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293 KiB
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INSLAW's ANALYSIS and REBUTTAL
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of the
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BUA REPORT
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Memorandum in Response to the
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March 1993 Report of Special Counsel Nicholas J. Bua
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to the Attorney General of the United States
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Responding to the Allegations of INSLAW, Inc.
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INTRODUCTION
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The attempt by the Department of Justice (DOJ) to deal with
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the INSLAW case through a Special Counsel, who is required to
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report to the Attorney General, and a staff of DOJ attorneys
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raises significant public policy questions. These are apparent on
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the face of the Bua Report.
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For example, should DOJ, as one of the parties to a civil
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dispute, be able to use the authority of a federal grand jury and
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the secrecy requirements of its proceedings to improve its own
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civil litigation posture? Should DOJ be using its own lawyers and
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investigators and a federal grand jury to investigate colleagues,
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superiors, and subordinates? How should the tension between the
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obligation to enforce the criminal laws of the United States and
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the legitimate need to safeguard intelligence and national
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security be reconciled?
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The problems with the Bua Report, as set forth in INSLAW's
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Analysis and Rebuttal, are much more concrete than the
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aforementioned public policy questions. We do, however, think
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that the problems identified by these questions should be
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carefully and thoughtfully addressed as steps are being taken to
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bring the INSLAW case to a fair, final and publicly acceptable
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conclusion.
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The main body of this memorandum is divided into sections
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addressing (1) DOJ's wrongful acquisition of an enhanced version
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of PROMIS to which it was not entitled and which it has continued
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to use without properly compensating INSLAW, (2) DOJ's attempt,
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by improper means, to cause the conversion of the INSLAW
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bankruptcy from reorganization to liquidation, and (3) the
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indications of a more widely ramified conspiracy involving Earl
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Brian and the intelligence and law enforcement agencies of the
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United States and foreign governments.
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Each of these sections examines the basis for the
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conclusions reached in the Bua Report and points out errors and
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omissions plainly demonstrable on the basis of evidence cited in
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the report itself or readily available to the investigators in
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the records of prior investigations and judicial proceedings. The
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sections also identify evidentiary points as to which Judge Bua
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chose to believe the self-serving statements of individuals
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directly implicated in the theft of INSLAW's software, to
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disbelieve the testimony on the same points by INSLAW witnesses,
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and to ignore evidence supporting the findings of the Bankruptcy
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Court for the District of Columbia, the United States District
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Court for the District of Columbia, and the House Committee on
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the Judiciary.
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In addition to the deficiencies apparent on its face, the
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report reveals numerous failures to pursue testimony or
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documentary evidence that could have contradicted its conclusions
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and corroborated INSLAW's allegations. The following sections
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identify these failures in at least 40 situations.
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Immediately after his appointment, INSLAW called to Judge
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Bua's attention the essentiality of assuring senior DOJ officials
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and other government employees who had given important
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information to INSLAW that they could disclose this information
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to him or his staff without fear of reprisal. Any person
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seriously attempting to uncover the truth would have gone to
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great lengths to find a way of overcoming these apprehensions.
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This was not done. Appended to this memorandum is a listing of
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these informants together with a brief synopsis of information
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they have furnished to INSLAW. The listing gives enough of an
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indication of who they are to make clear that they deserve to be
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taken seriously, but not so much as to make it possible to
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identify them individually. The synopses make clear at the same
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time that the information they could furnish strongly
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corroborates other evidence of the wider conspiracy.
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The Bua Report denigrates the findings of the Bankruptcy
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Court without clearly acknowledging that those findings were
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affirmed and supplemented by two other entities independent of
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DOJ, the U.S. District Court and the House Judiciary Committee.
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Senior U.S. District Judge William B. Bryant, Jr., issued a 44-
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page opinion, in which he states in part:
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It is sufficient to state that after careful review of
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all of the volumes of transcripts of the hearings
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before the bankruptcy court, the more than 1,200 pages
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of briefs and supporting appendices, and all other
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relevant documents in the record, there is convincing,
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perhaps compelling support for the findings set forth
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by the bankruptcy court.
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. . . the court has examined the bankruptcy judge's
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findings of fact in the light of the entire record, and
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finds his account of the evidence is eminently
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plausible; and this court is not left with any notion
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that a 'mistake has been committed,' Id. at 574. This
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conclusion is reached without regard to the deference
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to be accorded to the judge's opportunity to assess
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credibility. The cold record adequately supports his
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findings under any standard of review.
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The section on the wrongful acquisition of PROMIS amply
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supports its thesis that the Bua Report focuses only on those
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facts that its authors deemed relevant to the conclusions they
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intended to reach. It calls attention to the fact that the report
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based some of its most important conclusions on interviews with
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unnamed individuals and on undisclosed documentary evidence. This
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section also points out the report's remarkable credulity toward
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professions of innocence by the very individuals heretofore
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identified as the principal culprits in the theft of the
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software. As the section observes, "To accept the self-serving,
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long after-the-fact and post hoc rationalizations of these
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individuals over their testimony at trial, which testimony
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clearly evidenced their propensity for lying and covering up the
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truth, as found by two federal courts, is ludicrous."
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The section on the conversion of the INSLAW bankruptcy
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exposes the same pattern of justifying the DOJ version of the
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facts and downplaying, misinterpreting, or ignoring evidence to
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the contrary. This is particularly striking in the case of the
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report's attempt to minimize the testimony of Anthony Pasciuto,
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Deputy Director of the Executive Office for U.S. Trustees. In
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reaching for an explanation of Pasciuto's conduct, his
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testimony, and his subsequent recantation, the report avoids the
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one most logical explanation: the fear that he would not get the
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promotion he had long sought and the fear that he would be fired
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for telling the truth, as he eventually was.
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Pages 28-35 of the section on the more widely ramified
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conspiracy pull together the numerous indications that INSLAW's
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PROMIS software is widely used throughout the United States
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Government. A thorough investigation would, at a minimum, have
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conducted the relatively simple and inexpensive computer-based
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code comparisons between PROMIS and its suspected clones in U.S.
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intelligence and law enforcement agencies, that might have shown
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whether or not these claims are true. The Bua investigation made
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no attempt to arrange such comparisons.
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Relevant both to DOJ's bad faith in its dealings with INSLAW
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and to its involvement in a broader conspiracy is the issue of
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the DOJ's complicity in the denial of reappointment to George F.
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Bason, Jr., who presided over the Bankruptcy Court trial. The
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report reveals that the criticisms of Judge Bason by his
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predecessor, Roger Whelan, were influential in the Merit
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Selection Panel's deliberations about Judge Bason's suitability
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for reappointment. Whelan told the Panel that Judge Bason was a
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poor administrator. Chief Judge Aubrey Robinson of the U.S.
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District Court, however, told the Judiciary Committee that Judge
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Bason's only administrative problems were inherited from Judge
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Whelan and that these were soon brought under control by Judge
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Bason. In the Chapter 11 proceeding, Roger Whelan represented the
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INSLAW creditor which pressed hardest for INSLAW's liquidation
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and which, in so doing, appears to have acted in collusion with
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DOJ. The report also discloses direct communications on the
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INSLAW case between a DOJ attorney and the Chair of the Merit
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Selection Panel, communications whose existence was not revealed
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in the course of two Congressional investigations on the subject.
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It is noteworthy in the circumstances that Judge Bua made an
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eleventh-hour approach to INSLAW's lawyers in an effort to broker
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a $25 million settlement between INSLAW and the DOJ. The
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inference that Judge Bua was aware of the weaknesses in his own
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report is difficult to avoid.
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I. DOJ WRONGFULLY OBTAINED AN ENHANCED VERSION OF PROMIS
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TO WHICH IT WAS NOT ENTITLED AND THEREAFTER HAS USED
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THAT VERSION WITHOUT PROPERLY COMPENSATING INSLAW
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In assessing the validity of the so-called "tentative"
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factual conclusions reached in the Bua Report, one need be
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mindful of the following telling admission of the authors:
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Our discussion here of the factual background of the
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1982 contract does not purport to be exhaustive.
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Instead, _we have attempted to focus on those facts
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that are relevant to the conclusions we have reached_.
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Where it is necessary to explain specific findings or
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conclusions, we have undertaken a more detailed
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examination of certain events in subsequent sections of
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this report. (Emphasis added.) (Page 15)
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In effect, the authors of the Bua Report determined,
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apparently in advance, the conclusions that they intended to
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reach and, thereafter, set about to "focus" on only those facts
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that they deemed relevant to support those conclusions, to the
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exclusion of the massive factual record that otherwise would, and
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did, lead to the very opposite conclusions found not only by two
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federal courts, but, in part, by the Committee on the Judiciary
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of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Permanent
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Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Government
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Affairs of the U.S. Senate.
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It is remarkable that the authors of the Bua Report either
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ignored or rejected every conclusion reached by the federal
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courts and the two legislative committees that was contrary to
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the conclusions reached by the Bua Report, while at the same time
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accepting those conclusions that were supportive of the
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conclusions reached in the Bua Report. It is even more remarkable
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that the Bua Report could find, on the one hand, that DOJ neither
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obtained the enhanced version of PROMIS through fraud nor
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wrongfully distributed PROMIS while, on the other hand, Judge Bua
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repeatedly informed journalists covering the INSLAW case and once
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conveyed directly to INSLAW's attorneys that he had reached the
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opposite conclusion and had recommended that DOJ settle its
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dispute with INSLAW by the payment of $25 million to INSLAW.
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The following is an attempt merely to highlight some of the
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most glaring errors in the factual conclusions reached in the Bua
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Report.
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A. Negotiation of the 1982 Implementation Contract
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The Bua Report found that DOJ had issued a Request for
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Proposals (RFP) in late 1981 that solicited proposals on a
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contract to: (1) implement computer-based PROMIS software in 20
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"larger" United States Attorneys' Offices and (2) create and
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install word processing based case management software in the
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remaining 74 offices. There is no dispute that, at the time that
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the RFP was issued and the contract was awarded to INSLAW, both
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DOJ and INSLAW understood that DOJ intended to utilize the
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computer-based PROMIS only in the 20 larger offices; it clearly
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was understood that the remaining 74 offices would not receive
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this software.
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The Bua Report acknowledged that INSLAW, in responding to
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the RFP, specifically stated that:
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During the life of this project -- but not as part of
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this project -- Inslaw plans new enhancements and
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modifications to the basic PROMIS software and to the
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original version of PROMIS for U.S. Attorneys.
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....[I]mprovements funded by other [i.e. non-
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governmental] sources and developed and accepted for
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inclusion in the software supported by Inslaw, will be
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made available to the U.S. Attorneys' offices. (Page
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19)
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However, the Bua Report concluded, without any factual
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support, that INSLAW did not clarify what it meant by "accepted
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for inclusion" or "will be made available." This is wrong.
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First, the Bua Report ignores the fact that the quoted
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statement was made specifically in response to the Statement of
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Work, which in part required that:
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All systems enhancements, modifications, and
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development performed _pursuant to this contract_ shall
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be incorporated within the systems which have already
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been installed in the U.S. Attorneys' Offices.... (
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3.2.4.2) (Emphasis added.)
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INSLAW was responding to this portion of the Statement of
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Work by advising DOJ that while INSLAW planned new enhancements,
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they would not be as a part of, or pursuant to, this contract.
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Thus, DOJ clearly was put on notice that these new enhancements
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would not be made available for free.
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Second, there is ample testimony that both before and after
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the PROMIS contract was signed, INSLAW specifically advised the
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Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys ("EOUSA") in writing that it
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had available for sale, at an additional cost, certain
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proprietary enhancements to PROMIS. INSLAW provided this
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information to DOJ because, by the time that DOJ issued the RFP,
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INSLAW had made substantial enhancements to Old PROMIS.
