenciales de Poindexter y vice primero buscadas de OIC como parte de sus peticiones del descubrimiento pre-trial. En una audiencia pre-trial el 6 de septiembre de 1989, los abogados de Poindexter dijeron a corte que las notas presidenciales reflejaran ese Poindexter informaran al presidente sus negaciones al congreso en 1986 de la actividad de NSC en apoyo de los contras, y que las notas “demostrarían lo que hablaron el presidente de lo que era hecho para apoyar los contras en America Central, y el consentimiento del presidente y la ratificación y la aprobación de esa actividad.” 12 en buscar vice notas presidenciales, los abogados de Poindexter dijeron la corte que “en caulquier momento él [Bush] faltó una reunión, almirante Poindexter lo resumieron en ella luego.” 13
12 Robinson, audiencia Pre-trial de Poindexter, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
La corte, antes de tomar una decisión encendido si obligar a OIC que elabore estos documentos, el 11 de septiembre de 1989, ordenó Poindexter para archivar una nota ex del parte que explicaba exacto cómo estos documentos asistirían a su defense.14 que requirió de consejos independientes un memorándum legal referente a su responsabilidad de elaborar documentos presidenciales presidenciales y vice no en la posesión de OIC.
14 opinión, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Sentenziare i felons condannati negli Stati Uniti
Automatically translated into Italian thanks to WorldLingo
Capitolo 3
Stati Uniti v. John M. Vizio
Adm del blu marino di Poindexter. John M. Poindexter è stato nominato come consigliere di sicurezza nazionale del presidente Reagan il 4 dicembre 1985, riuscendo Robert C. McFarlane, quale Poindexter aveva servito sotto da delegato per due anni. La carriera della Casa Bianca del Poindexter si è conclusa il 25 novembre 1986, quando è stato costretto a dimettersi come conseguenza della rilevazione pubblica dell'Iran/contra la diversione.
Poindexter, tenente. Colonna Il nord e McFarlane del Oliver erano il Attorney General Edwin Meese III dei tre individui identificato il 25 novembre 1986, come informato della diversione. Il controllo del Poindexter del nord e la sua propria partecipazione nell'Iran e contra i funzionamenti erano fuochi in anticipo di ricerca del consulente legale indipendente.
Come nell'argomento contro prova del nord e criminale contro Poindexter ha dovuto essere riunitoe rapidamente prima che fosse costretto a testimoniare su Capitol Hill di estate di 1987 sotto una concessione di immunità limitata. Altrimenti, il processo di Poindexter era probabile essere sfidato considerando che è stato derivato da o in qualche modo è stato influenzato dalla sua testimonianza congressuale immunizzata.
Il 16 marzo 1988, Poindexter è stato incriminato su sette spese di crimine in seguito alla sua partecipazione nell'Iran/contra l'affare, come componente di un atto d'accusa del multi-difensore di 23 conteggi. È stato chiamato con il nord, maggiore pensionato dell'aeronautica. Generatore. Richard V. Secord ed Albert Hakim come membro della cospirazione da defraudare il governo degli Stati Uniti effettuando l'Iran/contra la diversione ed altra si comporta.
Dopo che i casi si dividano e due delle spese originali siano allontanati, Poindexter è stato provato e condannato stato nell'aprile 1990 di cinque crimini, includendo: un conteggio di cospirazione ostruire le inchieste ed atti ufficiali, due conteggi di ostruzione del congresso e due conteggi delle dichiarazione false a Congress.1 Stati Uniti Giudice Harold H. del distretto. Greene lo ha sentenziato ad un termine di sei mesi della prigione. Nel novembre 1991, le convinzioni del Poindexter sono state capovolte su appello. Nel dicembre 1992, gli Stati Uniti Corte suprema rifiutata per rivedere il caso.
1 il caso di Poindexter è stato provato dai consulenti legali Dan K. del socio. Webb, cristiano J. Mixter, Howard M. Perla e Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter ha unito il personale del Consiglio di sicurezza nazionale nel giugno 1981, seguendo una carriera navale distinta che ha incluso gli alberini di pentagono di ordine e di alto-posto del battleship. Nell'ottobre 1983 è diventato delegato al consigliere McFarlane di sicurezza nazionale; fra i suoi subalterni era del nord. Durante il possesso di un anno del Poindexter come consigliere di sicurezza nazionale, che ha cominciato nel dicembre 1985, ha sorvegliato l'Iran/contra i funzionamenti in cui il nord direttamente è stato coinvolto.
Nel novembre 1986, mentre i funzionamenti segreti stavano essendo esposti pubblicamente, Poindexter ha stato bene al funzionario maggiore della gestione responsabile dell'impartire le direttive ad altri consiglieri più importanti del presidente circa le vendite di armi dell'Iran. in serie di riunioni della Casa Bianca con altri funzionari e membri del congresso durante il mese, ha presentato ripetutamente una versione falsa delle transazioni che distanced il presidente Reagan dalle 1985 spedizioni legalmente discutibili di armi fatte attraverso l'Israele, specialmente la transazione del HAWK-missile del novembre 1985.
Anche se Poindexter era il portavoce, non era responsabile solo del conoscere i fatti. Virtualmente ogni altro funzionario, compreso il presidente Reagan, che si è sentito che la sua versione delle vendite di armi nelle istruzioni durante il novembre 1986 ha pensata esso erano errati. Tuttavia nessuno, secondo le note contemporanee di quelle istruzioni, spoke fino a Poindexter corretto.
Poindexter con il nord ed altri nel novembre 1986 tentati per tagliuzzare ed alterare la traccia di carta che riflette il loro Iran/contra le attività. Tra l'altro, Poindexter ha distrutto l'unica individuazione presidenziale firmata esistente di segreto-azione che è stata intesa per autorizzare con effetto retroattivo la partecipazione di CIA alla spedizione dei HAWKs del novembre 1985.
Poindexter ed il nord riuscivano meno in lo sradicamento della traccia del calcolatore-messaggio del loro Iran/contra le attività. Poindexter ed il nord hanno comunicato spesso attraverso una scanalatura speciale che Poindexter, uno specialista in materia di computer, aveva installato sul sistema di elaborazione di NSC. Questa scanalatura, conosciuta come “il controllo in bianco riservato,„ ha permesso che Poindexter ed il nord trasmettessero l'un l'altro i messaggi senza il loro che è diretto attraverso le scanalature in cui altre sul personale di NSC potrebbero selezionarle.
Fra dal 22 al 29 novembre 1986, il nord ha cancellato dai suoi messaggi dell'archivio elettronico 736 e Poindexter ha cancellato 5.012 messaggi durante lo stesso period.2 malgrado queste omissioni, i nastri ordinariamente conservati di sostegno della Casa Bianca che contengono tutti i dati nel sistema affinchè due settimane proteggesse da perdita eventuale. Quando l'Iran/contra l'affare è stato esposto nel novembre 1986 tardo, l'agenzia di comunicazioni della Casa Bianca, che controlla il sistema di elaborazione di NSC, ha mantenuto i nastri di sostegno che datano dal 15 novembre. I ricercatori, quindi, potevano richiamare le copie di tutti i messaggi che erano negli archivi informatici di Poindexter-Nord nel metà di novembre 1986 prima che la maggior parte delle omissioni accadessero. Questi messaggi del calcolatore si sono trasformati in in prova importante sia nel Poindexter che nelle prove del nord.
2 Williams, testimonianza di prova di Poindexter, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter ammesso a molte delle sue attività prima che i comitati ristretti nel luglio 1987 sotto una concessione di immunità testimonial, che ha impedito le sue ammissioni usando contro di lui nel procedimento affatto criminale. Poiché il presidente Reagan non ha testimoniato in quanto la tribuna, Poindexter è stata denominata per rispondere alla domanda che ha dominato le udienze: Il presidente ha saputo circa ed approvare la diversione le vendite di armi dell'Iran continua ai contras? Poindexter ha risposto a no, “gli arresti del buck qui con me.„ 3 ha detto che ha ritenuto deliberatamente le informazioni dal presidente Reagan perché ``ho desiderato il presidente avere certo deniability in modo che sia protetto. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, testimonianza prescelta dei comitati, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Di fronte ad una prova criminale, Poindexter ha confrontato un dilemma differente: Non era più una questione di protezione del presidente ma difendersi contro cinque spese di crimine. Prima del congresso, testimonianza più significativa del Poindexter smentite ripetute del presidente Reagan confermato di consapevolezza dell'Iran/contra la diversione. Nell'aula di tribunale, Poindexter ha montato una difesa di alto-autorizzazione, tentante di convincere la giuria che il presidente aveva approvato le sue azioni, compreso quelle che hanno provocato le spese criminali. Invece di testimoniare nella sua propria difesa, tuttavia, ha denominato il presidente Reagan per testimoniare.
Atti Pre-Trial
Stati Uniti Giudice Gerhard A. del distretto. Gesell nel giugno 1988 ha ordinato che la cassa del multi-difensore contro Poindexter, nord, Secord e Hakim è severed.5 dopo la separazione, caso del Poindexter è stato trasferito al giudice principale Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr. ed allora giudicare Greene, che ha presieduto ulteriori atti dell'eccedenza.
5 per una descrizione più dettagliata della separazione della cassa del multi-difensore, veda il capitolo del nord.
Tutte le sfide sostanziali del Poindexter alla validità dell'atto d'accusa sono state allontanate prima della prova. Le edizioni importanti restanti si sono interessate: (1) la conservazione della carica di cospirazione; (2) la risoluzione delle classific-informazioni disputa; (3) la risoluzione delle edizioni relative alla testimonianza congressuale immunizzata del Poindexter, secondo il regolamento conosciuto come Kastigar; e (4) lo sforzo riuscito del difensore assicurare testimonianza di prova dall'ex presidente Reagan.
La conservazione e limitare dei problemi della carica
di cospirazione con le informazioni classificate hanno condotto allo scioglimento delle spese centrali di cospirazione prima della prova del nord ed i problemi simili si sono pensati che presentassero nell'argomento contro Poindexter. Il 20 giugno 1989, i consulenti legali indipendenti si sono mossi per eliminare le vaste spese originali di cospirazione basate sul rifornimento dei contras e della diversione e per limitare sostanzialmente la carica della cospirazione per violare gli altri statuti criminali sostanziali, dichiarazione false ostili ed ostruzione. Dopo le limature e la discussione orale, la corte ha assegnato il movimento del governo.
La carica era refocused sull'atto illegale della cospirazione con il nord e Secord celare le attività dal congresso. I consulenti legali indipendenti hanno sostenuto con successo che questo stringimento della carica di cospirazione minimizzerebbe i problemi delle classific-informazioni che hanno contagiato il processo del nord.
Le informazioni classificate pubblicano
le procedure classificate delle informazioni si comportano (CIPA) hanno permesso che la corte di prova efficacemente risolvesse i problema che coinvolgono l'uso dei documenti e della testimonianza classificati in Poindexter. Giudichi il controllo del Greene del processo di CIPA e le trattative fruttuose fra i consulenti legali per il governo e Poindexter risolti la maggior parte delle dispute con un minimo di fa ritardare.
Contrariamente al nord, non ci era prolungato o la controversia significativa riguardo alla forma o alla portata degli avvisi di CIPA del Poindexter alla corte rilevare ha classificato le informazioni alla prova. Fra il 27 novembre 1989 e 13 marzo 1990, Poindexter ha servito 11 tali avviso, compreso la testimonianza classificata possibile di descrizione otto che i documenti classificati elencati lui hanno desiderato usare alla prova, due ed uno messo a fuoco solamente sulle informazioni che ha desiderato trarre al deposito del presidente Reagan.
Giudichi Greene ha ordinato che tutte le differenze che eccedenza ha classificato le informazioni sono negoziate fra i partiti prima di essere portato davanti alla corte. Giudichi Greene ha tenuto sei udienze chiuse di CIPA prima della prova ha cominciato e completato quelli con parecchie udienze più corte durante la prova. La maggior parte delle sue decisioni sull'attinenza e sull'ammissibilità delle informazioni classificate e sull'adeguatezza delle sostituzioni proposte dal governo, sono state fatte dal banco.
Presi insieme, gli avvisi di CIPA del Poindexter hanno elencato circa 1.200 documenti, solo una piccola frazione di cui infine è stata introdotta alla prova. La maggior parte delle informazioni classificate sono state coperte dalle stipulazioni del Government a determinati fatti e ad altre sostituzioni non classificate. Ciò ha permesso che la prova continuasse uniformemente, senza i conflitti che hanno complicato il nord o l'argomento contro la stazione precedente Joseph principale F. di CIA. Fernandez, che era allontanato dovuto le classific-informazioni problems.6
6 vede il capitolo del Fernandez.
Gli atti Poindexter
di Kastigar sono stati costretti sotto una concessione di immunità di uso a testimoniare in 1987 prima dei comitati ristretti che studiano l'Iran/contra. Come l'altro Iran/contra i difensori che hanno dato la testimonianza immunizzata prima del congresso, Poindexter spostato per allontanare l'atto d'accusa sulla teoria che ha violato i campioni enunciati in Kastigar v. Gli Stati Uniti, 7 che sostengono che la sua testimonianza immunizzata è stata usata contro di lui nella grande giuria ed alla prova. Questa discussione ha dimostrato infruttuoso al livello di prova ma infine è prevalso nella Corte d'Appello.
i 7 406 Stati Uniti 411 (1972).
Prima che le loro prove si dividano, Poindexter spostato insieme con il nord e Hakim, che inoltre avevano ricevuto l'immunità per testimoniare prima del congresso, per avere le spese contro di loro ha allontanato sulla terra che la prova contro di loro è stata alterata dalla loro testimonianza immunizzata. Il giudice Gesell ha negato quel movimento. Tuttavia, nella deferenza a difesa sostiene che userebbero uno - possibilmente la testimonianza immunizzata giustificativa di un altro, il giudice Gesell nel giugno 1988 ha diviso le prove.
Poindexter ha rinnovato il suo movimento di Kastigar prima del giudice Greene nell'agosto 1989. Dopo l'istruzione e la discussione, 8 la corte hanno ordinato che due udienze probatorie sono tenute. Al primo, la corte ha sentito la testimonianza dai consulenti legali Dan K. del socio. Webb e Howard M. Imperli riguardo alla loro esposizione alla testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter prima di unire l'ufficio dei consulenti legali indipendenti. Webb e la perla hanno unito il personale di OIC in 1989 e non hanno avuti, prima dei loro appuntamenti, stato conforme alle procedure del OIC isolarsi dalla testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter. Giudichi Greene ha trovato la loro esposizione alla testimonianza del Poindexter per essere insignificante ed ha permesso che entrambi gli avvocati partecipassero alla prova.
8 il caso di Poindexter sono stati provati prima della Corte d'Appello regolati nel nord che le udienze del testimone erano necessarie da consentire la prova di un difensore immunizzato.
Il secondo insieme delle udienze di corte ha interessato i testimoni di prova, di cui la testimonianza può essere alterata dalla testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter. Il giudice Greene ha accettato la revisione più iniziale del Gesell del giudice di grandi testimoni Jury ed ha rifiutato di riesaminare i suoi risultati. Inoltre ha rifiutato di allontanare l'atto d'accusa in base a grande esposizione potenziale del juror alla testimonianza immunizzata.