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(Hamilton, T. 105; Merrill, T. 763) These enhancements, which
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eventually included major new functional subsystems and
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substantial changes to the existing code, at a cost which INSLAW
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estimated to be $8.3 million, rendered Enhanced PROMIS far
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superior to Old PROMIS in terms of speed, flexibility, ease of
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use, breadth of function, and ability to be modified for
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particular needs. (Hamilton, T. 400; Merrill, T. 760-762; Holton,
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T. 1216-1219)
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In its Technical Proposal responding to DOJ's PROMIS Project
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RFP, INSLAW informed DOJ that it had made enhancements to Old
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PROMIS which were proprietary, and as to which it had made a
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significant developmental and commercial commitment. (Answer
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13; PX 12; Hamilton, T. 124-125; Gizzarelli, T. 482-483) In this
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regard, INSLAW specifically made a claim of proprietary rights in
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such enhancements. (Hamilton, T. 124)
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The Bua Report suggests that DOJ did not understand that
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INSLAW had made this claim of proprietary rights, and that INSLAW
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had failed to explain in sufficient detail the basis or impact of
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that claim. That is not correct. In fact, in response to INSLAW's
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proposal, DOJ specifically requested a clarification of INSLAW'S
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claim of proprietary rights. (PX 13; Hamilton, T. 126; Merrill,
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T. 766-767) In an amendment to its Technical Proposal dated
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January 13, 1982, INSLAW responded to DOJ's inquiry and
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specifically informed DOJ that ". . . all of INSLAW's software is
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proprietary to it thus far." (PX 14; Hamilton, T. 127) DOJ did
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not respond further to INSLAW's amendment of its Technical
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Proposal. (Gizzarelli, T. 490; Merrill, T. 767-769) INSLAW also
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indicated that such programs were copyrighted and that since May
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1981 it had been developing privately financed enhancements to
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PROMIS which were the exclusive property of INSLAW, and that DOJ
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had no license to use these privately-financed enhancements. (PX
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14)
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To illustrate this point, INSLAW, in its Technical Proposal,
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singled out the two-program version of the data base adjustment
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subsystem as an enhancement which had been developed by INSLAW
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using private funds. (Hamilton, T. 125; PX 14) The data base
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adjustment subsystem was not required to be delivered under the
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contract nor had it been required to be delivered under any prior
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DOJ contracts (Hamilton, T. 125, 2575-2578; Merrill, T. 768) By
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this January 13 amendment, INSLAW illustrated the concept that
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INSLAW had all the proprietary rights in Enhanced PROMIS
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(Gizzarelli, T. 493)
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Subsequent to receipt of INSLAW's response to DOJ, and prior
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to the execution of the contract, no one from DOJ made any
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further inquiry of INSLAW, or raised any questions, concerning
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INSLAW's right to assert its proprietary rights in Enhanced
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PROMIS. (Hamilton, T. 128; Merrill, T. 767-769; Gizzarelli, T.
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490)
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From the foregoing exchange of communications, it should be
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clear that any rational person acting on behalf of DOJ would
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understand that INSLAW was advising DOJ that the proprietary
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enhancements developed by INSLAW would be made available to the
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Department for a fee, should the Department desire to have those
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enhancements included within the software delivered under the
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contract. If there was any confusion on the part of DOJ, that
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confusion was not the fault of INSLAW; had DOJ any further
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questions concerning what was meant by the language in issue
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after having received the January 13 clarification, it was up to
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DOJ to seek answers to those questions.
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Not surprisingly, after thoroughly reviewing the record,
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Judge Bryant reached the same conclusion:
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The parties negotiated for over two months, and finally
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entered into a contract on March 16, 1982. Prior to the
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execution of the contract, and for a time thereafter,
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there were extensive discussions about what INSLAW
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claimed were privately
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funded enhancements which were featured in PROMIS. In
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other words, INSLAW claimed that at the time of
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entering into the contract their version of PROMIS was
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considerably more advanced than it was at the time of
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the pilot project, and that it claimed proprietary
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rights to those features which were developed with
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other than government funding. (D. Ct. Mem. Op., p. 4)"1
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B. INSLAW's Continuing Assertion of Proprietary
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Rights and DOJ's Improper Response
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To the extent that there was any lingering confusion on
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DOJ's part regarding INSLAW's assertion of proprietary rights in
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the enhanced version of PROMIS, that confusion should have been
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removed by INSLAW's continuing assertion of those rights. Indeed,
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in April 1982, INSLAW formally notified DOJ of its intent to
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market Enhanced PROMIS as a fee-generating product to public and
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private sector customers. (Hamilton, T. 134-136; Merrill, T. 775)
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In this connection, Roderick M. Hills, an attorney for INSLAW,
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wrote to Associate Deputy Attorney General Stanley E. Morris,
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enclosing a memorandum written by Hamilton (with his counsel's
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assistance) describing the origin and financing of Old PROMIS,
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INSLAW's efforts to substantially improve the program utilizing
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private funds, and the need to market such privately-financed
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enhancements. (PX 21)
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Hill's letter solicited any questions or objections that DOJ
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had to INSLAW's plans. (PX 21) In essence, this inquiry was
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intended to provide advance notice to DOJ as to INSLAW's plans
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and to obtain a "sign-off" letter from DOJ to respond to concerns
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raised by IBM which at that time was considering a joint
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marketing agreement with INSLAW. (Rogers, T. 422-424; Hamilton,
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T. 277) The purpose of the "sign-off" letter, from INSLAW's
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perspective, was to give INSLAW assurance that DOJ understood
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what INSLAW was proposing to do, that it agreed with INSLAW's
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legal position, and that it would take no affirmative action to
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disrupt or impede INSLAW's marketing efforts. (Rogers, T. 444-
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445) Any questions that DOJ continued to have should have been
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answered by this memorandum.
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The Bua Report acknowledges the above facts but fails to
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take into consideration that this additional effort by INSLAW
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clearly should have put DOJ on notice that there were additional
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enhancements included within the PROMIS software that were not
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part of the software to be delivered under the contract, absent a
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separate agreement regarding that software.
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There is no dispute that this plan obviously infuriated C.
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Madison Brewer, DOJ's PROMIS Project Manager. The Bua Report
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accepts the fact that Brewer vehemently took issue with the
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representations and conclusions set forth in the Hamilton
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memorandum, which Brewer referred to as "scurrilous," and further
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acknowledges that Brewer's opposition to the plan was presented
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in an improper manner. However, in a woefully inadequate effort
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to downplay Brewer's conduct, the Bua Report proceeds to seek to
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justify his opposition, while at the same time totally ignoring
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all of the undisputed facts that evidence his outrageous conduct
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directed at injuring INSLAW.
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First, the Bua Report's conclusion that at least some of the
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positions taken by Brewer appear to have been well-founded is not
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only wrong, but also is a facially obvious effort to obfuscate
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the fact that virtually all of the substantive positions and
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actions taken by DOJ, at the direction of Brewer, were not well-
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founded. In this regard, the Bua Report credits Brewer for a
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grand total of two correct positions, to the exclusion of all of
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the incorrect positions. More particularly, the Bua Report states
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that Brewer was correct to object to the extent that the Hamilton
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memorandum claimed that all software developed after May 1981 was
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proprietary, since the five BJS enhancements that were under
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development would have been in the public
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domain. INSLAW did not then, nor has it ever, disputed this
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fact, and the memorandum did not take a contrary position.
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Additionally, the Bua Report credits Brewer for correctly arguing
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that INSLAW had received some federal funding after May 1981.
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Once again, while this funding may have taken place, INSLAW was
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not asserting any proprietary rights for software developed from
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government funding under contracts containing federal data rights
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clauses. Moreover, the specific contracts referenced in the Bua
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Report did not encompass any software development work;
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therefore, none of the proprietary enhancements was developed
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using government money. Thus, the only two points on which the
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Bua Report agrees with Brewer are non-issues, and serve only to
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cloud the otherwise obvious wrongful conduct undertaken by
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Brewer.
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The Bua Report ignores the fact that at an April 14, 1982
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meeting, Brewer actively considered terminating for the
|
|
government's convenience the month-old PROMIS Contract in
|
|
retaliation for INSLAW's letter to Morris. (Brewer, T. 1673; PX
|
|
23) In his testimony at trial, Brewer's deputy, Jack Rugh,
|
|
acknowledged that such a termination at that time would have been
|
|
"ludicrous." (Rugh, T. 1471; Brewer, T. 1673; PX 23) In addition,
|
|
Brewer discussed reprisals against INSLAW on its several other
|
|
contracts with DOJ, one of which was the BJS contract for
|
|
specific PROMIS enhancement development work which was not part
|
|
of the PROMIS enhancements claimed as proprietary by INSLAW.
|
|
(Hamilton, T. 114; PX 24)
|
|
|
|
Another contract discussed at the April 14, 1982 meeting was
|
|
awarded to INSLAW in 1981 by DOJ to perform a needs analysis and
|
|
system design for PROMIS in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the
|
|
District of Columbia. (PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 122; Brewer, T.
|
|
1634, 1673; Hamilton, T. 141; PX 232) The authorized second phase
|
|
of this contract would have been a PROMIS implementation effort
|
|
by INSLAW at an estimated contract price of $600,000. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at pp. 123-124; Hamilton, T. 141-142) It was noted
|
|
during the April 14th meeting that DOJ was undecided about
|
|
whether to proceed with the contract's second phase and that
|
|
Brewer and Rugh would meet with the District of Columbia's U.S.
|
|
Attorney's Office staff to decide what would be done on the
|
|
contract. (PX 23) It was further noted that cancellation of the
|
|
authorized second phase would adversely affect INSLAW's ability
|
|
to keep its overhead rate in line with EOUSA expectations. (PX
|
|
23)
|
|
|
|
Stating that he wanted to discuss the BJS contract with
|
|
INSLAW, Brewer demanded a meeting with INSLAW for April 19, 1982.
|
|
(PX 24; Brewer, T. 1638)
|
|
|
|
At the outset of the meeting on April 19, 1982, Brewer
|
|
informed James Kelley, INSLAW's General Counsel, and Joyce Deroy
|
|
of INSLAW that his concern on the BJS contract arose from the
|
|
"scurrilous" memorandum written by Hamilton which was attached to
|
|
INSLAW's April 2, 1982 notice to Morris of its plans to market
|
|
Enhanced PROMIS. (PX 25; PX 26; PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 137;
|
|
Brewer, T. 1671)
|
|
|
|
As of this meeting, Brewer understood from Hamilton's
|
|
memorandum that INSLAW was asserting its ownership rights in
|
|
Enhanced PROMIS, as well as its right to market Enhanced PROMIS.