Per quanto riguarda i testimoni di prova, la corte ha approntato le vaste misure accertarsi che le dichiarazione immunizzate del Poindexter non fossero usate contro di lui. La corte ha ordinato il governo per fare un'ex presentazione del parte (più successivamente rilevata a Poindexter) di tutte le dichiarazione rilasciate dai testimoni di prova potenziali prima che Poindexter desse la sua testimonianza immunizzata prima del congresso nel luglio 1987. La corte ha trovato che tutta la testimonianza proposta di la maggior parte dei testimoni potenziali era stata memorialized prima che Poindexter comparisse pubblicamente il 15 luglio 1987 e quindi non è stata alterata.
Per quanto riguarda quei testimoni di cui hanno previsto che la testimonianza di prova non fosse limitata alla prova OIC aveva sigillato con la corte prima della testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter, le informazioni supplementari richieste Greene del giudice. Ha concluso che il governo non era riuscito a stabilire che cinque dei relativi testimoni potenziali erano esenti da segno ed aveva ordinato loro da comparire ad un'udienza pre-trial. Due dei tre testimoni che infine sono comparso alla prova credibly hanno affermato che la loro testimonianza prevista non sarebbe influenzata in nessun modo dalla testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter; il terzo, del nord, rifiutato di fare così.
Nord dichiarato all'udienza pre-trial che non poteva, riguardo a tutto l'oggetto, distinguersi che cosa aveva fatto personalmente, osservato o sperimentato da che cosa aveva imparato dal guardare testimony.9 immunizzato del Poindexter per quanto riguarda distruzione del Poindexter dell'individuazione presidenziale di segreto-azione del dicembre 1985 -- prova importante nell'ostruzione del congresso -- Il nord ha riconosciuto che aveva visto Poindexter distruggere pezzo di carta ma insistita che non ha saputo esso era un'individuazione fino a che Poindexter non dichiarasse quel fatto nella sua testimonianza immunizzata prima del congresso.
9 testimonianza del nord, udienza Pre-trial di Poindexter, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
La corte ha rifiutato la testimonianza pre-trial del nord come non believable. Del nord, la corte trovata, ``sembra essere intrapresa a quel tempo [all'udienza] il corso calcolato di tentare di aiutare il suoi ex collega e co-difensore. . . tergiversando sulle varie edizioni. . . opinione 10
, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. del '' 10. 9.
In una alberino-prova separata che regola, la corte ha aggiunto che per quanto la distruzione dell'individuazione, la testimonianza del nord alla sua propria prova circa l'evento era contradditoria con il suo reclamo che non potrebbe ricordarselo indipendente dalla testimonianza immunizzata del Poindexter. La corte lo ha trovato “inerentemente incredibile„ che il nord non si è ricordato “della sua partecipazione ad un evento ch'ha testimoniato firsthand e quello era come drammatico, effettivamente storico, come lo strappo in su di un'individuazione presidenziale estremamente rara.„ 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
Il Subpoena uno
del Reagan delle funzioni più notevoli del caso di Poindexter era il tentativo riuscito del difensore di denominare l'ex presidente Reagan per testimoniare alla sua prova tramite il deposito registrato.
Poindexter in primo luogo ha cercato le note presidenziali presidenziali e vice da OIC come componente delle sue richieste di scoperta pre-trial. In un'udienza pre-trial il 6 settembre 1989, gli avvocati del Poindexter hanno detto alla corte a che le note presidenziali riflettessero quel Poindexter informassero il presidente delle sue smentite al congresso in 1986 di attività di NSC a sostegno dei contras e che le note “mostrerebbero a che cosa il presidente si è detto circa che cosa stava facendo per sostenere i contras in America Centrale ed il consenso del presidente e ratifica e l'approvazione di quell'attività.„ 12 nella ricerca delle note presidenziali vice, gli avvocati del Poindexter hanno detto alla corte che “in qualunque momento [Bush] ha mancato una riunione, l'ammiraglio Poindexter gli ho impartito le direttive su esso in seguito.„ 13
12 Robinson, udienza Pre-trial di Poindexter, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
La corte, prima di prendere una decisione sopra se costringere OIC per redigere l'11 settembre 1989 questi documenti, ha diretto Poindexter per archiviare un ex appunto del parte che spiega precisamente come questi documenti aiuterebbero il suo defense.14 che ha richiesto dai consulenti legali indipendenti un memorandum legale riguardo alla relativa responsabilità di redigere i documenti presidenziali presidenziali e vice non in possesso del OIC.
14 opinione, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Verurteilen der überführten Täter in den Vereinigten Staaten
Automatically translated into German thanks to WorldLingo
Kapitel 3
Vereinigte Staaten V. John M. Poindexter
Marine-Laster Adm. John M. Poindexter wurde als Präsident Reagans Staatssicherheit Berater am 4. Dezember 1985 ernannt und folgte Robert C. McFarlane, dem Poindexter darunter als Abgeordnetes für zwei Jahre gedient hatte. Poindexters beendete Hauskarriere 25. November 1986, als er gezwungen wurde, unmittelbar nach der allgemeinen Freigabe des Irans/gegen Ablenkung abzufinden.
Poindexter, Leutnant. Spalte Oliver Norden und McFarlane waren der drei Einzelpersonen Attorney General Edwin Meese III am 25. November 1986 gekennzeichnet, wie kenntnisreich von der Ablenkung. Überwachung Poindexters des Nordens und seine eigene Teilnahme am Iran und gegen Betriebe waren frühe Foki der Untersuchung des unabhängigen Ratschlags.
Wie im Argument gegen Nord-, kriminellen Beweis gegen Poindexter mußte schnell erfaßt werden, bevor er gezwungen wurde, auf dem Capitol Hill am Sommer von 1987 unter einer Bewilligung der begrenzten Immunität zu bezeugen. Andernfalls war die Verfolgung von Poindexter wahrscheinlich herausgefordert zu werden, mit der Begründung daß sie von abgeleitet wurde oder auf gewisse Weise durch sein immunisiertes Kongreßzeugnis beeinflußt.
Am 16. März 1988 wurde Poindexter auf sieben Kapitalverbrechenaufladungen angeklagt, die aus seiner Miteinbeziehung im Iran/gegen Angelegenheit, als Teil einer das 23 Zählimpuls Multibeklagte Anklage entstehen. Er wurde mit Norden, pensionierter Luftwaffe Major genannt. Generator. Richard V. Secord und Albert Hakim als Mitglied der Verschwörung, zum die Vereinigte Staaten Regierung, indem sie den Iran/gegen Ablenkung und andere, zu betrügen bewirken fungiert.
Nachdem die Fälle getrennt wurden und zwei der ursprünglichen Aufladungen entlassen, wurde Poindexter im April 1990 fünf Kapitalverbrechen versucht und überführt und schloß ein: ein Zählimpuls des Verschwörens, amtliche Anfragen und Verfahren, zwei Zählimpulse des Versperrens des Kongresses und zwei Zählimpulse der falschen Aussagen zu Congress.1 US zu versperren Bezirk Richter Harold H. Greene verurteilte ihn zu einer Sechsmonatsgefängnisbezeichnung. Im November 1991 wurden überzeugungen Poindexters auf Anklang umgeworfen. Im Dezember 1992 die US Höchstes Gericht gesunken, um den Fall zu wiederholen.
1 der Poindexter Fall wurde durch Teilnehmer-Ratschläge Dan K. versucht. Webb, Christ J. Mixter, Howard M. Perle und Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter verband den Staatssicherheit Ratpersonal im Juni 1981 und folgte einer bemerkenswerten Marinekarriere, die Linienschiff Befehl und Hochklassifizierung Pentagonpfosten einschloß. Im Oktober 1983 er wurde Abgeordneter zum Staatssicherheit Berater McFarlane; unter seinen Untergebenen war Nord. Während Poindexters des einjährigen Besitzes als Staatssicherheit Berater, der im Dezember 1985 anfing, beaufsichtigte er den Iran/gegen Betriebe, in denen Norden direkt miteinbezogen wurde.
Im November 1986 während die geheimen Betriebe öffentlich herausgestellt wurden, stand Poindexter dem älteren Leitung Beamten, das für die Besprechung anderer oberer Berater des Präsidenten über die der Iran Waffenverkäufe verantwortlich ist. In einer Reihe von Haussitzungen mit anderen Beamten und Mitgliedern des Kongresses während des Monats, breitete er wiederholt eine falsche Version der Verhandlungen, die Präsidenten Reagan vom erlaubterweise fraglichen 1985 Armversand überholten, der durch Israel gebildet wurde, besonders die November 1985 Falke-Flugkörperverhandlung aus.
Obgleich Poindexter der Wortführer war, war er nicht für das Kennen der Tatsachen alleinverantwortliches. Praktisch jeder andere höhere Beamte, einschließlich Präsidenten Reagan, der hörte, daß seine Version der Waffenverkäufe in den Anweisungen während November 1986 Anlaß zur Annahme ihn hatte, waren falsch. Dennoch keine, entsprechend gleichzeitigen Anmerkungen jener Anweisungen, Speiche bis zu korrektem Poindexter.
Poindexter zusammen mit Norden und andere im November 1986 versucht, um die Papierspur zu zerreißen und zu ändern, die ihren Iran/reflektiert, gegen Tätigkeiten. Unter anderem zerstörte Poindexter das einzige bestehende unterzeichnete Präsidentenc$verborgentätigkeit Finden, das CIA Miteinbeziehung im November 1985 Falkeversand rückwirkend autorisieren sollte.
Poindexter und Norden war weniger erfolgreich, wenn sie die Computeranzeige Spur von ihrem Iran/gegen Tätigkeiten ausrotteten. Poindexter und Norden standen häufig durch eine spezielle Führung in Verbindung, die Poindexter, ein Computerexperte, auf das NSC Computersystem aufgestellt hatte. Diese Führung, bekannt als „der private Blankoscheck,“ ließ Poindexter und Norden Anzeigen ohne ihr miteinander neu legen, der durch Führungen verlegt wurde, in denen andere auf dem NSC Personal sie aussortieren konnten.
Zwischen 22. bis 29. November 1986 löschte Norden aus seinen Anzeigen der Datei 736, und Poindexter löschte 5.012 Anzeigen während des gleichen period.2 trotz dieser Auslassungen, die gespeicherten Unterstützungklebebänder des Weißen Hauses routinemäßig, die alle Daten im System enthalten, damit zwei Wochen gegen unbeabsichtigten Verlust sich schützen. Als der Iran/gegen Angelegenheit in spätem November 1986 herausgestellt wurde, behielt die das Haus-Kommunikationen Agentur, die das NSC Computersystem handhabt, die Unterstützungsklebebänder, die ab dem 15. November datieren. Forscher waren folglich in der Lage, Kopien aller Anzeigen zurückzuholen, die in den Poindexter-Norden Dateien mittleres November 1986 waren, bevor die meisten Auslassungen auftraten. Diese Computeranzeigen wurden wichtiger Beweis im Poindexter und in den Nordversuchen.
2 Williams, Poindexter Probezeugnis, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter zugelassen worden zu vielen seiner Tätigkeiten bevor die auserwählten Ausschüsse im Juli 1987 unter einer Bewilligung der testimonial Immunität, die seine Aufnahmen an gegen ihn im irgendwie kriminellen Verfahren verwendet werden verhinderte. Weil Präsident Reagan nicht dadurch bezeugte, daß Forum, Poindexter benannt wurde, um die Frage zu beantworten, die die Hörfähigkeiten beherrschte: Wußte der Präsident ungefähr und die Ablenkung die der Iran Waffenverkäufe zu genehmigen fährt zu den contras fort? Poindexter beantwortete Nr., „die Dollaranschläge hier mit mir.“ 3, die er sagte, daß er absichtlich die Informationen vom Präsidenten Reagan zurückhielt, weil ``ich den Präsidenten irgendein deniability haben wünschte, damit er geschützt würde. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, auserwähltes Ausschuss-Zeugnis, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Einen kriminellen Versuch gegenüberstellend, konfrontierte Poindexter ein anderes Dilemma: Es war nicht mehr eine Frage des Schützens des Präsidenten aber des Verteidigens gegen fünf Kapitalverbrechenaufladungen. Vor Kongreß Poindexters bedeutendstes Zeugnis bekräftigten Präsident Reagans wiederholte Ablehnungen des Bewußtseins des Irans/gegen Ablenkung. Im Gerichtssaal brachte versuchte Poindexter eine Hochermächtigung Verteidigung an und, die Jury, daß der Präsident seine Tätigkeiten genehmigt hatte, einschließlich die zu überzeugen, die kriminelle Aufladungen ergaben. Anstatt, den Standplatz in seiner eigenen Verteidigung zu nehmen jedoch an rief er Präsidenten Reagan, um zu bezeugen.
Vorverfahren
US Bezirk Richter Gerhard A. Gesell bestellte im Juni 1988, daß der Multibeklagtes Kasten gegen Poindexter, Norden, Secord und Hakim severed.5 nach Abtrennung ist, Fall Poindexters wurde gebracht auf Hauptrichter Aubrey E. Robinson, jr. und Greene dann beurteilen, der weitere Verfahren des überschusses vorsaß.
5 für eine ausführlichere Beschreibung der Abtrennung des Multibeklagtes Kastens, sehen Sie Nordkapitel.
Alle Poindexters substantivische Herausforderungen zur Gültigkeit der Anklage wurden vor Versuch entlassen. Die restlichen wichtigen Ausgaben betroffen: (1) die Bewahrung der Verschwörungaufladung; (2) die Auflösung der Einstufeninformationen Debatten; (3) die Auflösung der Ausgaben bezogen auf Poindexters immunisiertem Kongreßzeugnis, unter dem Anordnen bekannt als Kastigar; und (4) die erfolgreiche Bemühung des Beklagten, Probezeugnis vom ehemaligen Präsidenten Reagan zu sichern.
Das Konservieren und das Verengen der Verschwörung-Aufladung
Probleme mit eingestuften Informationen führten zu die Entlassung der zentralen Verschwörungaufladungen vor dem Nordversuch, und ähnliche Probleme wurden erwartet, um im Argument gegen Poindexter zu entstehen. Am 20. Juni 1989 bewogen unabhängige Ratschläge, um die ursprünglichen ausgedehnten Verschwörungaufladungen zu beseitigen, die nach dem Versorgungsmaterial der contras und der Ablenkung und die Aufladung der Verschwörung im wesentlichen zu verengen, um andere substantivische kriminelle Gesetze, verbietende falsche Aussagen und Hindernis zu verletzen gegründet wurden. Nach Archivierungen und Mundargument bewilligte das Gericht die Bewegung der Regierung.
Die Aufladung war refocused auf der ungültigen Tat des Verschwörens mit Norden und Secord, Tätigkeiten vom Kongreß zu verbergen. Unabhängige Berater argumentierten erfolgreich, daß dieses Verengen der Verschwörungaufladung die Einstufeninformationen Probleme herabsetzen würde, die die Nordverfolgung quälten.
Eingestufte Informationen geben
die eingestuften Informationen Verfahren fungieren (CIPA) ließen das Probegericht effektiv die Ausgaben beheben heraus, die den Gebrauch von eingestuften Dokumenten und Zeugnis in Poindexter mit einbeziehen. Beurteilen Sie überwachung Greenes des CIPA Prozesses und fruchtbare Vermittlungen zwischen den Ratschlägen für die Regierung und Poindexter, die den meisten Debatten mit einem Minimum von behoben werden, verzögert.
Im Gegensatz zu Norden gab es kein ausgedehnt, oder der bedeutende Rechtsstreit hinsichtlich ist der Form oder des Bereichs der Nachrichten CIPA Poindexters zum Gericht freizugeben stufte Informationen am Versuch ein. Zwischen 27. November 1989 und 13. März 1990 diente Poindexter 11 solche Nachrichten, einschließlich beschreibendes mögliches eingestuftes Zeugnis acht, daß aufgeführte eingestufte Dokumente er am Versuch verwenden wollten, zwei und eine, die nur auf Informationen gerichtet wurde, die er an der Absetzung des Präsidenten Reagan herausbekommen wollte.
Beurteilen Sie Greene bestellte, daß über alle Unterschiede, die überschuß Informationen einstufte, zwischen den Parteien verhandelt werden, bevor man vor dem Gericht geholt wird. Beurteilen Sie Greene hielt sechs geschlossene CIPA Hörfähigkeiten vor dem Versuch anfing und ergänzte die mit einigen kürzeren Hörfähigkeiten während des Versuches. Die meisten seinen Regelungen auf der Bedeutung und der Zulässigkeit der eingestuften Informationen und auf der Angemessenheit des Ersatzes, der durch die Regierung vorgeschlagen wurde, wurden von der Bank gebildet.
Verzeichneten die zusammen genommen, Nachrichten CIPA Poindexters ungefähr 1.200 Dokumente, nur dessen kleiner Bruch schließlich am Versuch eingeführt wurden. Die meisten eingestuften Informationen wurden durch Government Bedingungen zu bestimmten Tatsachen und zu anderem nicht klassifiziertem Ersatz abgedeckt. Dieses ließ den Versuch, ohne die Konflikte glatt fortfahren, die Norden oder das Argument gegen ehemalige CIA Station Hauptjoseph F. erschwerten. Fernandez, der an den Einstufeninformationen problems.6 6 entlassenes
lag, sehen Fernandez Kapitel.
Kastigar Verfahren
Poindexter wurden unter einer Bewilligung der Gebrauchimmunität gezwungen, 1987 vor den auserwählten Ausschüssen zu bezeugen, die den Iran/gegen nachforschen. Wie der andere Iran/gegen Beklagte, die immunisiertes Zeugnis vor Kongreß gaben, Poindexter verschoben, um die Anklage auf der Theorie zu entlassen, daß sie die Standards verletzte, die in Kastigar V. ausgesprochen wurden. Vereinigte Staaten, 7 argumentierend, daß sein immunisiertes Zeugnis gegen ihn in der großartigen Jury und am Versuch verwendet wurde. Dieses Argument prüfte, erfolgloses auf dem Probeniveau aber herschte schließlich im Gericht von Anklänge vor.
7 406 US 411 (1972).
Bevor ihre Versuche getrennt wurden, entließ Poindexter, das zusammen mit Norden und Hakim verschoben wurde, die auch Immunität empfangen hatten, um vor Kongreß zu bezeugen, um die Aufladungen gegen sie zu haben aus den Grund, daß der Beweis gegen sie durch ihr immunisiertes Zeugnis verdorben wurde. Richter Gesell verweigerte diese Bewegung. Jedoch in der Achtung zur Verteidigung behauptet, daß sie ein verwenden würden - eines anderen vielleicht rechtfertigendes immunisiertes Zeugnis, Richter Gesell trennten im Juni 1988 die Versuche.
Poindexter erneuerte seine Kastigar Bewegung vor Richter Greene im August 1989. Nach Anweisung und Argument bestellten 8 das Gericht, daß zwei überzeugende Hörfähigkeiten gehalten werden. Am ersten hörte das Gericht Zeugnis von den Teilnehmer-Beratern Dan K. Webb und Howard M. Perlen Sie hinsichtlich ihrer Aussetzung zu Poindexters immunisiertem Zeugnis, bevor Sie das Büro der unabhängigen Ratschläge verbinden. Webb und Perle verbanden den OIC Personal 1989 und hatten nicht, vor ihren Verabredungen, gewesen abhängig von Verfahren OICS, sich von Poindexters immunisiertem Zeugnis zu isolieren. Beurteilen Sie Greene fand ihre Aussetzung zum Zeugnis Poindexters, um bedeutungslos zu sein und erlaubte beiden Rechtsanwälten, am Versuch teilzunehmen.
8 der Poindexter Fall wurden vor dem Gericht der Anklänge versucht, die im Norden angeordnet wurden, daß Zeugehörfähigkeiten notwendig waren, um den Versuch eines immunisierten Beklagten zu ermöglichen.
Der zweite Satz von Gerichtsterminen betraf Probezeugen, deren Zeugnis durch Poindexters immunisiertes Zeugnis verdorben worden sein kann. Richter Greene nahm Richter Gesells früheren Bericht der großartigen Jury Zeugen an und sank, seine Entdeckungen nachzupruefen. Er lehnte auch ab, die Anklage auf der Grundlage von mögliche großartige Geschworenaussetzung zum immunisierten Zeugnis zu entlassen.
Betreffend Probezeugen ergriff das Gericht umfangreiche Maßnahmen, sicherzugehen, daß Poindexters immunisierte Aussagen nicht gegen ihn verwendet wurden. Das Gericht bestellte die Regierung, um eine ex parte Unterordnung (später freigegeben zu Poindexter) von allen Aussagen zu bilden, die durch mögliche Probezeugen abgegeben wurden, bevor Poindexter sein immunisiertes Zeugnis vor Kongreß im Juli 1987 gab. Das Gericht fand, daß alles vorgeschlagene Zeugnis der meisten möglichen Zeugen memorialized, bevor Poindexter öffentlich am 15. Juli 1987 erschien, und folglich wurde nicht verdorben gewesen war.
Was jene Zeugen anbetrifft deren erwarteten, daß Probezeugnis nicht auf den Beweis OIC begrenzt würde, hatte mit dem Gericht vor Poindexters immunisiertem Zeugnis, erforderliche zusätzliche Informationen des Richters Greene versiegelt. Er stellte fest, daß die Regierung hatte herstellen nicht gekonnt, daß fünf seiner möglichen Zeugen von der Färbung frei waren und ihnen bestellt, zum an einer vorbereitenden Hörfähigkeit zu erscheinen. Zwei der drei Zeugen, die schließlich am Versuch credibly erschienen, bestätigten, daß ihr vorweggenommenes Zeugnis nicht in keiner Weise durch Poindexters immunisiertes Zeugnis beeinflußt würde; das dritte, Nord, abgelehnt, so zu tun.
Norden angegeben an der vorbereitenden Hörfähigkeit, daß er, in Bezug auf jedes mögliches Thema nicht imstande war, zu unterscheiden was er persönlich getan hatte, beobachtet oder erfahren von, was er vom Aufpassen Poindexters von immunisiertem testimony.9 was Zerstörung anbetrifft Poindexters des Dezember 1985 Präsidentenc$verborgentätigkeit Findens erlernt hatte -- wichtiger Beweis im Hindernis des Kongresses -- Norden bestätigte, daß er Poindexter gesehen hatte, einen Papierstreifen zu zerstören, aber, daß er nicht wußte, ihm ein Finden beharrt war, bis Poindexter diese Tatsache in seinem immunisierten Zeugnis vor Kongreß angab.
9 Nordzeugnis, Poindexter vorbereitende Hörfähigkeit, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
Das Gericht wies vorbereitendes Nordzeugnis zurück, wie nicht glaubwürdig. Nord, scheint das gefundene Gericht, ``, [an der Hörfähigkeit] nach dem errechneten Kurs des Versuchens zu dieser Zeit eingeschifft worden zu sein, seinen ehemaligen Kollegen und Cobeklagtes zu unterstützen. . . durch prevaricating auf verschiedenen Ausgaben. . . '' 10
10 Meinung, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. 9.
In einem unterschiedlichen anordnenden Pfostenversuch, fügte das Gericht hinzu, daß, insoweit die Zerstörung des Findens, Nordzeugnis an seinem eigenen Versuch über den Fall mit seinem Anspruch inkonsequent war, daß er nicht an ihn sich erinnern könnte Unabhängiges von Poindexters immunisiertem Zeugnis. Das Gericht fand es „in sich selbst unglaublich“, daß Norden sich nicht „an seine Teilnahme an einem Fall erinnerte, den er aus erster Hand zeugte und das war, wie drastisch, in der Tat historisch, als eines extrem seltenen Präsidentenc$findens oben heftig zerreißen.“ 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
Die Reagan Vorladung unter Strafandrohung
eine der bemerkenswertesten Aspekte des Poindexter Falles war der erfolgreiche Versuch des Beklagten, ehemaligen Präsidenten Reagan anzurufen, um an seinem Versuch durch videotaped Absetzung zu bezeugen.
Poindexter zuerst gesuchte Präsidenten- und Vizepräsidentenanmerkungen von OIC als Teil seiner verfahrensvorbereitende Tatsachenfeststellung Anträge. In einer vorbereitenden Hörfähigkeit am 6. September 1989, erklärten Rechtsanwälte Poindexters dem Gericht, daß Präsidentenanmerkungen dieses Poindexter informierten den Präsidenten über seine Ablehnungen zum Kongreß 1986 der NSC Tätigkeit zur Unterstützung der contras reflektieren würden und daß die Anmerkungen „zeigen würden, was dem Präsidenten erklärt wurde über, was getan wurde, um die contras in Mittelamerika zu stützen und des die Zustimmung Präsidenten und die Bestätigung und die Zustimmung dieser Tätigkeit.“ 12, wenn sie Vizepräsidentenanmerkungen suchten, erklärten Rechtsanwälte Poindexters das Gericht, dem „jederzeit er [Bush] eine Sitzung vermißte, Admiral Poindexter unterwiesen ihn auf ihr danach.“ 13
12 Robinson, Poindexter vorbereitende Hörfähigkeit, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
Das Gericht, bevor es an eine Entscheidung traf, ob man OIC zwingt, um diese Dokumente am 11. September 1989 zu produzieren verwies Poindexter, um ein ex parte Protokoll einzuordnen, das genau erklärt, wie diese Dokumente sein defense.14 unterstützen würden, das es von den unabhängigen Ratschlägen ein zugelassenes Protokoll hinsichtlich ist seiner Verantwortlichkeit, die Präsidenten- und Vizepräsidentendokumente nicht im Besitz OICS zu produzieren erforderte.
14 Meinung, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Sentenciando criminosos convicted nos Estados Unidos
Automatically translated into Portuguese thanks to WorldLingo
Capítulo 3
Estados Unidos v. John M. Vice
Adm da marinha de Poindexter. John M. Poindexter foi apontado como o conselheiro da segurança nacional do presidente Reagan dezembro em 4, 1985, sucedendo Robert C. McFarlane, a quem Poindexter tinha servido abaixo como o deputado por dois anos. A carreira branca da casa de Poindexter terminou novembro 25, 1986, quando foi forçado a renunciar na vigília da divulgação pública do Irã/contra a diversão.
Poindexter, tenente. Coluna O norte e McFarlane de Oliver eram o Attorney General Edwin Meese III de três indivíduos identificado novembro em 25, 1986, como knowledgeable da diversão. A supervisão de Poindexter do norte e sua própria participação no Irã e contra operações eram focos adiantados da investigação do conselho independente.
Como no argumento de encontro à evidência norte, criminal de encontro a Poindexter teve que ser recolhido rapidamente antes que estêve compelido testify no monte de Capitol no verão de 1987 sob uma concessão de immunity limitado. Se não, o prosecution de Poindexter era provável ser desafiado nas terras que estêve derivado ou em alguma maneira influenciada por seu testimony congressional immunized.
Março em 16, 1988, Poindexter foi processado em sete cargas do felony que levantam-se de sua participação no Irã/contra o caso, como parte de um indictment do multi-réu de 23 contagens. Foi nomeado com norte, major aposentado da força aérea. Gerador. Richard V. Secord e Albert Hakim como um membro do conspiracy a defraudar o governo de Estados Unidos efetuando o Irã/contra a diversão e a outra agem.
Depois que os casos severed e duas das cargas originais foram demitidas, Poindexter foi tentado e convicted em abril 1990 de cinco felonies, incluindo: uma contagem de conspiring obstruir inquéritos e continuações oficiais, duas contagens de obstruir o Congress, e duas contagens de indicações falsas a Congress.1 ESTADOS UNIDOS. Juiz Harold H. do distrito. Greene sentenciou-o a um termo de seis meses da prisão. Em novembro 1991, as convicções de Poindexter foram viradas na apelação. Em dezembro 1992, os ESTADOS UNIDOS. Corte suprema declinada rever o caso.
1 o exemplo de Poindexter foi tentado por conselhos Dan K. do associado. Webb, cristão J. Mixter, Howard M. Pérola, e Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter juntou a equipe de funcionários do conselho de segurança nacional em junho 1981, seguindo uma distinta carreira naval que incluísse bornes do Pentagon do comando e do elevado-ranking do cruzador de batalha. Em outubro 1983 transformou-se deputado ao conselheiro McFarlane da segurança nacional; entre seus subordinados era norte. Durante o tenure one-year de Poindexter como o conselheiro da segurança nacional, que começou em dezembro 1985, oversaw o Irã/contra as operações em que o norte foi envolvido diretamente.
Em novembro 1986, enquanto as operações secretas se estavam tornando expostas publicamente, Poindexter assentou bem no oficial sênior da administração responsável para instruir outros conselheiros superiores do presidente sobre as vendas de braços de Irã. Em uma série das reuniões brancas da casa com outros oficiais e membros do Congress durante todo o mês, colocou repetidamente para fora uma versão falsa das transações que distanced o presidente Reagan dos 1985 shipments de braços legalmente questionáveis feitos através de Israel, particularmente a transação do Falcão-míssil de novembro 1985.
Embora Poindexter fosse o spokesman, não era responsável sozinho para saber os fatos. Virtualmente cada outro oficial sênior, including o presidente Reagan, que se ouviu que sua versão das vendas de braços nas instruções durante todo novembro 1986 teve a razão a acreditar eram errados. Contudo ninguém, de acordo com as notas contemporaneous daquelas instruções, raio até Poindexter correto.
Poindexter junto com o norte e outro em novembro 1986 tentaram shred e alterar a fuga de papel que reflete seu Irã/contra atividades. Entre outras coisas, Poindexter destruiu único encontrar presidencial assinado existente da secreto-ação que foi pretendido autorizar retroactively a participação do CIA no shipment dos falcões de novembro 1985.
Poindexter e o norte eram mais menos bem sucedidos em eradicating a fuga da computador-mensagem de seu Irã/contra atividades. Poindexter e o norte comunicaram-se frequentemente através de uma canaleta especial que Poindexter, um perito de computador, ajustasse acima no sistema computatorizado de NSC. Esta canaleta, sabida como “a verificação em branco confidencial,” permitiu que Poindexter e o norte serelay as mensagens sem seu que estão sendo distribuídas através das canaletas em que outra na equipe de funcionários de NSC poderia as selecionar.
Entre novembro 22 a 29, 1986, norte suprimiu de suas mensagens da lima de computador 736, e Poindexter suprimiu 5.012 mensagens durante o mesmo period.2 apesar destes apagamentos, as fitas adesivas rotineiramente conservadas brancas do back-up da casa que contêm todos os dados no sistema por duas semanas para proteger de encontro à perda inadvertida. Quando o Irã/contra o caso foi exposto em novembro atrasado 1986, a agência branca das comunicações da casa, que controla o sistema computatorizado de NSC, reteve as fitas adesivas alternativas que datam novembro de 15. Os Investigators, puderam conseqüentemente recuperar cópias de todas as mensagens que estavam nas limas de computador do Poindexter-Norte no mid-November 1986 antes que a maioria dos apagamentos ocorreram. Estas mensagens do computador transformaram-se evidência importante no Poindexter e nas experimentações nortes.