|
|
(PX 25; PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 141)
|
|
|
|
During the April 19, 1982 meeting, Brewer again referred to
|
|
the Hamilton memo and launched into a very emotional, even
|
|
belligerent, tirade. (PX 26; Brewer, T. 1639; Kelley,
|
|
T. 1397) During this part of the discussion of the Hamilton
|
|
memo, Brewer made a number of specific statements regarding the
|
|
memo. (PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 143) He stated that the Hamilton
|
|
memo was unnecessary because in Brewer's view DOJ had already
|
|
acknowledged INSLAW's right to sell Enhanced PROMIS. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at pp. 144-145) Nevertheless, and despite the obvious
|
|
inconsistency, it was Brewer's further understanding, he said,
|
|
that while INSLAW had the right to sell Enhanced PROMIS, DOJ had
|
|
unlimited rights to such software, including the right "to give
|
|
it away" to those very public and private sector entities to
|
|
which INSLAW would be attempting to market PROMIS. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at pp. 146-147; Brewer, T. 1683-1684) DOJ has the
|
|
audacity to contend that "[it] is in no way inconsistent" for
|
|
INSLAW to have "the right to sell . . . PROMIS" at the same time
|
|
that DOJ has "unlimited rights" to give PROMIS away to INSLAW's
|
|
intended customers. (DRPPFF 167)
|
|
|
|
Brewer also questioned INSLAW's ability to perform the
|
|
PROMIS Contract and indicated that a number of people at DOJ were
|
|
upset with INSLAW and that the Hamilton memo had caused all kinds
|
|
of problems. (PX 26; PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 172, 174-175) Brewer
|
|
further questioned the quality and timeliness of INSLAW's work,
|
|
citing the Illinois Criminal Justice Coordinating Council, the
|
|
Michigan Prosecuting Attorneys' Association and others as sources
|
|
of this information. (PX 26; PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 175-176)
|
|
|
|
Finally, Brewer strongly challenged INSLAW's right to claim
|
|
ownership of, and complete domain over, Enhanced PROMIS. (PX 26;
|
|
PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 177)
|
|
|
|
Another matter of discussion by Brewer at the April 19, 1982
|
|
meeting was a supplemental request for payment from INSLAW in the
|
|
amount of $125,000 in regard to the BJS contract (PX 324 [Brewer]
|
|
at pp. 141-142; Brewer, T. 1638, 1679; Hamilton, T. 144, 200).
|
|
Brewer contacted the superior of the contracting officer on the
|
|
BJS contract and asked that a "preliminary notice" of default be
|
|
issued on the contract2 as well as a reprimand to INSLAW for
|
|
failing to comply with the "Limitation of Cost Clause." (PX 27)
|
|
Subsequent to the meeting and at Brewer's insistence, INSLAW
|
|
agreed to absorb this $125,000 expense into the PROMIS Contract
|
|
without increasing the total cost of the PROMIS Contract and
|
|
without any additional payment under the BJS Contract. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at pp. 276-278; Brewer, T. 1640; Hamilton, T. 145)3
|
|
|
|
Subsequent to the April 19, 1982 meeting, Brewer met with
|
|
officials of the District of Columbia U.S. Attorney's Office to
|
|
recommend that they not go forward with Phase II of the contract.
|
|
(PX 232; PX 237; PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 123; Brewer, T. 1674)
|
|
INSLAW was not formally notified of this decision until August
|
|
25, 1982, although it had successfully completed Phase I of the
|
|
D.C. U.S. Attorney's Contract on May 31, 1982. (Hamilton, T. 142;
|
|
PX 37; PX 38; PX 48) This formal notice was given just 13 days
|
|
after INSLAW received a letter from Deputy Attorney General
|
|
Stanley Morris dated August 11, 1982, which noted that INSLAW
|
|
could assert proprietary rights to any privately financed
|
|
PROMIS enhancements. (Hamilton, T. 138-140, 277; Merrill, T. 775-
|
|
776; PX 36)
|
|
|
|
Brewer played a very important role in the decision not to
|
|
go forward with Phase II of the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office
|
|
contract. (PX 232; PX 237; PX 324 [Brewer] at p. 124) Brewer
|
|
identified the purported basis for this decision, in part, as his
|
|
understanding that INSLAW was not able to perform because of the
|
|
demands being made upon INSLAW under the new three-year, PROMIS
|
|
Contract (PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 124-125; Brewer, T. 1635),
|
|
notwithstanding that the latter contract had only been in effect
|
|
a few months.
|
|
|
|
Based on prior discussions with DOJ officials, INSLAW had
|
|
been led to believe that it would be awarded Phase II of the D.C.
|
|
U.S. Attorney's Office contract and had planned upon $600,000 of
|
|
revenue from Phase II for estimating its overhead rate for all of
|
|
its DOJ contracts and grants. (Hamilton, T. 143-144; Merrill, T.
|
|
774) After the decision not to go forward with Phase II had been
|
|
made, Brewer was informed by INSLAW's comptroller, Murray Hannon,
|
|
that denial of the $600,000 Phase II contract resulted in a
|
|
precipitous increase in INSLAW's overhead within a few months of
|
|
the decision, as Brewer had been forewarned would happen. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at p. 125)
|
|
|
|
Finally, while the Bua Report went out of its way in an
|
|
attempt to exonerate Brewer, it is noteworthy that the Bua Report
|
|
did not even address the unrefutable fact that DOJ failed totally
|
|
to act upon, let alone consider, INSLAW's repeated assertions of
|
|
bias on the part of Brewer. As Judge Bryant found:
|
|
|
|
INSLAW attributed its troubles to an acute bias on the
|
|
part of Brewer, who according to it was intent on
|
|
running the company out of business. INSLAW lodged many
|
|
complaints of bias and made several requests of DOJ to
|
|
investigate these complaints and give some relief from
|
|
what it perceived to be grossly unfair treatment. _DOJ
|
|
made no meaningful response to these complaints_, and
|
|
INSLAW's fortunes did not change. (Emphasis added.) (D.
|
|
Ct. Mem. Op., p. 6)
|
|
C. DOJ Obtained Enhanced PROMIS through Fraud and
|
|
Deceit
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report concluded that "[t]he evidence we have
|
|
compiled to date does not support a finding that DOJ employees
|
|
intentionally deceived or defrauded INSLAW, or that there was a
|
|
scheme to trick INSLAW into turning over its proprietary
|
|
software." (Page 125) This conclusion purportedly is supported on
|
|
the basis of a review of the deposition and trial testimony,
|
|
documents and interviews of "many of the individuals involved,"
|
|
and the review of additional unspecified documentary evidence.
|
|
Not surprisingly, the Bua Report does not disclose the identity
|
|
of every one of the individuals interviewed or the "additional
|
|
documentary evidence" reviewed. In fact, however, virtually none
|
|
of the witnesses offered by INSLAW during the trial was
|
|
interviewed by the authors of the Bua Report, and those who were
|
|
interviewed commented at the time on the perfunctory character of
|
|
the inquiry. Indeed, it is astonishing that the authors of the
|
|
Bua Report could conclude, on the basis of interviews with DOJ
|
|
personnel conducted over 10 years after the events in question
|
|
and following an extensive trial and extraordinary post-trial
|
|
publicity, that those individuals acted only in the "best
|
|
legitimate interests of the government. " (Page 125) To accept
|
|
the self-serving, long after-the fact and post hoc
|
|
rationalizations of these individuals over their testimony at
|
|
trial, which testimony clearly evidenced their propensity for
|
|
lying and covering up the truth, as found by two federal courts,
|
|
is ludicrous.4
|
|
|
|
1. The Advance Payment Dispute
|
|
|
|
Under the PROMIS Contract, INSLAW was entitled to receive
|
|
payments in advance of the waiting period usually necessary to
|
|
process an invoice. In order to qualify for the advance payment
|
|
clause, INSLAW had to represent that it was not then capable of
|
|
obtaining financing from banks or other traditional commercial
|
|
sources. The contract also contained a provision that prohibited
|
|
INSLAW from pledging its rights under the contract.
|
|
|
|
In November 1982, INSLAW informed DOJ that it had violated
|
|
inadvertently a technical covenant in the contract by assigning
|
|
its government invoices as collateral for a bank line of credit
|
|
that it had obtained in April 1982. DOJ responded to this by
|
|
threatening to terminate the advance payment clause and by
|
|
demanding that INSLAW turn over a copy of its software to DOJ.
|
|
The bankruptcy court found that the advance payment dispute was
|
|
manufactured, without justification, as a mechanism to injure
|
|
INSLAW and to require INSLAW to provide DOJ with a copy of the
|
|
software that would, in turn, enable DOJ to implement the
|
|
software in-house.
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report rejected the conclusion reached by the
|
|
bankruptcy court. In doing so, the authors of the Bua Report seek
|
|
to justify the conduct of DOJ on the basis that DOJ's action
|
|
was predicated upon its belief that INSLAW had "lied" to it.
|
|
They conclude that it was the misrepresentations by INSLAW
|
|
concerning its ability to obtain outside financing that was the
|
|
primary reason for DOJ giving notice of termination of advance
|
|
payments. The authors of the Bua Report assert that, after
|
|
viewing the "demeanor" of the contracting officer, they concluded
|
|
that his version was believable on this point. This conclusion,
|
|
however, ignores virtually all of the evidence in the record
|
|
relating to this subject.
|
|
|
|
First, the record is undeniably clear that, on February 19,
|
|
1982, prior to the issuance of the contract, when INSLAW sought
|
|
the so-called advance payment provision, commercial bank
|
|
financing was not available. Thus, INSLAW's representation to DOJ
|
|
at that time was correct and most certainly was not a lie. In
|
|
April 1982, largely on the strength of the $10 million contract
|
|
award, INSLAW was able to secure an additional line of credit
|
|
from the Bank of Bethesda. This credit was obtained, in part,
|
|
based upon the pledge of the receivables to the Bank. Thus,
|
|
contrary to the assertion in the Bua Report, INSLAW was not in
|
|
the process of obtaining commercial financing at the time that it
|
|
represented in its formal request that it was unable to do so,
|
|
and there is no conflict in the representation made in February,
|
|
prior to the contract, and the subsequent effort to obtain
|
|
financing in April, after the contract. The effort to obtain
|
|
financing took place later, and was predicated on the award of
|
|
the contract. Thus, INSLAW neither lied nor misrepresented
|
|
anything to DOJ.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding, there is no dispute that the pledging of
|
|
the receivables resulted in a technical violation of the
|
|
contract. In November 1982, this technical violation was
|
|
discovered by DOJ's auditor Robert Whitely and discussed by him
|
|
with INSLAW. At that time, Whitely told INSLAW that he was fully
|
|
satisfied with the foregoing explanation and that, since DOJ was
|
|
in no way negatively impacted by the line of credit or the
|
|
pledge, he would not raise any question in the current audit
|
|
about this matter. Whitely fully acknowledged these facts, and
|
|
particularly the fact that the government was not placed in any
|
|
financial risk as a result of the technical violation. (PX 345
|
|
[Whitely] at pp. 36-38, 40-44; Whitely, T. 1673-1764; Hamilton,
|
|
T. 166-167) However, when Whitely met with Videnieks and Brewer
|
|
and indicated his discovery of the technical violation, they
|
|
seized on the issue and maneuvered it into a controversy when
|
|
none really existed. Whitely later testified at trial that he had
|
|
been concerned about INSLAW's near insolvency, but could not
|
|
produce any contemporaneous documentation to verify the
|
|
truthfulness of such claims.
|
|
|
|
Second, despite considerable written discussions within DOJ
|
|
concerning this matter, there is no record whatsoever of any DOJ
|
|
employees stating their belief that INSLAW had lied to them. In
|
|
fact, while Brewer and the contracting officer purportedly were
|
|
concerned about a substantial deterioration in the financial
|
|
condition of INSLAW, as well as other concerns that they
|
|
enumerated in writing, at no time did they state their belief
|
|
that INSLAW had engaged in any misrepresentations. Nor did they
|
|
seek to justify their conduct on that basis during their
|
|
depositions or at trial. In short, while they may have asserted
|
|
this so-called "lie" argument to the authors of the Bua Report,
|
|
over 10 years after the fact, they most certainly did not raise
|
|
this argument at any earlier time.
|
|
|
|
Third, the entire premise on which DOJ threatened to
|
|
terminate the advance payment provision (i.e., the deteriorating
|
|
financial condition of INSLAW) was found by the bankruptcy
|
|
court to be a complete fabrication and a pretext for
|
|
demanding access to the computer software. Not surprisingly, this
|
|
wealth of evidence was totally ignored in the Bua Report.
|
|
|
|
For example, despite the expressed concerns about the
|
|
financial condition of INSLAW, neither Brewer nor Videnieks could
|
|
identify any evidence which led them to believe that INSLAW's
|
|
financial condition had substantially deteriorated since the
|
|
award of the PROMIS contract in March 1982, nor any evidence of
|
|
any fraud. (PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 232-233; 241-245; Brewer, T.