2 Williams, Testimony experimental de Poindexter, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter admitido a muitas de suas atividades antes que os comitês seletos em julho 1987 sob uma concessão do immunity testimonial, que impedisse que suas admissões estejam usadas de encontro a ele na continuação criminal. Porque o presidente Reagan não testify que o forum, Poindexter estêve chamado para responder à pergunta que dominou os hearings: O presidente soube aproximadamente e aprovar a diversão das vendas de braços de Irã prosegue aos contras? Poindexter respondeu ao No., “os batentes do buck aqui com mim.” 3 que disse que reteve deliberadamente a informação do presidente Reagan porque ``eu quis o presidente ter algum deniability de modo que fosse protegido. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, Testimony seleto dos comitês, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Enfrentando uma experimentação criminal, Poindexter confrontou um dilemma diferente: Era já não uma pergunta de proteger o presidente mas de defender-se himself de encontro a cinco cargas do felony. Antes do Congress, o testimony o mais significativo de Poindexter negações repetidas do presidente Reagan corroborated da consciência do Irã/contra a diversão. No courtroom, Poindexter montou uma defesa da elevado-autorização, tentando convencer o júri que o presidente tinha aprovado suas ações, including aquelas que resultaram em cargas criminal. Em vez de fazer exame do carrinho em sua própria defesa, entretanto, chamou o presidente Reagan para testify.
Continuações Pre-Trial
ESTADOS UNIDOS. Juiz Gerhard A. do distrito. Gesell em junho 1988 requisitou que a caixa do multi-réu de encontro a Poindexter, norte, a Secord e a Hakim fosse severed.5 depois da separação, caso de Poindexter foi transferido ao juiz principal Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr., e para julgar então Greene, que presided umas continuações mais adicionais do excesso.
5 para uma descrição mais detalhada da separação da caixa do multi-réu, veja o capítulo norte.
Todos os desafios substantivos de Poindexter à validez do indictment foram demitidos antes da experimentação. As edições importantes restantes concerniram: (1) a preservação da carga do conspiracy; (2) a definição da classific-informação disputa; (3) a definição das edições relacionadas ao testimony congressional immunized de Poindexter, sob governar sabido como Kastigar; e (4) o esforço bem sucedido do réu fixar o testimony experimental do presidente anterior Reagan.
Preservar e estreitar os problemas da carga
do Conspiracy com informação classificada conduziram ao dismissal das cargas centrais do conspiracy antes da experimentação norte, e os problemas similares esperaram-se levantar-se no argumento de encontro a Poindexter. Junho em 20, 1989, os conselhos independentes moveram-se para eliminar as cargas largas originais do conspiracy baseadas na fonte dos contras e da diversão e para estreitar substancialmente a carga de conspiracy para violate os outros statutes criminal substantivos, indicações falsas proibindo e obstrução. Após arquivamentos e o argumento oral, a corte concedeu o movimento do governo.
A carga era refocused no ato ilegal de conspiring com norte e Secord esconder atividades do Congress. Os conselhos independentes discutiram com sucesso que este se estreitar da carga do conspiracy minimizaria os problemas da classific-informação que flagelaram o prosecution norte.
A informação classificada emite
os procedimentos classificados da informação age (CIPA) permitiu que a corte experimental eficazmente resolvesse as edições que envolvem o uso de originais e do testimony classificados em Poindexter. Julgue a supervisão de Greene do processo de CIPA e as negociações fruitful entre os conselhos para o governo e o Poindexter resolvidos a maioria de disputas com um mínimo de atrasam.
No contraste ao norte, não havia nenhum prolongado ou o litigation significativo a respeito do formulário ou do espaço de observações de CIPA de Poindexter à corte divulgar classificou a informação na experimentação. Entre novembro 27, 1989, e março 13, 1990, Poindexter serviu a 11 tais observações, including o testimony oito que os originais classificados listados ele quiseram se usar na experimentação, dois classificado possível de descrição, e a uma focalizada unicamente na informação que quis eliciar no deposition do presidente Reagan.
Julgue Greene requisitou que todas as diferenças que o excesso classificou a informação estejam negociadas entre os partidos antes de ser trazido antes da corte. Julgue Greene prendeu seis hearings fechados de CIPA antes da experimentação começou e suplementou aqueles com diversos hearings mais curtos durante a experimentação. A maioria de seus rulings na relevância e no admissibility da informação classificada, e no adequacy das substituições propostas pelo governo, foram feitos do banco.
Feitas exame junto, as observações de CIPA de Poindexter alistaram aproximadamente 1.200 originais, only uma fração pequena de que foi introduzida finalmente na experimentação. A maioria de informação classificada foi coberta por estipulações de Governo a determinados fatos e a outras substituições unclassified. Isto permitiu que a experimentação proseguisse lisamente, sem os conflitos que complicaram o norte ou o argumento de encontro à estação anterior Joseph principal F. do CIA. Fernandez, que era demitido devido à classific-informação problems.6
6 vê o capítulo de Fernandez.
As continuações Poindexter
de Kastigar foram compelidas sob uma concessão do immunity do uso testify em 1987 antes dos comitês seletos que investigam Irã/contra. Como o outro Irã/contra os réus que deram o testimony immunized antes do Congress, Poindexter movido para demitir o indictment na teoria que violated os padrões enunciated em Kastigar v. Estados Unidos, 7 que discutem que seu testimony immunized estêve usado de encontro a ele no júri grande e na experimentação. Este argumento provou mal sucedido no nível experimental mas prevaleceu finalmente na corte de apelações.
7 406 ESTADOS UNIDOS. 411 (1972).
Antes que suas experimentações severed, Poindexter movido conjuntamente com norte e Hakim, que tinham recebido também o immunity para testify antes do Congress, para ter as cargas de encontro a eles demitiu na terra que a evidência de encontro a eles tainted por seu testimony immunized. O juiz Gesell negou esse movimento. Entretanto, no deference à defesa reivindica que usariam um - possivelmente o testimony immunized exculpatory another, juiz Gesell em junho 1988 severed as experimentações.
Poindexter renovou seu movimento de Kastigar antes do juiz Greene em agosto 1989. Após a instrução e o argumento, 8 a corte requisitaram que dois hearings evidentiary estivessem prendidos. No primeiro, a corte ouviu o testimony dos conselhos Dan K. do associado. Webb e Howard M. Pearl a respeito de sua exposição ao testimony immunized de Poindexter antes de juntar o escritório de conselhos independentes. Webb e a pérola juntaram a equipe de funcionários de OIC em 1989 e não a tiveram, antes de suas nomeações, sido sujeitos aos procedimentos de OIC isolar-se do testimony immunized de Poindexter. Julgue Greene encontrou sua exposição ao testimony de Poindexter para ser insignificante e permitiu que ambos os advogados participassem na experimentação.
8 o exemplo de Poindexter foram tentados antes da corte de apelações governadas no norte que os hearings da testemunha eram necessários para permitir a experimentação de um réu immunized.
O segundo jogo de hearings de corte concerniu as testemunhas experimentais, cujo o testimony pode tainted pelo testimony immunized de Poindexter. De Gesell aceitado Greene do juiz do juiz revisão mais adiantada de testemunhas Jury grandes e declinada re-examine seus findings. Recusou também demitir o indictment na base da exposição grande potencial do juror ao testimony immunized.
A respeito das testemunhas experimentais, a corte fêz exame de medidas extensivas assegurar-se de que as indicações immunized de Poindexter não estivessem usadas de encontro a ele. A corte requisitou o governo para fazer uma submissão ex do parte (divulgada mais tarde a Poindexter) de todas as indicações feitas por testemunhas experimentais potenciais antes que Poindexter deu seu testimony immunized antes do Congress em julho 1987. A corte encontrou que todo o testimony proposto de a maioria das testemunhas potenciais tinha sido memorialized antes que Poindexter apareceu publicamente julho em 15, 1987, e conseqüentemente não tainted.
Quanto para 2 aquelas testemunhas os cujos esperaram que o testimony experimental não estaria limitado à evidência OIC tinha selado com a corte antes do testimony immunized de Poindexter, informação adicional requerida Greene do juiz. Concliu que o governo não tinha estabelecido que cinco de suas testemunhas potenciais estavam livres do taint e lhes tinha requisitado a aparecer em um hearing pre-trial. Duas das três testemunhas que apareceram finalmente na experimentação credibly afirmaram que seu testimony antecipado não estaria influenciado em nenhuma maneira pelo testimony immunized de Poindexter; o terceiro, norte, recusado fazer assim.
Norte indicado no hearing pre-trial que era incapaz, com respeito a todo o assunto, distinguir o que tinha feito pessoalmente, observado ou experimentado de o que tinha aprendido de prestar atenção a testimony.9 immunized de Poindexter quanto para à destruição de Poindexter de encontrar presidencial da secreto-ação de dezembro 1985 -- evidência importante na obstrução do Congress -- O norte reconheceu que tinha visto Poindexter destruir uma parte de papel mas insistido que não soube lhe era encontrar até que Poindexter indicou esse fato em seu testimony immunized antes do Congress.
9 Testimony norte, Hearing Pre-trial de Poindexter, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
A corte rejeitou o testimony pre-trial norte como nao believable. Norte, a corte encontrada, ``parece embarked naquele tempo [no hearing] em cima do curso calculado de tentar ajudar a seus colega e co-réu anteriores. . . prevaricating em várias edições. . . opinião 10
, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. do '' 10. 9.
Em uma borne-experimentação separada que governa, a corte adicionou que tanto quanto a destruição de encontrar, o testimony norte em sua própria experimentação sobre o evento era inconsistent com sua reivindicação que não poderia a recordar independent do testimony immunized de Poindexter. A corte encontrou-o “inerente incredible” que o norte não recordou “sua participação em um evento que testemunhou firsthand e isso era como dramático, certamente historic, como rasgar acima de encontrar presidencial extremamente raro.” 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
O Subpoena um
de Reagan dos aspectos os mais notáveis do exemplo de Poindexter era a tentativa bem sucedida do réu de chamar o presidente anterior Reagan para testify em sua experimentação pelo deposition gravado.
Poindexter procurou primeiramente notas presidenciais presidenciais e vice de OIC como parte de seus pedidos da descoberta pre-trial. Em um hearing pre-trial setembro em 6, 1989, os advogados de Poindexter disseram à corte que as notas presidenciais refletiriam esse Poindexter informaram o presidente de suas negações ao Congress em 1986 da atividade de NSC na sustentação dos contras, e que as notas “mostrariam o que o presidente foi dito sobre o que estava sendo feito para suportar os contras em América Central, e o consentimento do presidente e o ratification e a aprovaçã0 dessa atividade.” 12 em procurar notas presidenciais vice, os advogados de Poindexter disseram a corte que “em qualquer altura que [Bush] faltou uma reunião, almirante Poindexter instruíram-no nela mais tarde.” 13
12 Robinson, Hearing Pre-trial de Poindexter, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
A corte, antes de fazer uma decisão sobre se compelir OIC para produzir estes originais, setembro em 11, 1989, Poindexter dirigido para arquivar um memorando ex do parte que explica precisamente como estes originais ajudariam a seu defense.14 ele requereu dos conselhos independentes um memorando legal a respeito de sua responsabilidade produzir originais presidenciais presidenciais e vice não na possessão de OIC.
14 opinião, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Döma beslog grov förbrytare i Förenta staterna
Automatically translated into Swedish thanks to WorldLingo
Förenat kapitel
3 påstår V. John M. Poindexter
marinlast Adm. John M. Poindexter var bestämd som presidentReagans konsulenten för nationell säkerhet på December 4, 1985 som lyckas Robert C. McFarlane, som Poindexter hade tjänat som under som ersättaren för två år. Poindexters Vita huskarriären avslutade November 25, 1986, då han tvingades för att avgå i vaket av det offentliga avslöjandet av Iran/contra skenmanöver.
Poindexter Lt. Kolonn Den Oliver norden och McFarlane var justitiekanslern Edwin Meese III som för tre individer identifierades på November 25, 1986, som kunnigt av skenmanövern. Poindexters övervakning av norden och hans egna deltagande i Iran och contra funktioner var tidig sort fokuserar av oberoende rådgivare utredning.
Som i fallet mot nord, bevisar brottslingen mot Poindexter måste att samlas snabbt, för han tvingades för att vitsorda på Capitolkullen i sommaren av 1987 under ett lån av inskränkt immunitet. Annorlunda var åtalet av Poindexter rimligt att utmanas på jordningen att det härleddes från eller i något som påverkades långt av hans immunized kongress- vittnesbörd.
På mars 16, 1988, Poindexter indicted på sju brottsåtal som uppstår från hans medverkan i Iran/contra angelägenhet, som del av ettsvarande för 23 räkning åtal. Han namngavs med den norr pensionerade flygvapenmajen. Generator. Richard V. Secord och Albert Hakim som en medlem av komplotten som bedrar den Förenta staterna regeringen, genom att verkställa Iran/contra skenmanöver och annan, agerar.
Efter fallen avskildes, och två av de original- laddningarna avfärdades, försöktes beslogs Poindexter och i April 1990 av fem grov förbrytelse, däribland: en räkning av att konspirera som blockerar officiella förfrågningar och förfaranden, två räkningar av blockering av kongressen och två räkningar av falska meddelanden till Congress.1 U.S. Distriktsdomare Harold H. Greene dömde honom till ett six-month fängelsestraff. I November 1991, Poindexters valts övertygelser på vädjan. I December 1992, U.S.NA. Högsta domstolen som gås ned för att granska fallet.
1 det Poindexter fallet försöktes av Bundsförvant Råda Dan K. Webb kristen J. Mixter Howard M. Pärla och Louise R. Radin.
Poindexter sammanfogade nationell säkerhetrådet bemannar i Juni 1981, efter en distingerad sjö- karriär som den inklusive slagskeppet befaller, och kick-rangen pentagonen postar. I Oktober 1983 blev han ställföreträdande till nationell säkerhetkonsulenten McFarlane; bland hans underordnadar var norr. Under Poindexters ettåriga ambetstid som nationell säkerhetkonsulenten som började i December 1985, hade uppsikt över han Iran/contra funktioner som norden var direkt involverad i.
I November 1986, som de hemliga funktionerna var passande publicly utsatt, blev Poindexter den höga förvaltningstjänstemannen som ansvariga för att sammanfatta president andra bästa konsulenter om Iran beväpnar reor. I en serie av Vita husmöten med andra representanter och kongressledamotalltigenom månaden, lade han upprepade gånger ut en falsk version av transaktionerna, som distanserade presidenten Reagan från de lagligt tvivelaktiga 1985 vapensändningarna som gjordes till och med Israel, bestämt den November 1985 Hök-missilen transaktionen.
Även om Poindexter var talesmannen, var han inte den ensamma ansvariga för att veta fakta. Faktiskt varje annan hög tjänsteman, den inklusive presidenten Reagan, som hörde att hans version av beväpnar reor i förhandsmötealltigenom November 1986, hade att resonera för att tro den var fel. Yet inget, enligt contemporaneous noterar av de förhandsmötear, talade upp till korrekta Poindexter.
Poindexter tillsammans med nord och andra i November 1986 försökte att strimla och förändra den pappers- slingan som reflekterar deras Iran/contra aktiviteter. Bland annat förstörde Poindexter det enda existerande undertecknade presidents- busksnår-åtgärdar finna det ämnades bemyndiga retroaktivt CIA-medverkan i den November 1985 höksändningen.
Poindexter och norden var mindre lyckade, i att utrota dator-meddelandet slingan av deras Iran/contra aktiviteter. Poindexter och norden meddelade ofta till och med en sakkunnig kanaliserar den Poindexter, en sakkunnig dator, hade uppsättningen upp på NSC-ADB-systemet. Detta kanaliserar, bekant, som ”den privata blankochecken,” tillåtna Poindexter och norden som vidarebefordrar meddelanden till varje annat utan deras som sänds kanaliserar igenom, i vilket andra på NSCEN bemannar kunde avskärma dem.
Mellan November 22 till 29, 1986, nord tog bort från hans meddelanden för dataregister 736, och Poindexter tog bort 5.012 meddelanden under den samma illviljan period.2 dessa raderingar, sparade säkerhetskopian för Vita huset den rutinmässigt tejpar att innehålla alla data i systemet för att två veckor ska skydda mot ouppmärksam förlust. Då Iran/contra angelägenhet var utsatt i sena November 1986, behöll Vita huskommunikationsbyrån, som klarar av NSC-ADB-systemet, säkerhetskopian tejpar datummärkning från November 15. Utredare, var därför kompetent att hämta kopierar allra meddelanden som var i Poindexter-Norden dataregisteren i miden-November 1986, för mest av raderingarna uppstod. Dessa datormeddelanden blev viktiga bevisar i både Poindexteren och norr försök.
2 Williams, Poindexter försökvittnesbörd, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter medgav till många av hans aktiviteter för de valda kommittéerna i Juli 1987 under ett lån av intygimmunitet, som förhindrade hans erkännandear från att användas mot honom i något brottsligt förfarande. Därför att presidenten Reagan inte vitsordade däri fora, kallades Poindexter för att svara ifrågasätta som dominerade utfrågningarna: Visste presidenten omkring, och att godkänna skenmanövern av Iran beväpnar reaintäkter till contrasna? Poindexter svarade nr.en, ”bockstoppen här med mig.”, 3 som han sade han undanhöll avsiktligt informationen från presidenten Reagan, därför att ``jag önskade att presidenten ska ha någon deniability, så att han skulle skyddas. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, vald kommittévittnesbörd, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Vända mot ett brottsligt försök, konfronterade Poindexter ett olikt dilemma: Det var ej längre en ifrågasätta av skydd av presidenten men försvar som var självt mot fem brottsåtal. För kongress Poindexters viktigaste vittnesbörd bestyrkte presidentReagans upprepade förnekanden av medvetenheten av Iran/contra skenmanöver. I rättssalen monterade Poindexter ettbemyndigande försvar som försöker att övertyga juryn, att presidenten hade godkänt hans handlingar som var inklusive de som resulterade i brottsåtal. I stället för att ta stativ i hans egna försvar, emellertid, kallade han President Reagan för att vitsorda.
Pre-Trial förfaranden
U.S. Distriktsdomare Gerhard A. Gesell i Juni 1988 beställde, att mång--svarandet fallet mot Poindexter, nord, Secord och Hakim är efter avskiljande severed.5, Poindexters fall överfördes till lagmannen Aubrey E. Robinson jr., och därefter att bedöma Greene, som varade ordförande över mer ytterligare förfaranden.
Se det norr kapitlet, 5 för en specificerad beskrivning av avskiljandet av mång--svarandet fallet.
Alla Poindexters väsentliga utmaningar till giltigheten av åtal avfärdades för försök. Det resterande viktigt utfärdar angått: (1) bevarandet av komplottladdningen; (2) grälar upplösningen av klassificera-information; (3) utfärdar upplösningen av släkt till Poindexters immunized kongress- vittnesbörd, under avgörandet som är bekant som Kastigar; och (4) svarande lyckade försök att säkra försökvittnesbörd från tidigare president Reagan.
Bevara och begränsa komplottladdnings
problemen med hemlig information ledde till avskedanden av centralkomplottladdningarna för det norr försök, och liknande problem förväntades för att uppstå i fallet mot Poindexter. På Juni 20, 1989, rörd oberoende rådgivare att avlägsna de original- breda komplottladdningarna som baseras på tillförselen av contrasna och skenmanövern och väsentligen att begränsa laddningen av komplott för att överträda andra väsentliga brottsliga lagar och att förbjuda falsk meddelanden och blockering. Efter arkiveringar och muntligt argument beviljade domstolen regeringen vinkar.
Laddningen var refocused på det olagligt agerar av att konspirera med nord och Secord som döljer aktiviteter från kongress. Oberoende rådgivare argumenterade lyckat att detta begränsa av den skulle komplottladdningen minimerar deinformation problemen som besvärade det norr åtalet.
Hemlig information utfärdar
de hemliga informationstillvägagångssätten agerar (CIPA) tillåtet försökdomstolen effektivt som ska lösas, utfärdar att gälla bruket av den hemliga dokument och vittnesbörden i Poindexter. DomareGreenes övervakning av CIPAEN bearbetar och fruktbara förhandlingar mellan advokat för regeringen och Poindexter som lösas mest tvister med en minimi av fördröjningen.
I kontrast till norden fanns det något långvarigt, eller den viktiga prosessen som angår bilda eller räckvidden av Poindexters CIPA, märker till domstolen för att avslöja hemlig information på försök. Mellan November 27, 1989 och mars 13, 1990, tjänade som Poindexter sådan 11 märker, däribland beskriva möjligheten hemlig vittnesbörd åtta som, som listade hemliga dokument, han önskade att använda på försök, två och en som endast fokuserades på information han önskade att elicit på avlagringen av presidenten Reagan.
Bedöma Greene beställd att alla skillnader över hemlig information förhandlas mellan partierna innan du kommas med för domstolen. Bedöma Greene rymde sex stängda CIPA-utfrågningar för försök började och kompletterade de med flera kortare utfrågningar under försök. Mest av hans avgöranden på relevansen och admissibilityen av hemlig information och på adequacyen av ersättningar som var föreslagna vid regeringen, gjordes från ta av planet.
Sammantaget Poindexters märker CIPA listat ungefärligt 1.200 dokument, only ett litet del av vilka introducerades ultimately på försök. Mest hemlig information täcktes av Regering stipulations till bestämda fakta och andra unclassified ersättningar. Detta tillåtet försök som slätt fortsätter, utan konflikterna som den invecklade norden eller fallet mot gamlan CIA posterar högsta Joseph F. Fernandez som avfärdades tack vare, klassificera-information problems.6
6 ser det Fernandez kapitlet.
Kastigar förfaranden
Poindexter tvingades under ett lån av bruksimmunitet för att vitsorda i 1987 för de valda kommittéerna som utforskar Iran/contra. Som den annan Iran/contra svaranden som gav immunized vittnesbörd för kongress, rörda Poindexter att avfärda åtal på teorin att den överträdde normana enunciated i Kastigar v. Enigt påstår, 7 som argumenterar att hans immunized vittnesbörd användes mot honom i åtalsjuryn och på försök. Detta argument bevisade mislyckat på det jämna försök men segrade ultimately i hovrätten.
7 406 U.S. 411 (1972).
För deras försök avskildes, avfärdade Poindexter som var rörd gemensamt med norden och Hakim, som också hade mottagit immunitet för att vitsorda för kongress, som har laddningarna mot dem, på det slipat som bevisa mot dem fläcktes av deras immunized vittnesbörd. Domare förnekade Gesell som vinkar. Emellertid i deference till försvar fordrar att de skulle bruk ett - den another eventuellt exculpatory immunized vittnesbörden, domaren Gesell i Juni 1988 avskilde försöken.
Poindexter förnyade hans Kastigar vinkar för domaren Greene i Augusti 1989. Efter förhandsmöte och argument 8 som domstolen beställde att två evidentiary utfrågningar rymms. På första hörde domstolen vittnesbörd från förbunden advokat Dan K. Webb och Howard M. Pärlemorfärg angå deras exponering till Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd, innan att sammanfoga kontoret av oberoende rådgivare. Webb och pärlan sammanfogade OICEN bemannar i 1989 och hade inte, för deras tidsbeställningar, vart betvingar till OICS tillvägagångssätt för att isolera sig från Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd. Bedöma Greene grundar deras exponering till Poindexters vittnesbörd för att vara oansenligt och tillåtet båda advokater som deltar i försök.
8 det Poindexter fallet försöktes för hovrätten som härskades i nord som bevittnar utfrågningar var nödvändiga till tillstånd försök av en immunized svarande.
Understödjauppsättningen av domstolutfrågningar angick försökvittnen, vars vittnesbörd kan ha fläckts av Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd. Domaren Greene accepterade domaren som tidigare Gesells granskar av åtalsjuryvittnen och gått ned för att re-examine hans rön. Han vägrade också för att avfärda åtal på basen av potentiell storslagen jurymedlemexponering till den immunized vittnesbörden.
Angående försökvittnen tog domstolen omfattande mäter för att se till att Poindexters immunized meddelanden inte användes mot honom. Domstolen beställde regeringen för att göra meddelanden för en före dettapartesubmission som (mer sistnämnd som avslöjs till Poindexter) allra gjordes av potentiella försökvittnen, för Poindexter gav hans immunized vittnesbörd för kongress i Juli 1987. Domstolen grundar att alla av föreslagen vittnesbörd av mest av de potentiella vittnena hade varit memorialized, för Poindexter visades publicly på Juli 15, 1987 och därför inte fläcktes.
Som för de vittnen vars förväntade, hade försökvittnesbörden som skulle för att inte begränsas till bevisa OIC, förseglat med domstolen före Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd, krävd extra information om domare Greene. Han avslutade att regeringen hade missat för att upprätta, att fem av dess potentiella vittnen var fria av skamfläck och hade beställt dem som syns på en pre-trial utfrågning. Två av de tre vittnena, som syntes ultimately på försök credibly, intygade att deras förutsedda vittnesbörd som skulle för att inte påverkas i any långt av Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd; tredje, norr, vägrat för att göra så.
Norden som påstås på den pre-trial utfrågningen, att han var oförmögen, med hänsyn till några betvingar, för att skilja vad han hade personligen gjort, observerat eller erfarit från vad han hade lärt från att hålla ögonen på Poindexters immunized testimony.9, som för Poindexters förstörelse av presidents- December 1985 busksnår-åtgärda att finna -- viktigt bevisa i blockeringen av kongressen -- Norden bekräftade att han hade sett Poindexter förstöra en lappa av pappers- men insisterat, att han inte visste det var finna, tills Poindexter påstod det faktum i hans immunized vittnesbörd för kongress.
9 norr vittnesbörd, Poindexter Pre-trial utfrågning, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
Domstolen kasserade den norr pre-trial vittnesbörden som inte believable. Norr verkar den fann domstolen, ``att ha gåtts ombord då [på utfrågningen] på beräknad jagar av att försöka att hjälpa hans tidigare kollega och co-svarande. . . vid prevaricating på olikt, utfärdar. . . åsikt 10
, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. för '' 10. 9.
I ett separat posta-försök avgörande tillfogade domstolen att så långt, som förstörelsen av finna angicks, den norr vittnesbörden på hans egna försök om händelsen var inkonsekvent med his fordrar att han inte kunde minnas den vilden av Poindexters immunized vittnesbörd. Domstolen grundar det ”som naturligt är oerhört” den nord, mindes inte ”hans deltagande i en händelse som han bevittnade firsthand, och det var som dramatisk, sannerligen historiskt, som avrivningen upp av extremt sällsyntt presidents- finna.”, 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
Den Reagan stämningen
en av de mest noterbara aspekterna av det Poindexter fallet var svarande lyckade försök till appelltidigare president Reagan att vitsorda på hans försök vid spelad in på video avlagring.
Poindexter sökte först presidents-, och vice presidents- noterar från OIC som del av hans pre-trial upptäcktförfrågan. I en pre-trial utfrågning på September 6, 1989, Poindexters berättade advokater domstolen som presidents- noterar skulle reflekterar den Poindexter informerade presidenten av hans förnekanden till kongressen i 1986 av NSC-aktivitet i service av contrasna, och som noterar skulle ”show vad presidenten berättades om vad gjordes för att stötta contrasna i centralen Amerika, och president samtycke och ratificationen och godkännandet av den aktivitet.”, 12, i sökande vice presidents-, noterar, Poindexters advokater berättade domstolen, som ”han [busken] missa anytime ett möte, amiral som Poindexter sammanfattade honom på det därefter.”, 13
12 Robinson, Poindexter Pre-trial utfrågning, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
Domstolen, för danande ett beslut på huruvida som tvingar OIC till jordbruksprodukter dessa dokument, på September 11, 1989, riktade Poindexter för att spara en före dettapartememo som exakt förklarar, hur dessa skulle dokument hjälper hans defense.14 det, krävde från oberoende rådgivare en laglig anteckning som angår dess ansvar till presidents- och vice presidents- dokument för jordbruksprodukter inte i OICS besittning.
14 åsikt, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large scale and for a lengthy period, and then to lie about their activities to prevent the Congress and the public from finding out. . . .
With all due respect to the distinguished military records of Admiral Poindexter, Colonel North, General Secord, and the others, they have no standing in a democratic society to invalidate the decisions made by elected officials . . . As I said several times during the trial, it is immaterial to this criminal case who was right and who was wrong about the wisdom of the Contra policy. That is not what this trial was about. The jury and this court were not competent to decide for this nation whether resistance forces in Nicaragua should or should not have been supplied with weapons.
But more importantly for present purposes, neither was Admiral Poindexter. When he and his associates took it upon themselves to make that decision anyway, to implement it on a broad scale, and to work actively to keep what they were doing from the Congress and the public, they not only violated various statutes. They were also in violation of a principle fundamental to this constitutional Republic -- that those elected by and responsible to the people shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions that give them the ability to operate programs prohibited by law. It is unfortunate that, whatever may be his view of his own purposes and actions, the defendant still gives no evidence of recognizing that principle and the seriousness of its violation.
Given the nature of the offenses, the sentencing principle that is primarily applicable here is that of deterrence, and as a practical matter, deterrence means meaningful penalties. If the court were not to impose such a penalty here, when the defendant before it was the decision-making head of the Iran-contra operation, its action would be tantamount to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions.
A message of that kind could not help but encourage others in positions of authority and secrecy to frustrate laws that fail to accord with their notions of what is best for this country, and to carry out their own private policies in the name of the United States. . . .85
85 Judge Greene, Poindexter Transcript of Sentencing, 6/11/90, pp. 18-22
The Appeal
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in a 2-1 decision on November 15, 1991, reversed Poindexter's convictions on the grounds that his trial was impermissibly tainted by his immunized congressional testimony. The Poindexter ruling was based on the appeals court decision in the North case, which extended the protections of the use immunity statute to prohibit use of any witness whose testimony has been refreshed or shaped in any way by the defendant's immunized testimony. In his dissenting opinion, Chief Judge Abner Mikva noted that the majority ruling ``tells future defendants that all they need to evade responsibility [to testify at trial] is a well timed case of amnesia.'' 86
86 U.S. v. Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369, 390 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
The Poindexter appeals panel also overturned the two obstruction convictions on the grounds that the statute was ``unconstitutionally vague'' in its proscription of ``corruptly'' endeavoring to impede a congressional inquiry. The appeals panel ruled that a defendant's lying to Congress does not constitute obstruction unless the defendant corruptly influences someone else to do so. Again, Chief Judge Mikva dissented, finding it ``obvious . . . that Poindexter 'corruptly' obstructed the congressional investigation when he lied to Congress.'' 87
87 Ibid.
In October 1992, Independent Counsel petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Poindexter case. Independent Counsel said the appeals court ruling that the obstruction statute was unconstitutional ``leaves a large gap in the criminal law, while endorsing a method of analyzing constitutional vagueness challenges that could prove enormously destructive to a substantial body of federal legislation.'' 88 The petition noted that at least 17 other laws besides the obstruction statute at issue use the word ``corruptly'' to define an element of the offense.89
88 U.S. v. Poindexter, Crim. No. 88-0080-01, Petition for Writ of Certiorari by United States of America, at 9 (October 1992).