|
|
1630; Videnieks, 207-208) In fact, Brewer and Videnieks were
|
|
mistaken in their assumption that INSLAW's financial condition
|
|
had deteriorated during the latter half of 1982; INSLAW was much
|
|
stronger in December 1982 than at the time the PROMIS contract
|
|
began. (Hamilton, T. 162) In fact, during 1982, INSLAW was able
|
|
to increase a previously existing line of credit of $700,000 with
|
|
First American Bank to a $1.2 million line of credit from the
|
|
Bank of Bethesda. (Hamilton, T. 159; Merrill, T. 799) In
|
|
addition, between August and December 1982, INSLAW entered into
|
|
the co-marketing agreement with IBM. (Hamilton, T. 160; Merrill,
|
|
T. 799) Perhaps most important is the fact that INSLAW had
|
|
obtained the PROMIS contract, and prospects were strong for
|
|
successful completion of the contract. (Hamilton, T. 160-161;
|
|
Sherzer, T. 958-959)
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding the evidence to the contrary, Brewer
|
|
informed Tyson, Director of EOUSA, about these same unsupported
|
|
concerns. (PX 49; Hamilton, T. 156-157) In a December 9, 1982
|
|
memo to Tyson, Brewer raised the following issues:
|
|
|
|
a. The prospect of INSLAW's bankruptcy;
|
|
|
|
b. The possible need for in-house EOUSA personnel to
|
|
take over the PROMIS Project;
|
|
|
|
c. Substantial questions of fraud being raised by
|
|
INSLAW's accounting practices;
|
|
|
|
d. The need for close auditing review of INSLAW's
|
|
costs, particularly overhead and computer center
|
|
costs; and
|
|
|
|
e. The prospect of terminating the PROMIS Contract.
|
|
(PX 49; Hamilton, T. 156-156)
|
|
|
|
The December 9 memo also expressly detailed EOUSA's
|
|
commencement of planning for carrying-on the PROMIS Contract
|
|
Project in-house, using EOUSA employees ". . . in the event of
|
|
trouble" and stated that DOJ had "demanded, as is our right, from
|
|
INSLAW copies of all software documentation ...." (PX 49)
|
|
(Emphasis added.) This planning was not disclosed at any time by
|
|
DOJ to INSLAW. (Hamilton, T. 165) Had this planning been
|
|
disclosed to INSLAW, INSLAW would not have turned its software
|
|
over to DOJ pursuant to Modification 12. (Hamilton, T. 165-166)
|
|
|
|
The December 9, 1982 Brewer memo was based on several
|
|
fundamental misconceptions. First, INSLAW had not incurred
|
|
$975,000 of additional bank debt, but $275,000, and the
|
|
additional borrowing was necessary to defray partially $344,000
|
|
that DOJ then owed INSLAW
|
|
for its time-sharing services. (Hamilton, T. 157-158)
|
|
Second, Brewer misconstrued the Advance Payments provision of the
|
|
contract as a mechanism for "payment-in-advance" when it was
|
|
merely a contractual procedure for DOJ's timely payment of
|
|
INSLAW's vouchers for work already completed. (Hamilton, T. 158)
|
|
Third, Brewer erroneously concluded that INSLAW had
|
|
"reprogrammed" $100,000 in contributions to the INSLAW employee
|
|
profit-sharing plan because INSLAW had not yet deposited the
|
|
annual contribution, when, in fact, the deposit was not yet due
|
|
and owing. (Hamilton, T. 158-159) Fourth, Brewer incorrectly
|
|
concluded that the nature of INSLAW's indebtedness had become
|
|
"desperate" by December 1982, when, in fact, INSLAW believed it
|
|
had just obtained DOJ's " sign-off" to its rights to license its
|
|
privately-financed enhancements, had established its first sales
|
|
and marketing unit, and had consummated a national co-marketing
|
|
arrangement with IBM for the public sector. (Hamilton, T. 159-
|
|
161) Fifth, Brewer confused a version of PROMIS developed under
|
|
the Pilot contract using a COBOL compiler that the hardware
|
|
manufacturer (PRIME) had subsequently discontinued, with a
|
|
version developed by INSLAW's European subsidiary based on
|
|
current compiler technology; as a consequence of his lack of
|
|
understanding, Brewer had suggested possible fraudulent
|
|
accounting practices at INSLAW. (Hamilton, T. 162-165) INSLAW's
|
|
independent public accountants had, in fact, reviewed and
|
|
approved the accounting transactions. (Hamilton, T. 165)
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report concludes that DOJ's actions concerning the
|
|
advance payments were fully justified by the memoranda they wrote
|
|
concerning the matter. According to the Bua Report, "[t]o believe
|
|
that DOJ's concerns about INSLAW's financial health were actually
|
|
a pretext, would require a finding that certain DOJ employees
|
|
were so prescient that they created numerous internal documents,
|
|
and indeed even misled their superiors, just so that they could
|
|
defend themselves against a claim of theft years later." No such
|
|
finding would be required. In fact, the only finding that is
|
|
necessary is that Brewer, for all of the reasons found by the
|
|
bankruptcy court, set about to manufacture a reason to justify
|
|
obtaining the software. There is nothing unusual in employees
|
|
attempting to paper the record in an effort to justify their
|
|
actions and that is exactly what happened here. The evidence
|
|
amply supports the bankruptcy court's findings that DOJ's
|
|
justification for seeking the software and cancelling the advance
|
|
payments provisions was unsupportable.
|
|
|
|
In an effort to justify the conduct of DOJ, the authors of
|
|
the Bua Report go to great lengths to rebut the conclusion of the
|
|
bankruptcy court that Brewer and Videnieks had no basis to
|
|
believe that INSLAW was near insolvency and that Whitely's
|
|
testimony in support of this argument was manufactured solely for
|
|
use at trial. According to the report, "Judge Bason stated this
|
|
conclusion after finding that Whitely never prepared any report,
|
|
that Whitely never referred to INSLAW's potential insolvency in
|
|
his deposition, and that Videnieks did not mention Whitely in his
|
|
deposition." The report concluded that "all of these factual
|
|
assertions appear to be just plain wrong." (Page 131-132) In
|
|
fact, Judge Bason was absolutely correct and it is the authors of
|
|
the Bua Report that are "just plain wrong."
|
|
|
|
Judge Bason first found that neither Brewer nor Videnieks at
|
|
their depositions could identify any evidence to demonstrate a
|
|
substantial deterioration in INSLAW's financial condition,
|
|
notwithstanding repeated opportunities during their
|
|
depositions to provide such evidence.5 While Videnieks did
|
|
suggest that he had been informed by the audit staff of the
|
|
possibility of INSLAW's financial failure, this was not evidence
|
|
of any deterioration in the financial condition of INSLAW. Judge
|
|
Bason next found that while Whitely asserted at trial his
|
|
conclusion regarding potential insolvency, Whitely did not
|
|
prepare a written report or any other document which "detailed"
|
|
his alleged conclusions. Judge Bason concluded, quite reasonably,
|
|
that if Whitely had reached such an obviously important, if not
|
|
critical, conclusion regarding the financial condition of INSLAW,
|
|
it would have been documented in his work papers, which it was
|
|
not. In fact, on rebuttal, INSLAW adduced the testimony of
|
|
Whitely's successor, Ms. Schacht, who testified that there was no
|
|
reference to such purported insolvency in the DOJ audit file nor
|
|
any discussions on this subject within DOJ's auditing group.
|
|
(Schacht, T. 2452) Not surprisingly, DOJ was unable to produce
|
|
any such written records that supported Whitely's trial
|
|
testimony, since none existed. While Whitely may have said he
|
|
prepared "work papers," the facts prove otherwise. Finally, Judge
|
|
Bason found that Whitely's other conclusions concerning the Irish
|
|
subsidiary receivable and the capitalization of software
|
|
development costs were directly contrary to the considered
|
|
opinion of Arthur Young & Co., a recognized independent
|
|
international auditing firm, which had given INSLAW, a "clean,"
|
|
unqualified audit opinion as to its financial condition, and
|
|
itself was the source of INSLAW's accounting treatment of its
|
|
capitalization. (Whitely, T. 1777-1779)
|
|
|
|
Obviously, Judge Bason was fully justified, based on the
|
|
record before him, in concluding that the basis for the advance
|
|
payment dispute was totally unjustified and manufactured. The Bua
|
|
Report does nothing to refute the conclusions reached by Judge
|
|
Bason, and its efforts to attack Judge Bason in this regard are
|
|
pathetic.
|
|
|
|
2. DOJ's Demand for the Software
|
|
|
|
The bankruptcy court concluded that DOJ knowingly set out to
|
|
obtain the version of PROMIS to which it was not entitled under
|
|
the contract and which DOJ understood contained proprietary
|
|
enhancements belonging to INSLAW. The district court concurred
|
|
with this conclusion:
|
|
|
|
Thus, the court is drawn to the same conclusion reached
|
|
by the bankruptcy court; the government acted willfully
|
|
and fraudulently to obtain property that it was not
|
|
entitled to under the contract. (D. Ct. Opinion, p. 34)
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report stated that this conclusion required proof
|
|
that DOJ set out to obtain something to which it was not
|
|
entitled. Because DOJ purported initially only to seek the public
|
|
domain version of the software, the Bua Report concludes that
|
|
proof of DOJ's fraudulent intent is missing. The Bua Report
|
|
concludes that INSLAW had failed to maintain a contract version
|
|
of
|
|
PROMIS and that, had they done so, there would have been no
|
|
proprietary rights dispute, since INSLAW's production of such a
|
|
version would have satisfied any obligation it had under the
|
|
contract. This entire argument displays a fundamental
|
|
misunderstanding of the contract.
|
|
|
|
First, the contract contemplated that DOJ promptly would
|
|
select the computer it wished to have installed at the 20 largest
|
|
U.S. Attorneys' Offices and that INSLAW would then implement the
|
|
public domain software on that hardware. This software then
|
|
consisted of two separate parts: the Pilot Project version and
|
|
the 5 BJS enhancements. Until DOJ selected its computer hardware,
|
|
there was no reason for INSLAW to maintain a separate public
|
|
domain version consisting of these then two separate and non-
|
|
integrated parts. The integration of the five BJS enhancements
|
|
with the Pilot Project version had to be done after DOJ selected
|
|
the specific computer hardware. The Pilot Project used PRIME
|
|
computers, and DOJ had not determined what brand and model of
|
|
computers it would buy for the 20 largest U.S. Attorneys'
|
|
Offices. For example, DOJ would not have reimbursed INSLAW to
|
|
create a separate Pilot Project PLUS five BJS enhancement version
|
|
for operation on a particular brand and model computer such as
|
|
the VAX mid-range computer from Digital Equipment Corporation
|
|
unless and until DOJ selected VAX for the 20 U.S. Attorneys'
|
|
Offices. Instead, DOJ selected PRIME.
|
|
|
|
Second, contrary to the assertion in the Bua Report, INSLAW
|
|
did have a version of public domain PROMIS that was frozen and
|
|
bug free. The U. S . Attorneys' Offices in San Diego and Newark
|
|
were each operating the Pilot Project version of PROMIS, and
|
|
INSLAW was supporting that version and keeping it "bug free." The
|
|
five BJS enhancements had not been created at the time of the
|
|
original Pilot Project implementation. Whatever hardware DOJ
|
|
selected would also be used to replace the hardware in the San
|
|
Diego and Newark Pilot Project offices. Consequently, while
|
|
INSLAW ultimately would have to implement the Pilot Project
|
|
version, as supplemented by the BJS enhancements in each of the
|
|
two Pilot Project offices as well as in the other 20 largest U.S.
|
|
Attorneys' Offices, INSLAW could not reasonably have begun to add
|
|
the five BJS enhancements to the bug-free Pilot Project version
|
|
until DOJ made its computer hardware selection. DOJ had not made
|
|
its selection of the hardware by the time DOJ demanded the time-
|
|
sharing version of PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
Third, the conclusion of the Bua Report that DOJ was unaware
|
|
of the fact that the version it sought contained the proprietary
|
|
enhancements is wrong. It is undisputed that during the period of
|
|
time before DOJ selected its hardware, it was understood that
|
|
INSLAW would accommodate DOJ by allowing the larger offices
|
|
access to INSLAW's computer in Maryland (not Virginia) on a time-
|
|
sharing basis. It was expected that DOJ would order the hardware
|
|
promptly, so that this accommodation would be short term. Since
|
|
it was not possible to implement the contracted-for version until
|
|
the hardware was selected, there was no reason to maintain a
|
|
separate copy of that version, and DOJ certainly knew this fact.
|
|
|
|
For this temporary time-sharing accommodation to DOJ, INSLAW
|
|
used its proprietary VAX version of PROMIS in which other
|
|
proprietary enhancements also had been included ("the time-
|
|
sharing version") There was no contractual requirement that
|
|
INSLAW provide DOJ with this time-sharing software, and therefore
|
|
INSLAW had, quite properly, not anticipated that DOJ would demand
|
|
the underlying software which contained these proprietary
|
|
enhancements. Indeed, no one connected to the contract ever
|
|
contemplated the delivery to DOJ of the time-sharing version,
|
|
since this version was being used merely as a short-term
|
|
accommodation. As DOJ was
|
|
not expected ever to take delivery of the time-sharing
|
|
version, INSLAW could reasonably have planned to use its
|
|
proprietary version in the time-sharing service, because this
|
|
improved version would enable INSLAW to provide more responsive
|
|
time-sharing services to each of the largest U.S. Attorneys'
|
|
Offices.
|
|
|
|
When DOJ demanded that INSLAW turn over its PROMIS software,
|
|
DOJ still had not selected either the minicomputer or the word
|
|
processing hardware that would ultimately be used to run
|
|
minicomputer PROMIS at the 20 larger offices and the word
|
|
processor-based case tracking software at the 74 smaller offices.
|
|
Thus, DOJ was not at that time prepared to implement the version
|
|
of PROMIS called for under the terms of the contract and, indeed,
|
|
INSLAW could not prepare the contracted-for version of PROMIS for
|
|
DOJ until DOJ had decided which minicomputer hardware to procure.
|
|
Therefore, when DOJ used the pretense of threatened termination
|
|
of advance payments as leverage to obtain the software, it had to
|
|
know that it was seeking the enhanced time-sharing version of
|
|
PROMIS to which it was not entitled under the contract, and which
|
|
DOJ understood contained proprietary enhancements belonging to
|
|
INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
Finally, contrary to the assertion in the Bua Report,
|
|
whether DOJ had knowledge that it was seeking the time-sharing
|
|
version at the time it sent its initial request letter is not a
|
|
critical issue, because DOJ clearly understood that it was
|
|
seeking the proprietary version at the time it negotiated
|
|
Modification 12. By that time, there is no dispute that DOJ was
|
|
aware that the software it was demanding was the version
|
|
containing the proprietary enhancements. Even the Bua Report
|
|
concedes that by the time the parties were negotiating
|
|
Modification 12, INSLAW had informed DOJ that the VAX version of
|
|
PROMIS being provided under the time-sharing arrangements
|
|
contained enhancements that INSLAW considered proprietary. (Page
|
|
136)
|
|
|
|
In fact, beginning at least as early as February 4, 1983,
|
|
when DOJ and INSLAW met to discuss DOJ's threatened
|
|
discontinuation of the advance payment provision, DOJ
|
|
specifically was put on notice that its simultaneous demand for
|
|
the underlying software would require INSLAW to turn over the
|
|
proprietary version of that software. Immediately upon learning
|
|
of this fact, there is no dispute that DOJ refused to resolve the
|
|
advance payment issue independently of the software issue,
|
|
notwithstanding that the two issues were unrelated. Indeed, as
|
|
even the Bua Report acknowledged, "from at least this point on,
|
|
DOJ collapsed the negotiations of the advance payment dispute
|
|
into the negotiations of the software request and the proprietary
|
|
rights issue." (Page 28) Thus, when DOJ used the pretense of
|
|
threatened termination of advance payments as leverage to obtain
|
|
the enhanced time-sharing software, it knowingly set out to
|
|
obtain a version of PROMIS to which it was not entitled under the
|
|
contract, and which DOJ understood contained proprietary
|
|
enhancements belonging to INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
Even if DOJ started out to obtain nothing more than the
|
|
contracted-for version (albeit for improper purposes), DOJ
|
|
clearly was seeking the proprietary version at the time it put
|
|
into effect its plan to "get the goods"6 via Modification 12. As
|
|
such, the absence of evidence that DOJ
|
|
knew, when it initially requested a copy of the PROMIS
|
|
codes, that it would obtain something other than the contract
|
|
version is irrelevant; the evidence is undisputed that it knew
|
|
that it was going to receive the proprietary version when it set
|
|
about to obtain that version without any intention to negotiate
|
|
in good faith over its use. Thus, there is no "great weakness" in
|
|
Judge Bason's conversion theory.
|
|
|
|
3. The Negotiation of Modification 12
|
|
|
|
The parties thereafter entered into negotiations to resolve
|
|
both the proprietary rights and advance payment issues,
|
|
ultimately resulting in the execution of Modification 12 to the
|
|
contract. The Bua Report acknowledges that, without regard to
|
|
whatever rights DOJ had to the software prior to Modification 12,
|
|
DOJ clearly was "bargaining away" some of its rights when it
|
|
agreed to enter into Modification 12, and moreover, was
|
|
obligating itself to "live up" to the terms of that Modification.
|
|
(Page 136-137)
|
|
|
|
Under this Modification, INSLAW agreed to turn over its
|
|
proprietary software on the basis of certain explicit commitments
|
|
by DOJ. First, DOJ was to bargain in good faith to identify the
|
|
proprietary enhancements contained within enhanced PROMIS.
|
|
Second, DOJ was to decide within a reasonable time which
|
|
enhancements it wanted to use, and to the extent that it did not
|
|
want to use certain of these enhancements, to direct INSLAW to
|
|
remove the enhancements it did not want. Third, DOJ was to
|
|
bargain in good faith with INSLAW as to the price to be paid for
|
|
those enhancements it did want.
|
|
|
|
The bankruptcy court found that DOJ never intended to meet
|
|
its commitments under Modification 12 and that once DOJ had
|
|
received Enhanced PROMIS pursuant to Modification 12, DOJ
|
|
thereafter refused to bargain in good faith with INSLAW. DOJ
|
|
instead "engaged in an outrageous, deceitful, fraudulent game of
|
|
cat and mouse, demonstrating contempt for both the law and any
|
|
principle of fair dealing." While conceding that DOJ's conduct
|
|
following execution of Modification 12 was subject to criticism
|
|
and demonstrated "poor judgment," the Bua Report rejected the
|
|
bankruptcy court's finding of DOJ fraud under Modification 12,
|
|
based largely upon its post hoc meetings with Rugh and Videnieks:
|
|
|
|
Bankruptcy Judge Bason found that DOJ "never intended
|
|
to meet its commitment" under Modification 12. We do
|
|
not believe the evidence supports this finding. The
|
|
weight of the evidence demonstrates that the DOJ
|
|
employees involved reviewed INSLAW's submissions in
|
|
good faith, and responded in ways that they
|
|
subjectively believed were within the government's
|
|
legitimate rights under the contract. We find no
|
|
evidence of bad faith or intentional wrongdoing.
|
|
|
|
This conclusion is belied by any reasonable and objective
|
|
review of the facts relating to this matter. It is also belied by
|
|
the very reasoning adopted by the authors of the Bua Report.
|
|
The authors conclude that DOJ had an affirmative obligation
|
|
to "live up" to the procedures contained in Modification 12 and
|
|
in a March 18, 1983 letter written by Videnieks which provides
|
|
the foundation for Modification 12. Together, these documents
|
|
clearly obligated DOJ to negotiate in good faith with INSLAW to
|
|
determine which of the enhancements were proprietary and,
|
|
thereafter, which of those enhancements DOJ wanted to be included
|
|
in the software delivered under the contract. The Bua Report
|
|
found that DOJ failed to negotiate with INSLAW regarding an
|
|
acceptable methodology for determining which enhancements were
|
|
proprietary. Indeed, the Bua Report concluded that DOJ refused to
|
|
accept the methodology proposed by INSLAW, refused to explain the
|
|
basis of that rejection, and refused to provide INSLAW with the
|
|
methodology that would be acceptable to DOJ. In fact, the Bua
|
|
Report concluded that "[i]t is difficult for us to see a good
|
|
reason not to tell INSLAW what criticism DOJ had of INSLAW's
|
|
methodology ... it was in neither party's interest to have INSLAW
|
|
guessing about what was the problem with the methodology." (Page
|
|
139) Yet, notwithstanding having concluded that DOJ was obligated
|
|
to negotiate in good faith to live up to its commitments under
|
|
the Modification, and having concluded that DOJ failed to do so
|
|
for no "good reason," the Bua Report concludes that these two
|
|
failures were not done in bad faith. By definition alone, they
|
|
most certainly were. Moreover, when put in context, DOJ's actions
|
|
clearly were a continuation of the ongoing bad faith conduct
|
|
directed at INSLAW during the entirety of the contract.
|
|
|
|
By way of background, when DOJ persisted in its attempts to
|
|
tie resolution of the advance payment issue to the proprietary
|
|
rights issue, INSLAW initially proposed that the parties enter
|
|
into an escrow agreement pursuant to which DOJ would receive the
|
|
software if, and only if, INSLAW went into bankruptcy. (PX 68;
|
|
Hamilton, T. 167-168; Brewer, T. 1693-1694; Merrill, T. 791)
|
|
|
|
Although certain DOJ personnel recommended INSLAW's third-
|
|
party escrow proposal, it was rejected by Brewer and Videnieks,
|
|
because they could not thereby immediately obtain the software.
|
|
(PX 73) Videnieks and Brewer discussed this issue on or about
|
|
March 28, 1983 and decided to propose a letter response to
|
|
INSLAW's government contracts counsel, Harvey Sherzer, indicating
|
|
DOJ's intent "to back off [Advance payments] discontinuation and
|
|
promising non-dissemination [of PROMIS software] in return for
|
|
delivery of information demanded on 12/6~ (PX 73) Videnieks
|
|
prepared a draft of this letter which Brewer then rewrote (PX
|
|
73). This letter was submitted to William Snider, Administrative
|
|
Counsel for Procurement, who previously had indicated his
|
|
preference for a bilateral agreement between the parties embodied
|
|
in a contract modification. (PX 73)
|
|
|
|
A March 28 memo further recounts that Videnieks was in full
|
|
agreement with Brewer about the letter, indicating quite
|
|
significantly ". . . why do you need signature if you got the
|
|
goods?" (PX 73; Videnieks, T. 1837-1838)
|
|
|
|
Snider quickly responded to the Brewer/Videnieks proposal on
|
|
March 29, "sharply disagreeing on this approach." (Videnieks, T.