89 Ibid., p. 10.
On immunized testimony, Independent Counsel in its petition to the Supreme Court said the appeals ruling in Poindexter would
make almost impossible the prosecution of any case involving public immunized statements that requires testimony by persons sympathetic to the accused, such as co-conspirators or other associates. And the dangers of abuse and manipulation are magnified by the court of appeals' view, expressed in North, that a witness inclined to assist the defense may become disqualified from testifying at trial by the simple expedient of soaking himself in the defendant's immunized statements. 90
90 Ibid., p. 22.
Independent Counsel also noted that the appeals ruling
. . . will have its most profound impact on cases involving public immunized testimony before Congress -- cases that, by definition, involve issues of the most fundamental import. If the court of appeals has erred, this Court should right that error before significant further damage is done to the legislative oversight function. 91
91 Ibid., p. 29.
The U.S. Supreme Court in December 1992 declined, without comment, to review the Poindexter case.
Conclusion
Poindexter was responsible for providing President Reagan with advice on national-security matters of highest importance. What his conviction showed was that a jury of ordinary citizens can sort and weigh complex evidence and agree that obstructing and lying to Congress is a serious act worthy of felony conviction.
The Poindexter trial served the public interest in another sense. Poindexter's determination to call President Reagan as a witness allowed the public the rare opportunity to see him testify for seven hours about the Iran/contra matter.
The completion of the Poindexter trial in April 1990, two years after the original indictment was returned, necessitated the re-activation of the criminal investigation into Iran/contra. For the first time, Poindexter and North were available for questioning by Independent Counsel. Although this decision was questioned by some, Independent Counsel determined that his Iran/contra investigative mandate could not be fulfilled until the central operational figures were interrogated to find out whether other high-ranking officials helped support and cover up their activities.
Присуждать осуженным felons в Соединенных Штатах
Automatically translated into Russian thanks to WorldLingo
Глава 3
Соединенные Штаты v. Джон M. Недостаток
Adm военно-морского флота Poindexter. Джон M. Poindexter было назначено как советник национальной безопасности президента Рейган 4-ого декабря 1985, преуспевающ C. Роберт. McFarlane, которое Poindexter послужило вниз как депутат на 2 лет. Карьера Белого дома Poindexter закончилась 25-ое ноября 1986, когда он принудился отказать in the wake of общественное разоблачение Ирана/contra диверсия.
Poindexter, лт. Колонка Севером и McFarlane Oliver было attorney general Эдвин Meese CIII 3 индивидуалов определенное 25-ого ноября 1986, как knowledgeable диверсии. Наблюдением Poindexter севера и его собственным участием в Иране и contra деятельности были предыдущие фокусы исследования независимо консультанта.
Как в аргументы против северном, уголовное доказательство против Poindexter должно быть собрано быстро прежде чем он был вынужден засвидетельствовать на конгрессе США в лете 1987 под даром ограниченного иммунитета. В противном случае, prosecution Poindexter был правоподобн быть брошенным вызов on the grounds that он был выведен от или in some way повлиян на его иммунизированным съездовским свидетельствованием.
16-ого марта 1988, Poindexter было предъявлено обвинение на 7 обвинения в совершении уголовного преступления возникая от его запутанности в Иране/contra дело, как часть обвинительного акта multi-подсудимого 23 отсчетов. Он был назван с севером, выбытым майором Военно-воздушных сил. Генератор. Ричард v. Secord и Альберт Hakim как член конспирацияа, котор нужно defraud правительство Соединенных Штатов путем производить эффект Иран/contra диверсия и другое действуют.
После того как случаи были разъединены и 2 из первоначально обязанностей были уволены, Poindexter было попытано и осужено в апреле 1990 5 тяжких преступлений, вклюающ: один отсчет конспирировать помешать официальные дознания и продолжения, 2 отсчета мешать съезд, и 2 отсчета ложных заявлений к Congress.1 США. H. Гарольд федеральный окружной судья. Greene присудило ему к six-month термину тюрьмы. В ноябре 1991, осуждения Poindexter были опрокинуты на воззвании. В декабре 1992, США. Верховный суд просклонянный для того чтобы рассмотреть случай.
1 случай Poindexter было попытано K. Дэн консультантов сподвижницы. Webb, J. Кристиан. Mixter, Говард M. Перла, и R. Луиза. Radin.
Poindexter соединило штат совету национальной безопасности в июне 1981, следующ за distinguished военноморской карьерой которая включила столбы пентагона команды и высок-ранжировки линкора. В октябре 1983 он стал депутатом к советнику McFarlane национальной безопасности; среди его подчиненных был северно. Во время tenure Poindexter одногодичного как советник национальной безопасности, который начал в декабре 1985, он надзирал Иран/contra деятельности в которые север сразу включился.
В ноябре 1986, по мере того как втихомолку деятельности были общественно, котор подвергли действию, Poindexter пошло должностным лицом высшей администрации ответственным для резюмировать других верхних советников президента о сбываниях рукояток Ирана. In a series of встречи Белого дома с другими должностными лицами и член конгресса в течении месяца, он повторно lay out ложный вариант трудыов которые дистанцировали президента Рейган от законно спорных 1985 пересылок рукояток сделанных через Израиль, определенно трудыы Хоук-реактивного снаряда ноября 1985.
Хотя Poindexter было оратором, он не был одни ответственными для знать факты. Фактически каждое другое старшее должностное лицо, включая президент Рейган, который услышал его вариант сбываний рукояток в инструктажах в течении ноября 1986 имел причину верить ей были неправильны. Но no one, согласно contemporaneous примечаниям тех инструктажей, поговорили до правильно Poindexter.
Poindexter вместе с севером и другие в ноябре 1986 попытанные для того чтобы shred и изменить бумажная тропка отражая их Иран/contra деятельности. Между прочим, Poindexter разрушило единственный существуя подписанный президентский находить covert-действия который было предназначен утвердить ретроактивно запутанность C I A в пересылке хоуков ноября 1985.
Poindexter и север были более менее успешно в искоренять тропку компьютер-сообщения их Ирана/contra деятельности. Poindexter и север часто связывали до специальный канал Poindexter, компьютерный эксперт, установило вверх на систему компьютера NSC. Этот канал, известный как «приватное незаполненный чек,» позволил Poindexter и север передать сообщения to each other без их будучи направлянным через каналы в которых другие на штате NSC смогли экранировать их.
Между 22-ое до 29 ноября 1986, север уничтоженный от его сообщений компьютерного файла 736, и Poindexter уничтожил 5.012 сообщения во время такого же period.2 несмотря на эти пропускания, Белый back-up дома по заведенному порядку сохраняемый связывает содержать тесьмой все данные в системе на 2 недели для того чтобы защитить против невольной потери. Когда Иран/contra дело подвергся действию в последнее ноябрь 1986, агенство связей Белого дома, которое управляет системой компьютера NSC, сохранило резервные ленты датируя начиная с 15-ого ноября. Исследователи, поэтому, могли retrieve экземпляры всех сообщений которые находились в компьютерных файлах Poindexter-Севера в mid- ноябре 1986 прежде чем большое часть из пропусканий произошла. Эти сообщения компьютера стали важным доказательством как в Poindexter, так и в северных пробах.
2 Williams, свидетельствование Poindexter пробное, 3/15/90, pp. 1752-65.
Poindexter впущенное к много из его деятельностей перед специальная комиссия в июле 1987 под дар testimonial невосприимчивости, который предотвратил его допущения от быть использованным против его в нисколько уголовном продолжении. Потому что президент Рейган не засвидетельствовал в что форум, Poindexter был вызван для того чтобы ответить вопрос который преобладал слухи: Президент знал около и одобрить диверсию сбываний рукояток Ирана продолжает к contras? Poindexter не ответило нет, «стопы самеца оленя здесь с мной.» 3, котор он сказал он нарочито задержало информацию от президента Рейган потому что ``я хотело президента иметь некоторое deniability так НОП он был бы защищен. . . . '' 4
3 Poindexter, свидетельствование специальная комиссия, 7/15/87, P. 95.
4 Ibid., P. 101.
Смотрящ на уголовную пробу, Poindexter confronted по-разному дилемма: Не было no longer вопросом защищать президента а защищать против 5 обвинения в совершении уголовного преступления. Перед съездом, свидетельствование Poindexter значительно corroborated запирательства президента Рейган повторные осведомленности Ирана/contra диверсия. В зале судебных заседаний, Poindexter установило оборону высок-утверждения, пытая убедить присяжного что президент одобрил его действия, включая те которые привели к в уголовное обвинение. Вместо принимать стойку в его собственной обороне, однако, он вызвал президента Рейган для того чтобы засвидетельствовать.
Pre-Trial продолжения
США. A. Gerhard федеральный окружной судья. Gesell в июне 1988 приказало, чтобы аргументы против Poindexter multi-подсудимого, севером, Secord и Hakim было severed.5 после severance, случай Poindexter было возвращено к главному судье Aubrey E. Robinson, cJr, и после этого судить Greene, которое председательствовало над более дополнительными продолжениями.
5 для более детального описания severance случая multi-подсудимого, см. северную главу.
Вся из возможностей Poindexter субстантивных к ценностьи обвинительного акта были уволены перед пробой. Остальные существенный вопрос относились: (1) консервация обязанности конспирацияа; (2) разрешение споров классифицировать-информации; (3) разрешение вопросов отнесенных к свидетельствованию Poindexter иммунизированному съездовскому, под управлять известный как Kastigar; и (4) усилие подсудимого успешно к безопасный пробному свидетельствованию от бывшия президент Рейган.
Сохранять и суживать проблемы обязанности
конспирацияа с расклассифицированной информаци информацией вели к отставке центральных обязанностей конспирацияа перед северной пробой, и были ы, что возникли подобные проблемы в аргументы против Poindexter. 20-ого июня 1989, независимо консультанты двинули для того чтобы исключить первоначально обширные обязанности конспирацияа основанные на поставке contras и диверсии и существенн сужать обязанность конспирацияа для того чтобы нарушить другие субстантивные уголовные законоположения, запрещая ложные заявления и затруднение. После опиловок и устно аргумента, суд дарил движение правительства.
Обязанность была refocused на противозаконное действие конспирировать с севером и Secord скрыть деятельности от съезда. Независимо консультанты поспорили успешно что этот суживать обязанности конспирацияа уменьшьет проблемы классифицировать-информации plagued северный prosecution.
Расклассифицированные информационные издания
расклассифицированные процедуры по информаци информации, котор действуют (CIPA) позволили пробный суд эффективно разрешить вопросы включая пользу засекреченных документов и свидетельствования в Poindexter. Судите наблюдение Greene процесса CIPA и плодотворные переговоры между разрешенными консультантами для правительства и Poindexter большинств спорам с минимумом задерживают.
In contrast to север, не было увеличиваемо или значительно судебный процечч относительно формы или объема извещений о CIPA Poindexter к суду показать расклассифицировал информаци информация на пробе. Между 27-ое ноября 1989 и 13-ого марта 1990, Poindexter служило 11 такое извещение, включая 8 которое listed засекреченные документы он хотели использовать на пробе, описывая по возможности расклассифицированном свидетельствовании 2, и одном сфокусированном единственно на информации, котор он хотел выпытать на низложении президента Рейган.
Судите Greene приказал, чтобы все разницы над расклассифицированной информаци информацией были обсужены между партиями перед быть принесенным перед судом. Судите Greene придержал 6 закрынных слухов CIPA перед пробой начал и дополнил те с несколькими более скоро слухов во время пробы. Большой часть из его rulings на релевантности и приемлемости расклассифицированной информаци информации, и на соответствии замещений предложенных правительством, была сделана от стенда.
Я приняты совместно, извещения о CIPA Poindexter перечислили приблизительно 1.200 документов, только малая часть of which предельно ввел на пробе. Большинств расклассифицированная информаци информация была предусматривана stipulations Правительства к некоторым фактам и другим unclassified замещениям. Это позволило пробу продолжать ровно, без конфликтов которые осложнили север или станции C I A аргументы против F. Иосиф бывшей главное. Fernandez, которое было уволено из-за классифицировать-информации problems.6
6 видит главу Fernandez.
Продолжения Poindexter
Kastigar были вынуждены под даром невосприимчивости пользы засвидетельствовать в 1987 перед специальная комиссия расследуя Иран/contra. Как сделал другой Иран/contra подсудимые дали иммунизированное свидетельствование перед съездом, Poindexter двинутое для того чтобы уволить обвинительный акт на теории что она нарушила стандарты enunciated в Kastigar v. Соединенные Штаты, 7 споря что его иммунизированное свидетельствование было использовано против его в большого жюри и на пробе. Этот аргумент доказал неудачное на пробном уровне но предельно превалировал в апелляционном суде.
7 406 США. 411 (1972).
Прежде чем их пробы были разъединены, Poindexter двинутое jointly with север и Hakim, который также получили невосприимчивость для того чтобы засвидетельствовать перед съездом, для того чтобы иметь обязанности против их уволило на земле что доказательство против их было tainted их иммунизированным свидетельствованием. Судья Gesell отказало то движение. Однако, в deference к обороне требует что они использовали одно - another по возможности exculpatory иммунизированное свидетельствование, судья Gesell в июне 1988 разъединило пробы.
Poindexter возобновило его движение Kastigar перед судьей Greene в августе 1989. После инструктажа и аргумента, 8 суд приказали, чтобы 2 evidentiary слуха держались. На первом, суд услышал свидетельствование от K. Дэн консультантов сподвижницы. Webb и Говард M. Pearl относительно их подвержения к свидетельствованию Poindexter иммунизированному перед соединять офис независимо консультантов. Webb и перла соединили штат OIC в 1989 и не имели, перед их назначениями, после того как они были subject to процедуры по OIC изолировать от свидетельствования Poindexter иммунизированного. Судите Greene нашл их подвержение к свидетельствованию Poindexter для того чтобы быть незначительно и позволил обоим юристам участвовать в пробе.
8 случай Poindexter были попытаны перед апелляционным судом управляемым в севере что слухи заверителя были обязательно для того чтобы позволить пробу иммунизированной подсудимого.
Второй комплект судебных процессов относился пробные заверители, свидетельствование которых может быть tainted свидетельствованием Poindexter's иммунизированным. Судья Greene признавало просмотрение Gesell судьи более предыдущее заверителей большого жюри и склоняло переосвидетельствовать его заключения. Он также отказал уволить обвинительный акт on the basis of потенциальная грандиозная подвержение juror к иммунизированному свидетельствованию.
Относительно пробных заверителей, суд принял обширные измерения обеспечить что заявления Poindexter иммунизированные не были использованы против его. Суд приказал правительство для того чтобы сделать ex представление parte (более поздно показанное к Poindexter) всех заявлений сделанных потенциальными пробными заверителями прежде чем Poindexter дало его иммунизированное свидетельствование перед съездом в июле 1987. Суд нашел что все предложенное свидетельствование большого части из потенциальных заверителей было memorialized прежде чем Poindexter появилось общественно 15-ого июля 1987, и поэтому не было tainted.