|
|
1838) At this point, Brewer "forbade" Videnieks
|
|
from entering into a "Mod" of the contract. (PX 73)7 Brewer
|
|
did not want a bilateral agreement if he could "get the goods"
|
|
without it. (Brewer, T. 1704-1705)
|
|
|
|
On April 5, 1983 Videnieks and Brewer had a telephone
|
|
conversation in which Brewer told Videnieks that he would
|
|
"protect" him from "backing down" to Sherzer and Hamilton. (PX
|
|
73) After this conversation, Videnieks checked with Snider and
|
|
"MH" [INSLAW's comptroller, Murray Hannon], who confirmed that a
|
|
contract modification protecting INSLAW's proprietary
|
|
enhancements was a precondition to INSLAW's delivery of the
|
|
software. (PX 73; Brewer, T. 1208) Brewer understood that INSLAW
|
|
wanted such protection and that INSLAW would remove any
|
|
enhancements that DOJ did not want. (Brewer, T. 1708-1709)
|
|
|
|
DOJ's March 18, 1983 response to INSLAW's March 11 escrow
|
|
agreement proposal dismissed the proposal but did offer, in
|
|
consideration of "getting the goods," to agree not to disseminate
|
|
or disclose the PROMIS software beyond EOUSA and the U.S.
|
|
Attorney's Offices enumerated in the PROMIS contract pending
|
|
resolution and negotiation of the proprietary enhancements issue
|
|
"until the data rights of the parties to the contract are
|
|
resolved." (PX 70; PX 71; Merrill, T. 792; Brewer, T. 1689-1690;
|
|
Hamilton, T. 168) This proposal by Videnieks was basically the
|
|
methodology proposed and discussed at the February 4, 1983
|
|
meeting. (Merrill, T. 792)
|
|
|
|
The March 18 letter also stated that once the "data rights"
|
|
issue was resolved, DOJ would review INSLAW's proprietary
|
|
enhancements to decide which (if any) enhancements DOJ desired to
|
|
include in the PROMIS Contract software. (PX 70; PX 71)
|
|
|
|
Videnieks specifically stated in his March 18 letter that
|
|
after the proprietary enhancements issue was resolved, DOJ:
|
|
|
|
. . . will review the effect of any enhancements which
|
|
are determined to be proprietary, and then either
|
|
direct INSLAW to delete those enhancements from the
|
|
versions of PROMIS to be delivered under the contract
|
|
or negotiate with INSLAW regarding the inclusion of
|
|
those enhancements in that software. The Government
|
|
would then either destroy or return the "enhanced"
|
|
versions of PROMIS in exchange for the Government
|
|
PROMIS software including only those enhancements that
|
|
should be included in the software. If this course of
|
|
action is acceptable to INSLAW there would be no need
|
|
for an escrow agreement. (PX 70; PX 71; Videnieks, T.
|
|
1813-1815)
|
|
|
|
The enhancements which DOJ did not want would be removed
|
|
from the software delivered to DOJ. (PX 70; PX 71; Brewer, T.
|
|
1690-1691, 1709; Hamilton, T. 330-331)
|
|
INSLAW understood from Videnieks' letter that it was
|
|
necessary to resolve the issue of "proprietary enhancements" as
|
|
soon as possible because INSLAW was scheduled to deliver software
|
|
to the 20 largest U.S. Attorney's offices beginning in the Summer
|
|
of 1983. (PX 73; Hamilton, T. 169) INSLAW also understood from
|
|
Videnieks' letter that it was to identify the enhancements that
|
|
had been privately financed, with evidence of the source of
|
|
private funding, and an indication as to why the enhancements
|
|
were not required to be furnished under the terms of the
|
|
contract. (Hamilton, T. 170; PX 70; PX 71)
|
|
|
|
Most importantly, INSLAW understood from Videnieks' letter
|
|
that DOJ would negotiate with INSLAW to purchase any privately
|
|
financed enhancements that it desired to keep in the software
|
|
deliverable under the contract. (Hamilton, T. 171; Merrill, T.
|
|
792-793; Gizzarelli, T. 534; Sherzer, T. 977-979; PX 341 [Tyson]
|
|
at pp. 205-207, 212-214; PX 336 [Snider] at pp. 91-96; PX 70; PX
|
|
71)
|
|
|
|
As of the time of Videnieks' letter, INSLAW was fully
|
|
prepared to delete any or all enhancements that DOJ indicated it
|
|
did not desire pursuant to the process laid out in Videnieks'
|
|
letter. (Hamilton, T. 172-173; Merrill, T. 793)
|
|
|
|
William Snider, Administrative Counsel for the Justice
|
|
Management Division ("JMD") and a prime negotiator of
|
|
Modification 12, understood that Modification 12 was intended to
|
|
implement Videnieks' letter of March 18 and the intent to
|
|
negotiate on proprietary enhancements stated in that letter. (PX
|
|
336 [Snider] at pp. 7, 90-96) In that regard, Snider further
|
|
understood that if DOJ wanted INSLAW's proprietary enhancements,
|
|
then it would pay INSLAW for such enhancements. (PX 336 [Snider]
|
|
at pp. 91-96) Indeed, Snider had informed INSLAW representatives
|
|
at a meeting prior to the execution of Modification 12 that DOJ
|
|
would negotiate compensation to INSLAW for all such enhancements
|
|
that DOJ wished to use. (Hamilton, T. 177; Sherzer, T. 977;
|
|
Merrill, T. 790-791)
|
|
|
|
In fact, however, notwithstanding the obligation of DOJ to
|
|
negotiate in good faith, Brewer had no intention to negotiate.
|
|
Indeed, Videnieks, Rugh and Brewer all testified that
|
|
notwithstanding Modification 12, they had no understanding of any
|
|
obligation on DOJ's part to negotiate with INSLAW concerning the
|
|
time-sharing or any other PROMIS software. (PX 324 [Brewer] at p.
|
|
163; Brewer, T. 1691-1693) Brewer had discussed his understanding
|
|
of Modification 12 with a number of people at DOJ and his views
|
|
in that regard were shared by Brewer's staff and by Videnieks.
|
|
(PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 163-164) This glaring admission was
|
|
ignored totally in the Bua Report, since this admission made at
|
|
the time of the trial totally contradicts the purported
|
|
statements made by these individuals to the authors of the Bua
|
|
Report in their post hoc interviews. Given the fact of these
|
|
admissions and the fact that DOJ's actions subsequent to
|
|
Modification 12 were consistent with the admissions, it is
|
|
impossible to conclude that DOJ's conduct was not taken in bad
|
|
faith. Moreover, this conduct at a minimum was a violation of the
|
|
contractual obligations of DOJ under Modification 12 to negotiate
|
|
in good faith.
|
|
|
|
In reviewing the entire factual record, Judge Bryant
|
|
concluded:
|
|
|
|
Once the software was in the possession of DOJ, there
|
|
is no evidence that the government ever negotiated in
|
|
good faith over the existence of the proprietary
|
|
enhancements claimed by INSLAW. The DOJ put the entire
|
|
onus of proof on
|
|
INSLAW, yet never indicated what methodology or proof
|
|
would be acceptable. The contract entered into by the
|
|
parties entitled the government to the version of
|
|
PROMIS then in the public domain. _The expert witnesses
|
|
demonstrate that INSLAW did enhance the software with
|
|
private funds. By failing to acknowledge or accept
|
|
INSLAW's claims. the government continued its
|
|
fraudulent behavior toward INSLAW. This behavior
|
|
persisted long after INSLAW filed for reorganization_.
|
|
(Emphasis added.) (D. Ct. Mem. Op., p. 40)
|
|
|
|
In the face of the factual record before the two federal
|
|
courts, it is impossible to conclude that DOJ acted other than in
|
|
bad faith. Most of the conduct of its key employees is
|
|
indefensible. Its failure to investigate the assertion of bias
|
|
also is indefensible. Its repeated false representations to
|
|
INSLAW's attorneys, as described in detail by the two lower
|
|
courts, is inexcusable. As Judge Bryant found:
|
|
|
|
The government accuses the bankruptcy court of looking
|
|
beyond the bankruptcy proceeding to find culpability by
|
|
the government. What is strikingly apparent from the
|
|
testimony and deposition of key witnesses and many
|
|
documents is that INSLAW performed its contract in a
|
|
hostile environment that extended from the higher
|
|
echelons of the Justice Department to the officials who
|
|
had the day-to-day responsibility for supervising its
|
|
work. (D. Ct. Mem. Op., p. 36)
|
|
|
|
Even the most cursory examination of the record leads to the
|
|
inescapable conclusion of bad faith on the part of DOJ. The Bua
|
|
Report's contrary conclusion, based upon its long-after-the-fact
|
|
"demeanor" interviews of the DOJ employees responsible for the
|
|
bad faith, is simply ridiculous.
|
|
|
|
4. The Implementation and Use of the PROMIS
|
|
Software Beyond the 20 Offices
|
|
|
|
Under Modification 12, DOJ agreed that it would not
|
|
distribute the software received under the Modification beyond
|
|
the offices enumerated under the contract. Subsequent thereto,
|
|
DOJ began to install this software beyond the 20 offices for
|
|
which the software was designated. The Bua Report concluded that
|
|
it was neither improper nor unreasonable for DOJ to "self"
|
|
install PROMIS beyond the 20 larger offices designated to receive
|
|
this version of PROMIS under the contract. Once again, this
|
|
conclusion is belied by any responsible understanding of the
|
|
contract and the circumstances under which Modification 12 was
|
|
negotiated.
|
|
|
|
The contract between INSLAW and DOJ involved two separate,
|
|
severable, and clearly
|
|
distinguishable tasks:
|
|
|
|
1. To create, generate and implement software to be
|
|
used on computers ("the computer-based software")
|
|
at 20 designated larger U.S. Attorney's Offices
|
|
(with an option, admittedly never exercised, to
|
|
expand this use, to up to thirty offices)
|
|
|
|
2. To create, generate and implement a different kind
|
|
of software to be used on specified word
|
|
processing equipment ("the word processing based
|
|
software") at some 74 smaller U.S. Attorneys'
|
|
Offices. (PX 17)
|
|
Thus, Paragraph 1.2 of the contract provides in part:
|
|
|
|
1.2 The Contractor shall implement PROMIS software and
|
|
procedures as modified for the U.S. Attorney's
|
|
environment on Government furnished mini-computers
|
|
located in the larger U.S. Attorneys' Offices.
|
|
Case tracking systems that have been developed to
|
|
operate on Government furnished word processing
|
|
equipment shall be installed in the smaller U.S.
|
|
Attorneys' Offices....
|
|
|
|
The parties clearly understood that these were separate
|
|
tasks, and required the development and creation by INSLAW of two
|
|
different and distinguishable kinds of software, each to be
|
|
implemented only within the designated types of offices specified
|
|
in the contract for that particular kind of software. (PX 324
|
|
[Brewer] at pp. 215-217; Snider 54-56; Gizzarelli, T. 479, 488,
|
|
494-495; PX 341 [Tyson] at p. 41; Hamilton, T. 110-111,115, 132-
|
|
134; Merrill, T. 770-771)
|
|
The computer-based software generated for the 20 larger
|
|
computer-site offices, as specified in the contract, was to be
|
|
used only at those offices, and the word processing based
|
|
software to be developed and created by INSLAW was to be used
|
|
only at the 74 smaller offices. (Hamilton, T. 132-134; Merrill,
|
|
T. 764; Gizzarelli, T. 488, 497-499; PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 215-
|
|
216) At no time during any meeting, either before or after the
|
|
contract was signed, did anyone from DOJ inform INSLAW that DOJ
|
|
believed that the computer-based software could be used beyond
|
|
these 20 offices. (Merrill, T. 770; Hamilton, T. 134) The
|
|
contract did provide, however, that DOJ could extend the
|
|
implementation of computer-based PROMIS to an additional 10
|
|
offices at an added price which the contract specified (and the
|
|
parties understood) would be negotiated between the parties.
|
|
(Hamilton, T. 124; PX 17; Merrill, T. 769-770; Gizzarelli, T. 496-
|
|
499; PX 324 [Brewer] at pp. 215-216)
|
|
|
|
In effect, it was as if there were two contracts calling for
|
|
two types of software to be delivered to two types of offices, a
|
|
fact clearly understood by DOJ. (Hamilton, T. 110-111, 132-134;
|
|
Merrill, T. 764; Gizzarelli, T. 488, 494, 497-499) At the time
|
|
that Modification 12 was executed, both aspects of the contract
|
|
were still operative. Modification 12 required INSLAW to produce
|
|
all "computer programs" and documentation for the time-sharing
|
|
version, the computer-based version, and the word processing
|
|
based version. (Merrill, T. 786; Sherzer, T. 980; Hamilton, T.
|
|
152, 2583-2588) DOJ never told INSLAW that it was not required to
|
|
produce all of this under Modification 12 or that INSLAW was
|
|
producing too much. (Merrill, T. 787)
|
|
|
|
Contrary to the mindless conclusion reached by the Bua
|
|
Report, the provisions of Modification 12 must be read
|
|
consistently with the existing contract, the terms of which
|
|
(Modification 12 unequivocally states) were not otherwise
|
|
changed. (Gizzarelli, T. 535; Sherzer, T. 1030) Thus, DOJ's
|
|
agreement not to disseminate or use the software beyond the 94
|
|
offices has to be read in the context of the two contract tasks
|
|
that existed at that time. This means that the computer-based
|
|
software would not be disseminated beyond the 20 designated
|
|
larger offices for which this software was being created and
|
|
developed, and the word processing based software would not be
|
|
disseminated beyond the 74 offices for which that type of
|
|
software was
|
|
being created and developed. (Merrill, T. 787-788; Hamilton,
|
|
T. 177-178; Gizzarelli, T. 535)
|
|
|
|
Contrary to the baseless assertions in the Bua Report,
|
|
Modification 12 sought to effect delivery to DOJ of all computer
|
|
programs developed under the contract, as well as INSLAW's
|
|
proprietary enhancements then incorporated in the software. The
|
|
statement of work defines the software for the word processing
|
|
machines as computer programs, (Hamilton, T. 2583) and
|
|
subparagraphs 3 and 5 of Modification 12 specify the delivery of
|
|
software for operation on word processing machines (Hamilton, T.
|
|
2584-2586). In addition, Modification 12 was directly related to
|
|
and fully embodies the process and intent of Videnieks' letter of
|
|
March 18, 1983. (Hamilton, T. 173; Gizzarelli, T. 535-536;
|
|
Merrill, T. 793-794; PX 336 [Snider] at pp. 7, 90-96)
|
|
|
|
Subsequently, when DOJ unilaterally terminated the word
|
|
processing part of the contract for the convenience of the
|
|
Government following the execution of Modification 12, the 74
|
|
word processing offices dropped out, and all that remained were
|
|
the 20 offices that were to receive the computer-based version of
|
|
PROMIS (plus the never-exercised option to extend the latter
|
|
version to ten additional offices at additional cost). At no time
|
|
had anyone from DOJ informed INSLAW that it was DOJ's intention
|
|
to implement PROMIS beyond the 20 offices specified in the
|
|
contract. Thus, only these 20 offices were among those the
|
|
parties contemplated would receive the computer-based PROMIS, and
|
|
it was only these offices that could receive the INSLAW software
|
|
until the data rights issue was resolved. No one ever
|
|
contemplated that DOJ would have the right to disseminate the
|
|
computer-based software beyond the 20 offices, and most certainly
|
|
not while there was still a dispute over the ownership rights in
|
|
that software.
|
|
|
|
Finally, whether DOJ had the right to implement the software
|
|
beyond the 20 offices, while clearly relevant in the context of
|
|
an automatic stay bankruptcy proceeding, is not relevant to the
|
|
more important question of whether DOJ had the right to continue
|
|
to use the proprietary software, without compensation to INSLAW,
|
|
after the data rights issue was determined in favor of INSLAW.
|
|
During the course of the bankruptcy proceedings, extensive
|
|
evidence was introduced that demonstrated that the software used
|
|
by DOJ was the proprietary, non-public domain version created by
|
|
INSLAW using non-government funding, and that this proprietary
|
|
software was not deliverable under the contract. Thus, even if
|
|
DOJ had the right to use the software until the data rights issue
|
|
was resolved, once that issue was resolved by the court in favor
|
|
of INSLAW, DOJ no longer could continue to use the software
|
|
without appropriate payment to INSLAW. Even DOJ has conceded that
|
|
its right to use the software under Modification 12 was limited
|
|
to the period of time during which the parties were required to
|
|
negotiate the data rights issue. DOJ understood that it could not
|
|
continue to keep the software to the extent it contained
|
|
proprietary enhancements without paying INSLAW for the right to
|
|
do so. Yet, notwithstanding the extensive findings of the
|
|
bankruptcy court, as affirmed in total by the federal district
|
|
court, that the software used by DOJ rightfully belonged to
|
|
INSLAW and that DOJ was not entitled to use that software, DOJ
|
|
has continued to use the software without compensating INSLAW
|
|
|
|
II. BUA'S INVESTIGATION OF THE EVIDENCE THAT DOJ ATTEMPTED
|
|
TO CAUSE THE CONVERSION OF THE INSLAW BANKRUPTCY BY
|
|
IMPROPER MEANS -- THE "INDEPENDENT HANDLING" PROCEEDING
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report devotes 41 pages to an analysis of the
|
|
factual underpinnings of the bankruptcy court's findings in the
|
|
"Independent Handling" proceeding.
|
|
|
|
The Independent Handling proceeding in the Spring of 1987
|
|
arose from INSLAW's request to the bankruptcy court to insulate
|
|
the handling of the INSLAW Chapter 11 reorganization by DOJ's
|
|
U.S. Trustee's program from improper influence by DOJ's Executive
|
|
Office for U.S. Attorneys. Such improper influence was reflected
|
|
in the contemporaneous handwritten notes of DOJ Contracting
|
|
Officer Peter Videnieks that INSLAW obtained during the first
|
|
quarter of 1987 in litigation discovery.
|
|
|
|
A separate adversarial hearing ensued on this subject, and
|
|
the bankruptcy court found that DOJ officials had, in fact,
|
|
secretly attempted in 1985 forcibly to convert INSLAW from a
|
|
Chapter 11 reorganization into a Chapter 7 liquidation in order
|
|
to prevent INSLAW from seeking redress in the courts for DOJ's
|
|
theft of the PROMIS software in April 1983.
|
|
|
|
While noting that the covert DOJ liquidation effort was "not
|
|
free from doubt," the report concludes that there is
|
|
"insufficient evidence to support a finding that DOJ planned or
|
|
attempted to convert the Inslaw bankruptcy case or engaged in any
|
|
cover-up to conceal the conduct alleged." This portion of the
|
|
report demonstrates, once again, that the Bua investigation's
|
|
focus and, indeed, its predisposition, was not to investigate DOJ
|
|
wrongdoing previously demonstrated to two courts through fully
|
|
litigated factual findings, but, instead, to justify DOJ's
|
|
conduct and exonerate the wrongdoers.
|
|
|
|
The report correctly states that INSLAW's evidence in the
|
|
proceeding consisted essentially of six parts: (1) statements and
|
|
testimony by Anthony Pasciuto, then Deputy Director of DOJ's
|
|
Executive Office for U.S. Trustees; (2) handwritten notes of
|
|
Peter Videnieks', DOJ's Contracting Officer for the INSLAW
|
|
contract; (3) testimony and notes of Gregory McKain, a senior
|
|
INSLAW computer software engineer; (4) evidence that U.S. Trustee
|
|
William White requested that the bankruptcy court add language
|
|
barring him from disclosing INSLAW data to anyone at the
|
|
Executive Office for U.S. Trustees; (5) statements and deposition
|
|
testimony of U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Cornelius Blackshear; and (6)
|
|
evidence regarding the planned transfer of Assistant U.S. Trustee
|
|
Harry Jones from New York to Washington to work on the INSLAW
|
|
case.
|
|
|
|
The core of the bankruptcy court's findings rests on the
|
|
intertwined relationship between the Videnieks notes, Rugh and
|
|
McKain's testimony, and McKain's notes. Videnieks made
|
|
contemporaneous notes of a telephone conversation he had with
|
|
Brewer's deputy, Jack Rugh, on February 20, 1985 (13 days after
|
|
INSLAW filed its Chapter 11 petition):
|
|
|
|
JR called re[garding] "our computer". Brick [Brewer]
|
|
talked to Stanton . . . "No way "11"-will be "7". Need
|
|
home for computer.
|
|
|
|
Videnieks' notes document a conversation with "JR" [Jack
|
|
Rugh] and what Rugh, a computer system executive for EOUSA, said
|
|
"re[garding] our computer. "8 The words following "Brick talked
|
|
to Stanton. . ." are a quote of what Stanton, the Director of the
|
|
Executive Office for U.S. Trustees, said. Quotation marks are
|
|
used to bracket what Stanton said: "no way '11' -will be '7'." It
|
|
cannot reasonably be inferred, as the Bua investigators infer,
|
|
that these four prefatory words in a seamless line of thought and
|
|
preceding an obvious quote of Stanton are somehow disconnected
|
|
from the quote they precede. As justification for such a
|
|
conclusion, the report cites "a space in the notes between the
|
|
words 'Brick talked to Stanton' and the words 'no way 11 will be
|
|
7'." In fact, there are three dots after the word "Stanton,"
|
|
indicating all the more that the phrases following are quotes and
|
|
are connected to the rest of the conversation.
|
|
|
|
Rugh testified that the notes correctly summarized what he
|
|
had told Videnieks, but that the statement "No way 11-will be 7"
|
|
represented merely his own personal view that INSLAW would be
|
|
liquidated and not something Brewer had told him as a result of
|
|
Brewer's conversation with Stanton. Rugh also testified about
|
|
subsequently calling INSLAW's McKain and telling him that he did
|
|
not think INSLAW would survive in bankruptcy, and trying to
|
|
arrange for the future hiring of McKain by DOJ.
|
|
|
|
McKain testified, however, that Rugh told him that they had
|
|
"talked to the trustees" and that the trustees said INSLAW was
|
|
not going to make it and that INSLAW would be out of business in
|
|
30 to 60 days. McKain made contemporaneous notes which were fully
|
|
consistent with his testimony. Moreover, he acted immediately in
|
|
a manner consistent only with his version of events: He went to
|
|
Mr. Hamilton and repeated what Rugh had told him, and asked
|
|
whether this was true. Incensed, Hamilton, in turn, had counsel
|
|
contact the local U.S. Trustee, who said that he had not made any
|
|
such prediction, that it must have come from the Executive Office
|
|
for U.S. Trustees, i.e., from Stanton's office. Although Rugh
|
|
acknowledged that he may have mentioned talking to the trustees,
|
|
he categorically denied telling McKain that the trustees had said
|
|
INSLAW would likely be liquidated in 30 to 60 days.
|
|
|
|
The bankruptcy court was thus presented with a classic
|
|
credibility conflict: Rugh's testimony and McKain's testimony
|
|
were irreconcilable. The court found that McKain was telling the
|
|
truth and that Rugh was lying. This conclusion was based not
|
|
simply upon the court's assessment of the witnesses' relative
|
|
courtroom demeanor, but also upon the corroboration of McKain's
|
|
version provided by his consistent contemporaneous notes and his
|
|
and Hamilton's unmistakably consistent actions: having INSLAW's
|
|
counsel contact and complain to the U.S. Trustee. If, as Rugh
|
|
maintained, Rugh had merely said that he thought that the company
|
|
would
|
|
be liquidated, INSLAW might have complained to Rugh's
|
|
superior, Brewer, or to the bankruptcy court, but not to the U.S.
|
|
Trustee.