Как для тех заверителей предпологали пробное свидетельствование не будет ограничено к доказательству OIC загерметизировал с судом до свидетельствования Poindexter иммунизированного, дополнительной информации судьи требуемого Greene. Он заключил что правительство не сумело установить что 5 из своих потенциальных заверителей были свободно taint и приказало им, котор нужно появиться на pre-trial слух. 2 из 3 заверителей предельно появились на пробу credibly подтвердили что их предвидимое свидетельствование не будет повлияно на в любом случае свидетельствованием Poindexter's иммунизированным; третье, северно, отказано для того чтобы сделать так.
Север заявленный на pre-trial слухе что он был неспособен, по отношению к любому вопросу, для того чтобы различить он лично сделал, после того как он наблюдал или после того как он испытан от он выучил от наблюдать testimony.9 Poindexter иммунизированное как для разрушения Poindexter находить covert-действия декабря 1985 президентский -- важное доказательство в затруднении съезда -- Север подтвердил что он увидел, что Poindexter разрушило куск бумаги но настаиван что он не знал ему был находить до тех пор пока Poindexter не заявить тот факт в его иммунизированном свидетельствовании перед съездом.
9 северное свидетельствование, слух Poindexter Pre-trial, 12/13/89, pp. 374-77.
Суд излучил северное pre-trial свидетельствование как правдоподобно. Северно, кажется, что embarked найденный суд, ``на том времени [на слухе] на высчитанном курсе пытать помочь его бывшим коллегау и co-подсудимому. . . путем prevaricating на различных вопросах. . . мнение 10
, Poindexter, 3/8/90, P. '' 10. 9.
В отдельно столб-пробе управляя, суд добавил что насколько разрушение находить, северное свидетельствование на его собственной пробе о случае было сбивчиво с его заявкой что он не смог вспомнить ее независимо свидетельствования Poindexter иммунизированного. Суд считал его «своиственно неимоверно» что север не вспомнил «его участие в случае, котор он witnessed firsthand и то был как драматически, деиствительно историческо, как срывать вверх весьма редкий президентский находить.» 11
11 Ibid., 5/29/90, pp. 32-40.
Subpoena одним
Рейган самых знатных аспектов случая Poindexter было удачная попытка подсудимого вызвать бывшия президент Рейган для того чтобы засвидетельствовать на его пробе videotaped низложением.
Poindexter сперва изыскивало президентские и вице президентские примечания от OIC как часть его запросов pre-trial открытия. В pre-trial слухе 6-ого сентября 1989, юристы Poindexter сказали суду что президентские примечания отразят то Poindexter сообщили президент его запирательств к съезду в 1986 из деятельности при NSC in support of contras, и что примечания «покажут президент был сказан о сделал для того чтобы поддержать contras в Центральной Америке, и согласие президента и утверждение и утверждение той RABOTы.» 12 в изыскивать вице президентские примечания, юристы Poindexter сказали суд которому «в любое время он [кустик] пропустил встречу, Admiral Poindexter резюмировали его на ей потом.» 13
12 Robinson, слух Poindexter Pre-trial, 9/6/89, P. 18.
13 Ibid., P. 19.
Суд, перед делать решение дальше направил ли вынудить OIC для того чтобы произвести эти документы, 11-ого сентября 1989, Poindexter для того чтобы хранить ex памятку parte объясняя точно как эти документы помогли бы его defense.14, котор оно требовало от независимо консультантов законного меморандума относительно своей ответственности произвести президентские и вице президентские документы не в владении OIC.
14 мнение, Poindexter, 9/11/89, P. 22.
Independent Counsel in a filing on September 18, 1989, told the court that the office did not have in its possession presidential notes, but rather had been granted access to notes and allowed to copy only a portion of them with special permission. As far as President Reagan's diary was concerned, Independent Counsel had been allowed to review typed extracts of portions deemed relevant by White House counsel, but the President had retained custody of his diary, which both he and the national archivist regarded as personal records, making them unaccessible under the Presidential Records Act unless their production were compelled by subpoena.15
15 Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice Presidential Documents that Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/18/89.
Attached to Independent Counsel's filing was a declaration by John Fawcett, assistant archivist for the Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration. Fawcett stated that President Bush's vice presidential records were transferred to the archives at the end of the Reagan Administration, but, ``No personal diary of former Vice President Bush has been specifically identified as being included in the Vice Presidential records. However, these Vice Presidential records have not yet been processed.'' 16
16 Ibid., Exhibit A. President Bush in December 1992 for the first time informed Independent Counsel that he had kept a diary as vice president from 1986 to 1988. See Bush chapter.
On September 25, 1989, Poindexter's attorneys informed the court that ``the defendant is willing to seek access to the personal diaries and notes of former President Reagan and former Vice President Bush pursuant to a . . . subpoena.'' 17 After reviewing Poindexter's ex parte submission on the materiality of presidential and vice presidential documents, the court on October 24, 1989, ruled that there was sufficient likelihood that President Reagan's documents would be material to the defense. Judge Greene differentiated between Reagan and Bush documents, however, because ``the Vice President had no operational authority with respect to Poindexter,'' because the information contained in vice presidential papers may be largely cumulative, and because of deference to the sitting President Bush.18
17 Defendant's Response to Government's Memorandum Concerning Presidential and Vice President Documents That Are Not in the Possession of Independent Counsel, 9/25/89, p. 2.
18 U.S. v. Poindexter, 725 F. Supp. 13, 28-31 (D.D.C. 1989). Judge Greene added that with respect to Bush documents, he would reevaluate the matter if Poindexter at a later date showed a more pressing need for them.
On November 3, 1989, Poindexter filed with the court a classified petition for leave to serve subpoenas on former President Reagan and the National Archives, seeking materials and testimony relevant to Iran/contra activities in 67 categories. On November 16, Judge Greene granted Poindexter's petition. Both President Reagan and the National Archives moved to quash the subpoena for documents.
In a pre-trial hearing December 4 the court stated that its order covered only documents, and not the President's possible trial testimony. On December 18 Poindexter sought the court's leave to subpoena President Reagan to testify at trial. In deciding whether Poindexter could subpoena President Reagan's testimony, Judge Greene asked Poindexter to submit a list of specific questions he intended to ask. Poindexter submitted a list of 183 questions, which were not made available to Independent Counsel.19 The court ruled that the questions directly related to the charges in the indictment and to Poindexter's anticipated defense.
19 In 1993, during preparation of this report, Independent Counsel obtained copies of these questions and other ex parte submissions from Poindexter's case.
In his February 5, 1990, ruling upholding the testimonial subpoena of Reagan, Judge Greene described Poindexter's proposed questions as falling into 12 categories. These included: (1) the frequency and occasions on which President Reagan and Poindexter met; (2) the President's view of the Boland Amendment and how it applied to contra support; (3) whether the President authorized Poindexter to seek foreign support for the contras; (4) what instructions the President gave Poindexter regarding meetings with Central American officials, and what information Poindexter subsequently relayed back to the President; (5) presidential discussions with Central American leaders concerning contra support; (6) presidential discussions with Poindexter regarding actions to be taken if Congress did not renew contra aid; (7) presidential knowledge of North's relationship to Iran/contra figures; (8) Poindexter's briefings of the President regarding a congressional inquiry in 1986 into North's activities; (9) Poindexter's communications with Congress at the direction of the President; (10) whether Poindexter informed the President about Secord's status; (11) discussions Poindexter had with the President regarding a chronology of the Iran arms sales prepared in November 1986; and (12) the President's knowledge of the arms shipments to Iran.
In his opinion explaining his decision to uphold Poindexter's subpoena of President Reagan, Judge Greene concluded:
Former President Ronald Reagan is claimed by Admiral Poindexter to have direct and important knowledge that will help to exonerate him from the criminal charges lodged against him. In view of the prior professional relationship between the two men, and defendant's showing discussed above, that claim cannot be dismissed as fanciful or frivolous. That being so, it would be inconceivable -- in a Republic that subscribes neither to the ancient doctrine of the divine right of kings nor to the more modern conceit of dictators that they are not accountable to the people whom they claim to represent or to their courts of law -- to exempt Mr. Reagan from the duty of every citizen to give evidence that will permit the reaching of a just outcome of this criminal prosecution. Defendant has shown that the evidence of the former President is needed to protect his right to a fair trial, and he will be given the opportunity to secure that evidence.20
20 U.S. v. Poindexter, 732 F. Supp. 142, 159-60 (D.D.C. 1990)
President Reagan did not claim executive privilege once he was ordered to testify.
The seven-hour videotaped deposition of the former President was taken February 16 and 17, 1990, in the Los Angeles federal courthouse, near his residence. The public and the press were not allowed to attend the deposition. Transcripts and the opportunity to view the videotape were made available to members of the press before the trial.
As for Poindexter's subpoena for documents from the former President, Judge Greene ordered President Reagan to make diary entries available for the court's in camera review. After its review, the court ordered President Reagan to produce the relevant diary entries to Poindexter in the absence of a claim of executive privilege. President Reagan, joined by the Bush Administration, claimed executive privilege as to the diary entries on February 5, 1990. On March 21, the court granted the Reagan-Bush motions to quash the subpoena for the diary entries, concluding that Poindexter's defense would be adequately served by the President's testimony.
The Poindexter Trial
The month-long Poindexter trial, which resulted in a five-count conviction on April 7, 1990, centered largely on the testimony of two witnesses: Oliver North for the prosecution and former President Reagan for the defense.
Both men attempted to help the defendant in their appearances on the witness stand, but each had given prior testimony harmful to Poindexter, and they could not deviate from that under threat of perjury charges.21 North could not abandon his earlier defense stance that he dutifully reported his activities -- including those found to be crimes -- to his superior, Poindexter. President Reagan was compelled at trial to state, as he had previously, that he repeatedly told his aides to obey the law and that he was unaware of their criminal acts.
21 Before taking the witness stand in Poindexter, North had testified before the Select Committees in July 1987, at his own trial in 1989, and at a Poindexter pre-trial hearing in 1990.
President Reagan was questioned by his Tower Commission on two occasions in early 1987. More significantly, the President in November 1987 answered 53 written interrogatories from Independent Counsel, which were submitted as sworn testimony to the federal Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra affair.
Poindexter chose not to testify at his trial.
Although Poindexter and North had destroyed and altered official papers and computer messages, the prosecution offered convincing documentary evidence that Poindexter was kept apprised of North's efforts to provide military aid to the Nicaraguan contras while it was outlawed from October 1984-October 1986 by the Boland Amendment; that Poindexter adopted false statements McFarlane and North made to Congress; and that Poindexter had been fully aware of the ill-fated November 1985 HAWK missile shipment to Iran, which he subsequently tried to conceal from Congress.
The Trial Testimony of Oliver L. North
The testimony of North, named as a co-conspirator in the case, was important to proving each of the five charges against Poindexter:
-- Count One, that Poindexter conspired with North and Secord to obstruct congressional inquiries of Iran- and contra-related matters, to make false statements to Congress, and to falsify, remove and destroy official documents.
-- Count Two, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in 1986 when it was investigating media allegations that North was raising funds and providing military aid to the contras. In letters to three committees, Poindexter answered questions by repeating denials McFarlane made before Congress in 1985 of North's involvement in contra-support activities, even though Poindexter knew the denials to be false. He set up a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee in August 1986 in which he knew North would have to give false testimony, and afterward congratulated North on his performance.
-- Count Three, that Poindexter obstructed Congress in November 1986 by participating with North in the preparation of false chronologies of the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran and by making false statements to the House and Senate intelligence committees. Specifically, Poindexter falsely asserted that no U.S. official knew before January 1986 that HAWK missiles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985. The indictment stated that North as early as November 20, 1985, told Poindexter about the shipment in advance and advised him of it again after the fact in late 1985.
-- Counts Four and Five, that Poindexter made false statements about the HAWK shipment to the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986. As in Count Three, the false statement charges were based on North's informing Poindexter about the shipment in 1985.
In four days of trial testimony, North reluctantly recounted his central operational role in the Iran/contra affair. He described the extensive contra-resupply network he ran with Secord and Hakim,22 his contra fund-raising efforts, and the military advice he gave the contras. He testified that he kept his bosses McFarlane and Poindexter fully informed of his activities and that he acted only with their approval.23
22 North objected to the prosecutor's use of the word ``Enterprise'' to describe the profit-making web of contra- and Iran-related operations he undertook with Secord and Hakim. He also objected to the use of the word ``testimony'' in reference to the false statements he made before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in August 1986, and the word ``diversion'' to describe the scheme in which he, Poindexter and others diverted Iran arms sales proceeds to the contras.
23 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1275-76.
North, who was forced to testify for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, frequently claimed that he could not recall many of the incidents in question, some of which had occurred several years before. North admitted a wide range of contra-support and Iran-related actions only when confronted with prior testimony in which he had provided extensive details.
North admitted that he lied in August 1986 when he told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) he was not engaged in raising funds or providing military support to the Nicaraguan contras.24 North described exchanges with Poindexter before and after the meeting that directly implicated Poindexter in a scheme to frustrate the congressional investigation.25
24 Ibid., 3/9/90, pp. 1042-43.
25 Ibid., 3/12/90, p. 1083.
HPSCI was one of three congressional committees pursuing a House inquiry into reports of North's contra-aid activities. North testified that prior to appearing before the committee in the White House Situation Room, he told Poindexter he would be asked about ``things that I had been told never to reveal.'' 26 In response, Poindexter told him, ``You can handle it, you can take care of it,'' according to North.27
26 Ibid., 3/9/90, p. 1033.
27 Ibid.
After receiving reports of North's statements to HPSCI, which Poindexter knew were false, Poindexter by way of his computer sent North a terse congratulatory message: ``Well done.'' 28
28 PROFs Note from Poindexter to North, 8/11/86, AKW 018921.
Based on the statements of North and Poindexter, HPSCI Chairman Lee Hamilton informed other members of Congress that the media allegations about North could not be proven. North's false testimony, in combination with Poindexter's perpetuation of McFarlane's previous lies, successfully frustrated the congressional oversight process. It was not until Nicaraguan soldiers on October 5, 1986, shot down a contra-resupply plane carrying American Eugene Hasenfus that Congress renewed its investigation into North's activities.
North testified that he kept Poindexter apprised of his involvement in the covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran in 1985 and 1986, including the operation's most secret aspect: the Iran/contra diversion. He sent Poindexter five or six memos stating that overcharges to the Iranian buyers would generate millions of dollars for diversion to the contras.29 North said Poindexter told him the diversion should never be revealed.30 North said he reported the diversion plan to Poindexter because he thought that projects funded by it ``ought to have the authority of the President behind them.'' 31
29 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, pp. 1107-11.
30 Ibid., pp. 1103-05.
31 Ibid., p. 1111.
North testified that in November 1985, he became directly involved in an Israeli shipment of U.S. HAWK missiles to Iran at McFarlane's behest.32 North said he got permission from both McFarlane, who was then the national security adviser, and Poindexter, then deputy national security adviser, to enlist Secord's help in resolving logistical problems surrounding the shipment.33 He also got McFarlane and Poindexter's permission to supply the Israelis with the name of a CIA-connected airline to assist.34 North outlined the details of the planned HAWK shipment in a computer note to Poindexter on November 20, 1985.35 By memoranda on December 4 and on December 9, 1985, North informed Poindexter that the Iranians were unhappy with the shipment and wanted the missiles to be retrieved.36
32 Ibid., pp. 1118-20.
33 Ibid., pp. 1121-22.
34 Ibid., pp. 1122-27.
35 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 11/20/85, AKW 002066.
36 PROFs Note from North to Poindexter, 12/4/85, AKW 002070-73; Memorandum from North to McFarlane and Poindexter, 12/9/85, AKW 002088-91.
When CIA officials insisted after the HAWK shipment that the President should retroactively authorize the agency's participation in the operation, CIA Director William J. Casey on November 26, 1985, gave Poindexter a covert-action Finding for President Reagan's signature.37 North testified that he saw the signed Finding either in Poindexter's office safe or in the safe of NSC counsel Paul Thompson.38
37 Memorandum from Casey to Poindexter, 11/26/85, AMY 000651-52.
38 North, Poindexter Trial Testimony, 3/12/90, p. 1245.
After public exposure of the Iran arms sales in November 1986, North -- at Poindexter's request -- prepared a chronology of U.S. involvement in the Iran arms sales, which underwent a series of re-writes. North testified that McFarlane removed from the chronology North's factual account of the November 1985 HAWKs shipment and substituted a cover story: that although the CIA became involved in the November 1985 shipment after Israel encountered logistical difficulties, U.S. officials at the time believed the cargo to be oil-drilling parts and did not learn until January 1986 that the true cargo was weapons.39
39 Ibid., pp. 1188-98.
Asked whether the McFarlane revision was part of a plan to ``cover up'' the existence of the November 1985 Finding, North answered: ``I don't know that cover up is the right word. I listened to the President's press conferences, I listened to statements being made by people and they just didn't talk about it.'' 40 North said McFarlane told him the cover story should be incorporated into the chronology because the 1985 Finding authorizing the weapons shipment described too directly an arms-for-hostages swap, which, if exposed, would politically embarrass the President.41
40 Ibid., p. 1191.
41 Ibid., pp. 1190-91.
The same oil-drilling-parts cover story was part of a CIA-prepared chronology that Casey and his deputy, Robert Gates, brought to a White House meeting on November 20, 1986, with Poindexter, North, Meese, Cooper and Thompson. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare Casey and Poindexter for their congressional testimony the following day. North was asked at trial:
Q: . . . did it become clear to you by the time McFarlane tells you that [the finding was too close to an arms-for-hostage swap] and by the time you see the CIA show up with this phony chronology, then at least did it appear to you that there was some effort or plan going on to cover up with U.S. involvement because of that finding?
A: Well, there is no doubt in my mind that I came to realize that finding was a disaster, and I understood that.42
42 Ibid., pp. 1208-09.
North testified that he altered and destroyed numerous documents in October and November 1986 that would have revealed details of the Iran and contra operations. He said he assured Poindexter that he had ``taken care of'' the documents that reflected his activities.43 He said he told Poindexter all the documents describing the Iran/contra diversion were destroyed, after learning from Poindexter on November 21, 1986, that Attorney General Meese would be conducting a weekend investigation into the Iran arms sales.44 North also testified that he altered other original NSC documents, after receiving Poindexter's permission to retrieve them from the NSC document-archiving system.45
43 Ibid., p. 1218.
44 Ibid., pp. 1120-21.
45 Ibid., pp. 1224-27.
More important, North reluctantly testified that he saw Poindexter destroy the only known copy of the signed presidential Finding that sought to authorize retroactively the November 1985 shipment of HAWK missiles to Iran.46 North's eyewitness account of the destruction of the Finding provided significant proof of Poindexter's intent to conceal facts about the HAWK missile shipment from Congress in November 1986.47
46 Ibid., 1252-54.
47 The destruction of the 1985 Finding was not charged as a separate crime in the indictment of Poindexter because Independent Counsel did not learn of it until North testified about it at his own trial in April 1989. Poindexter had told the Select Committees in 1987 that he destroyed the only signed copy of the 1985 presidential Finding. Independent Counsel did not learn of this statement at the time, however, because the OIC had taken measures to insulate itself from all immunized testimony. Even if Independent Counsel had been aware of the Poindexter testimony, OIC could not have used it in any criminal proceeding against Poindexter under the terms of immunity grant.
North's wide-ranging testimony enabled the prosecution to streamline its witness list to only nine other individuals, many of whom supplemented the central details provided by North.
The Trial Testimony of President Reagan
Before the trial of Poindexter, President Reagan had not testified publicly about Iran/contra. On February 16 and 17, 1990, he gave a seven-hour videotaped deposition as a defense witness. No classified matters were discussed and executive privilege was not invoked in response to any question. The videotaped deposition was shown in full, therefore, to the Poindexter jury during the trial on March 21 and 22, 1990.48
48 Immediately after each tape was shown to the jury, a copy was given to the television networks, allowing the public to see President Reagan's only courtroom testimony on the Iran/contra affair.
In direct examination, defense counsel sought to show presidential knowledge and approval of Poindexter's activities. But President Reagan frequently claimed memory lapses when questioned about specific exchanges he may have had with Poindexter and about his knowledge of individuals and details involved in the Iran and contra operations.
Although President Reagan exhibited virtually no detailed knowledge of the Iran/contra matter, he made clear to the jury that it had his imprimatur, calling it ``a covert action that was taken at my behest.'' 49 President Reagan said North was the only person he remembered being involved in the arms initiative.50 He could not recall being briefed by Poindexter on the May 1986 trip by McFarlane and North to Tehran, but he said he did recall signing a Bible for Iranians.51 President Reagan testified that the amount of weapons sold to Iran totaled $12.2 million.52
49 Reagan, Poindexter Trial Deposition, 2/16/90, p. 9.
50 Ibid., p. 21.
51 Ibid., p. 24.
52 Ibid., pp. 154-55.
Asked specifically about the November 1985 HAWK shipment to Iran, President Reagan said he recalled a plan in which the Israelis would turn their plane around in mid-delivery of the weapons if no hostages were released.53 He did not recall when he became aware of the November 1985 HAWK shipment; 54 he did not recall Poindexter telling him in November 1986 that others in the White House were having trouble remembering when they learned of it.55
53 Ibid., pp. 24-25.
54 Ibid., pp. 33-36.
55 Ibid., pp. 38-39.
President Reagan also claimed virtually no memory of the November 1986 period in which his top advisers were scrambling to limit public exposure of the Iran arms sales. He only generally recalled telling members of Congress about the arms sales on November 12, 1986.56 He could not remember receiving any information from Poindexter for any of his presentations on the matter in that time.57 The former President could not remember asking Poindexter to assemble the facts on the arms sales.58 He could not recall that Poindexter briefed the House and Senate intelligence committees on November 21, 1986.59
56 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
57 Ibid., p. 30.
58 Ibid., p. 28.
59 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
Defense counsel's questions suggested that their client had significant exchanges with the President during the arms-sale period and its aftermath. But Reagan's lack of recollection, and lack of specificity when he did remember events or individuals, left those questions unresolved.
President Reagan provided more helpful testimony for the defense on the subject of contra-support operations. Calling the Boland prohibition on contra funding a ``disaster,'' 60 Reagan testified that he urged his aides to do what they could to support the contras, while staying ``within the law.'' 61 Reagan recalled that Saudi Arabia's King Fahd pledged millions of dollars for the contras.62 He said he told his aides not to solicit contributions for the contras directly but to tell people how they could contribute if they wanted to help.63
60 Ibid., p. 69.
61 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
62 Ibid., pp. 74-75.
63 Ibid., pp. 53-54.
Asked whether Poindexter briefed him on the contras, President Reagan said: ``Oh yes, I depended on him for that.'' 64 He said he had no reason to believe that Poindexter was not keeping him fully informed.
64 Ibid., p. 116.
Asked to describe what he knew about North's responsibilities in the White House, President Reagan said:
Well, he was mainly performing tasks, as I understand it, for the NSC, but he -- his background and record had been one of being decorated for heroism and so forth in the Vietnamese conflict, and that he had been a very bold and brave soldier -- Marine.
And -- so, he was -- it was my impression, not from any specific reports or anything, that in through all of this that he was communicating back and forth between on the need for the support of the Contras and so forth.65
65 Ibid., p. 131.
In addition to professing a benign view of North and his activities, President Reagan indicated general knowledge of and support for the contra-resupply operation in Central America:
Q: Do you recall any discussions that he [Poindexter] may have had with you about the construction of an airstrip down there in Central America?
A: Well, I did hear -- we had learned that there was a rather primitive lane in there in the jungle near the border of Costa Rican [sic], and that was then being put into better shape as a usable airstrip.
Q: Did you have any -- do you recall any discussion about who was constructing the airstrip?
A: Well, no. I assume it was the Costa Rican government.
Q: And do you know what that airstrip was going to be used for?
A: Well, I know that -- I hoped that it would be used in the delivery of when once again we could supply, keep the Contras supplied, that it could be involved in the -- used there, if there was need for a refueling or anything of that kind of a plane.66
66 Ibid., p. 121.
President Reagan was then asked whether he knew who would be using the Costa Rican airstrip for contra resupply. His answer reflected knowledge of the operation supposedly being funded and run by private citizens -- the so-called ``private benefactors'' -- that was in fact being run by Secord at North's direction:
Q: Do you know who it was that was going to be using the airstrip? It was going to be used for supplying the Contras, but do you know who it was that was actually going to be doing the supplying and using the airstrip?
A: No, I do not on that. I don't think -- I don't think I ever considered that it would be military planes of ours. So, possibly some of those that weren't officially planes of ours that had been helping in the past in deliveries to the Contras and so forth.
Q: Earlier this morning or earlier today, I should say, you mentioned General Secord. That you knew that he was involved in the Contra supply effort.
Was it part of his operation you thought that he might be using the airstrip?
A: I can't say that I actually recall that, but it seems to me logical that he would have been involved in that.67
67 Ibid., p. 122.
President Reagan, who winked and smiled at Poindexter from the witness stand, did not hide his contempt toward congressional inquiries into NSC staff contra-support activities. Shown misleading letters written by Poindexter in July 1986 to the committees of Congress that were investigating allegations of North's contra efforts, Reagan said: ``I am in total agreement. If I had written it myself, I might have used a little profanity.'' 68
68 Ibid., pp. 146-47.
In cross-examination, the prosecution was able to impeach much of President Reagan's testimony. This was possible because Reagan late in 1987 had answered, under oath, 53 written interrogatories for Independent Counsel and the Grand Jury investigating the Iran/contra matter.
The July 21, 1986, letters -- in which Poindexter embraced and perpetuated the lies McFarlane had told Congress about North's contra-support activities a year earlier -- were a key element in the obstruction charges against the defendant. Under cross-examination by the prosecution, President Reagan was asked whether he was aware that the Poindexter letters repeated McFarlane's previous lies. The former President equivocated:
Well, I simply -- no, I did not have this information, but I have a great deal of confidence in the man who was quoted as sending these letters, McFarlane. And I have never -- I have never caught him or seen him doing anything that was in any way out of line or dishonest. And so, I was perfectly willing to accept his defense.69
69 Ibid., p. 151.
President Reagan said he did not know that McFarlane had pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in connection with the false letters.70
70 Ibid., pp. 220-21.
Asked whether he approved either the McFarlane or Poindexter letters to Congress, the former President said he had no recollection of doing so, adding that his memory could be faulty.71 Asked directly whether he would approve of sending false information to Congress, President Reagan conceded that he would not.72 Would he have authorized Poindexter to make false statements to Congress? President Reagan again attempted to assist his former aide: ``No. And I don't think any false statements were made.'' 73
71 Ibid., pp. 150-51.
72 Ibid., pp. 151-52.
73 Ibid., p. 158.
President Reagan also testified that he did not approve the destruction of Iran/contra documents by Poindexter, and that he was not told about their destruction.74 But the former President, in response to subsequent questioning, described the dilemma in which he placed his aides in November 1986 by instructing them that certain information could not be revealed because ``it will bring to risk and danger to people that are held and with the people that we were negotiating with.'' 75
74 Ibid., p. 160.
75 Ibid., p. 252.
Asked again whether he approved the destruction of alteration of any Iran/contra records, President Reagan said: ``And this, I cannot answer. I cannot recall because it is the possibility that there were such papers that would violate the secrecy that was protecting those individuals' lives.'' 76 President Reagan had denied in response to the earlier written interrogatories that he approved the destruction and alteration of documents; when confronted with his previous testimony he stated that it was truthful.
76 Ibid., p. 255.
On the issue of the contras, President Reagan said he ``never had any inkling'' that North was guiding their military strategy.77 But Reagan muddied the issue in a later statement about North:
77 Ibid., p. 170.
I know that he [North] was very active, and that was certainly with my approval, because I yesterday made plain how seriously I felt about the Contra situation and what it meant to all of us here in the Americas. And, so, obviously, there were many things that were being done. But, again, as I say, I was convinced that they were all being done within the law.78
78 Ibid., p. 189.
In questioning about the Iran/contra diversion, President Reagan surprisingly asserted that he had no proof that a diversion had occurred:
And to this day, I still with all of the investigations that have been made, I still have never been given one iota of evidence as to who collected the price, who delivered the final delivery of the weapons, or what was -- whether there was ever more money in that Swiss account that had been diverted someplace else. I am still waiting to find those things out and have never found them out.79
79 Ibid., p. 155.
Asked whether he had approved a diversion, Reagan again stated:
May I simply point out that I had no knowledge then or now that there had been a diversion, and I never used the term. And all I knew was that there was some money that came from some place in another account, and that the appearance was that it might have been a part of the negotiated sale. And to this day, I don't have any information or knowledge that that wasn't the total amount that -- or that there was a diversion.80
80 Ibid., p. 156.
Asked again whether he would have approved a diversion, President Reagan said he would not. But, he added, ``No one has proven to me that there was a diversion.'' 81
81 Ibid., p. 157.
President Reagan said he did not recall that the Tower Commission concluded in March 1987 that, in fact, a diversion had occurred. ``I, to this day, do not recall ever hearing that there was a diversion,'' he said.82 Shown that portion of the Tower Commission report describing the diversion, Reagan said: ``This report -- this is the first time that I have ever seen a reference that actually specified there was a diversion.'' 83
82 Ibid., p. 240.
83 Ibid., p. 243.
Asked whether Poindexter should have told him about an Iran/contra diversion, Reagan said: ``Yes. Unless maybe he thought he was protecting me from something.'' 84
84 Ibid., pp. 243-44.
The Verdict and Sentencing
After six days of deliberation, the jury on April 7, 1990, found Poindexter guilty of each of the five felony charges against him. Judge Greene on June 11, 1990, sentenced Poindexter to six months imprisonment on each of the five counts, to be served concurrently.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Greene noted complaints by Poindexter's supporters that the most he was guilty of was having become embroiled in a political quarrel between the White House and Congress. Judge Greene stated:
Whatever may have been the nature of the original dispute, what the defendant and his associates did was emphatically not a part of the normal political process.
. . . When Admiral Poindexter and his associates obstructed the Congress, what were they seeking to accomplish? In a word, it was to nullify the decision that body had made on the issue of supplies to the Contras. . . .
President Reagan did not, or for parliamentary reasons he could not, veto the bill [which contained the Boland prohibition on contra aid]. He did not attempt to assert his own constitutional powers or take the issue to the people, and at the conclusion of the political process the Boland Amendment thus became law.
No problem. What the president was unwilling or unable to do -- to defeat this law -- Admiral Poindexter, together with Oliver North and others, did on their own. They decided that the policy embodied in the Boland Amendment was wrong, and they went about to violate it on a large