|
|
|
|
The testimony by Rugh that his statements to McKain
|
|
represented only his "personal view" that INSLAW would not
|
|
survive -- as opposed to what Brewer had told him as a result of
|
|
his discussion with Stanton -- was extremely suspect on its face.
|
|
Rugh is a non-lawyer who acknowledged that he had known of only
|
|
one or two prior bankruptcy cases in his life. It is surely
|
|
unlikely that Rugh would have taken the step of contacting one of
|
|
INSLAW's chief computer software engineers and offering him a job
|
|
based only on his own layman's opinion that the company would not
|
|
survive. In addition, Videnieks' notes contain the statement
|
|
"need home for computer." This reflects a seeming certainty that
|
|
INSLAW would be put out of business imminently -- prompting the
|
|
need for Rugh or someone in EOUSA to take action to arrange a new
|
|
site for the DOJ computer then being used to operate PROMIS in
|
|
the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Maryland from
|
|
INSLAW's Maryland computer center.
|
|
|
|
Finally, it was the threatened immediacy of liquidation
|
|
forecast by Rugh that provoked such an intense response by McKain
|
|
and, in turn, by Hamilton. Liquidation in 30 to 60 days was
|
|
completely inconsistent with the briefing from INSLAW's
|
|
bankruptcy counsel that McKain and all INSLAW employees had
|
|
received only days before, to the effect that INSLAW could expect
|
|
to operate normally during the Chapter 11 Reorganization. Now,
|
|
according to Rugh, the employees would be out of work in 30 to 60
|
|
days. Even if it were plausible that Rugh had merely stated his
|
|
"personal view" about eventual liquidation, the notion that he
|
|
also expressed his "personal view" that it would happen in 30 to
|
|
60 days is simply inconceivable. Yet, if Rugh had not stated that
|
|
liquidation would likely occur very soon, McKain would not have
|
|
reacted as he did.
|
|
The bankruptcy court's resolution of the Rugh-McKain
|
|
credibility dispute is thus solidly grounded on corroborating
|
|
evidence. It is obvious that both McKain and Rugh gave the
|
|
testimony at issue under oath and subject to cross-examination in
|
|
a courtroom before a fact finder. It is hardly appropriate for
|
|
Special Counsel Bua -- on the basis of interviews of some of the
|
|
witnesses (McKain was not interviewed) five years removed from
|
|
that courtroom -- to opine that had he been there, he would have
|
|
resolved the dispute differently. That he would undertake to do
|
|
so, reflects a transparent effort to exonerate DOJ, whatever the
|
|
evidence. For example, the report argues that "there is no more
|
|
reason to think that Rugh is lying about this than there is to
|
|
think that McKain is." It further states, "If Rugh can be said to
|
|
have lied to help his employer, DOJ, it is equally plausible that
|
|
McKain lied to help his employer, INSLAW." This statement is
|
|
preposterous on its face. McKain's actions were taken in 1985, in
|
|
response to a call from Rugh, documented by contemporaneous notes
|
|
and corroborated by the undisputed actions of his employer
|
|
promptly thereafter. All of this occurred long before INSLAW had
|
|
knowledge of any basis for a lawsuit against DOJ. Accordingly,
|
|
these statements in the Bua Report are not only unfounded, but
|
|
they also represent a crude and totally unwarranted smear of
|
|
McKain.
|
|
|
|
The bankruptcy court's findings on the Rugh-McKain conflict
|
|
buttress the court's other findings. The conclusion that Rugh, a
|
|
subordinate non-lawyer, knowingly gave false testimony about his
|
|
call to McKain to conceal the truth, supports the conclusion that
|
|
it is likely that Stanton did make a commitment to Brewer to seek
|
|
INSLAW's liquidation despite both of their denials.
|
|
Stanton's actions in trying to bring Assistant U.S. Trustee
|
|
Harry Jones from New York to work on the case were certainly
|
|
consistent with such a commitment. The court's conclusion that
|
|
Judge Blackshear's testimony at his initial deposition, and in
|
|
his statements in his three prior telephone conversations with
|
|
INSLAW's attorneys and another judge -- that White had told him
|
|
that Stanton was going to ask him to send Harry Jones to
|
|
Washington to seek conversion of the INSLAW case -- was truthful
|
|
and that his two subsequent recantations were not truthful, is
|
|
also supported by the finding that Rugh falsely denied telling
|
|
McKain that the trustees had said INSLAW would be out of business
|
|
shortly.
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report's treatment of the Pasciuto testimony also
|
|
reflects an apparent preconception. It is perhaps difficult to
|
|
fully perceive from the cold record Pasciuto's evident anguish
|
|
and emotional turmoil in the courtroom. He was, at the time of
|
|
his testimony, Deputy Director of the Executive Office for U.S.
|
|
Trustees. Out of conscience, he had secretly met with the
|
|
Hamiltons and told them of the scheme to liquidate INSLAW two
|
|
years before, expecting that his friends, William White and Judge
|
|
Blackshear, both then no longer employed by the Trustees' Office,
|
|
would candidly support his statements. While Blackshear initially
|
|
did support Pasciuto's testimony, he quickly recanted, and White
|
|
denied any knowledge of such a scheme. Thus, at the time of his
|
|
testimony, Pasciuto, who was still employed at DOJ's Executive
|
|
Office for U.S. Trustees, had the worst of all possible worlds:
|
|
being exposed as a "whistle blower" to his boss and being left
|
|
out on a testimonial limb with no corroborative support.
|
|
|
|
INSLAW's trial team included former federal prosecutors with
|
|
well over sixty years of active trial experience. Pasciuto's
|
|
testimony was some of the most dramatic these lawyers had ever
|
|
observed in a courtroom. When confronted with the fact of his
|
|
secret meeting with the Hamiltons, Pasciuto first admitted the
|
|
meeting and then said he could not recall making the key
|
|
statements he had made. He wondered aloud whether the Hamiltons
|
|
had tape recorded the session.
|
|
|
|
The Hamiltons had not. He said he had met with the Hamiltons
|
|
to hurt Stanton, whom he disliked. Finally, when confronted with
|
|
the fact that he had made the same statements at a meeting with a
|
|
judge, the Honorable Lawrence Pierce of the United States Court
|
|
of Appeals for the Second Circuit, Pasciuto admitted that he had
|
|
made the statements. Ultimately, the bankruptcy court ruled that
|
|
Pasciuto's hearsay statements were inadmissible. Yet no one who
|
|
was in the courtroom when he testified could fail to have
|
|
concluded that something was terribly wrong at DOJ.
|
|
|
|
That conclusion was enhanced by DOJ's subsequent treatment
|
|
of Pasciuto. An investigation by DOJ's Office of Professional
|
|
Responsibility ("OPR"), incredibly, found that but for Pasciuto's
|
|
conduct, "the department would be in a much better litigation
|
|
posture," and concluded that he should be fired. Eventually, he
|
|
was allowed to resign. Before the Congressional committees,
|
|
Pasciuto maintained that he had told the Hamiltons the truth in
|
|
the first place, and had backed away from it because of pressure
|
|
from DOJ and fear of losing his job. The House Judiciary
|
|
Committee's Investigative Report had criticized OPR's treatment
|
|
of the Pasciuto case. The Bua Report rejects this criticism of
|
|
OPR, opining that Pasciuto only professed to have told the
|
|
Hamiltons the truth when he was confronted by OPR's
|
|
recommendation that he be fired for having set out to hurt his
|
|
superior, Stanton, by making false statements to the Hamiltons.
|
|
Pasciuto's conduct, his testimony, and his subsequent
|
|
recantation are most logically explained by fear: fear that he
|
|
would not get the promotion he had long sought and fear that he
|
|
would be fired for telling the truth, as he eventually was. The
|
|
claim that he made it all up to hurt Stanton is, in light of the
|
|
corroborating evidence which exists, obviously false, as Pasciuto
|
|
now acknowledges. For OPR to accept this claim and proceed to
|
|
recommend the disciplinary action of termination based on it, was
|
|
a charade -- designed to avoid the politically unpleasant task of
|
|
investigating the more serious wrongdoing that the underlying
|
|
situation reflected.
|
|
|
|
In 1987, the year the bankruptcy court released its oral
|
|
opinion adverse to DOJ, three Presidential $20,000 awards were
|
|
made to Senior Executive Service employees at DOJ. One award went
|
|
to Stuart Schiffer, at the time a Deputy Assistant Attorney
|
|
General in the Civil Division who had been criticized by the
|
|
bankruptcy court in the INSLAW litigation against DOJ. A second
|
|
award went to Michael Shaheen, head of OPR and the author of the
|
|
December 23, 1987 report recommending the termination of
|
|
Pasciuto. A separate $10,000 award, also one of three in DOJ for
|
|
the year 1987, was given to Lawrence McWhorter, an EOUSA official
|
|
who hired Brewer and whose testimony the bankruptcy court found
|
|
"totally unbelievable." McWhorter was also promoted that year to
|
|
Director of EOUSA. Thus, more than half -- $50,000 out of a total
|
|
of $90,000 -- available for distribution to senior executives
|
|
within DOJ for the year -- was distributed to key officials
|
|
involved in maintaining DOJ's claim of a lack of wrongdoing. This
|
|
startling fact is not mentioned in the Bua Report.
|
|
|
|
III. BUA'S INVESTIGATION OF POST-TRIAL LEADS ABOUT A MORE
|
|
WIDELY RAMIFIED CONSPIRACY INVOLVING EARL BRIAN AND THE
|
|
INTELLIGENCE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES OF THE UNITED
|
|
STATE AND FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
A. Bua's Investigation of the Alleged Justice
|
|
Department Distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
Software to U.S. Government Law Enforcement and
|
|
Intelligence Agencies, Other Than the U.S.
|
|
Attorneys' Offices
|
|
|
|
A significant number of individuals, some employed by the
|
|
Department of Justice (DOJ), and others with claimed associations
|
|
with United States and/or Israeli intelligence, have told INSLAW
|
|
that its PROMIS software has been implemented throughout the
|
|
United States Government as the de facto standard database
|
|
management software system for the U.S. intelligence community.
|
|
|
|
Among the agencies allegedly using PROMIS as their principal
|
|
case tracking and workflow management software system are the
|
|
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Drug Enforcement
|
|
Agency (DEA), and the U.S. Marshal's Service, all within DOJ
|
|
itself; and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the National
|
|
Security Agency (NSA), the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), and
|
|
the White House National Security Council (NSC).
|
|
|
|
In January 1992, INSLAW summarized these claims in a written
|
|
submission to Bua in which INSLAW identified many of the sources
|
|
of the allegations and also described other informants who were
|
|
unwilling to be identified unless assured of protection against
|
|
reprisals.
|
|
|
|
Since January 1992, INSLAW has been told by still more
|
|
witnesses, including additional current or former DOJ employees,
|
|
that these basic facts not only are true, but also are widely
|
|
known to be true among the Senior Executive Service (SES) career
|
|
officials in DOJ and the FBI.
|
|
|
|
Several sources have even claimed that the U.S. intelligence
|
|
and law enforcement agencies regularly exchange data from their
|
|
respective PROMIS-based systems via remote access through
|
|
computer terminals equipped with both traditional communications
|
|
modems and classified encoding equipment.
|
|
|
|
At least two journalists, Richard Fricker and George
|
|
Williamson, have told INSLAW that current or former senior-level
|
|
CIA officials have confirmed to them that the CIA is using
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS software and that the CIA obtained PROMIS from
|
|
DOJ. In the January 1993 issue of the national computer industry
|
|
magazine, Wired, Richard Fricker quotes from his interview with
|
|
an unnamed former senior CIA administrator who claimed to have
|
|
first-hand knowledge of these facts:
|
|
|
|
"On Nov. 20, 1990, the Judiciary Committee wrote a
|
|
letter asking CIA director William Webster to help the
|
|
committee 'by determining whether the CIA has the
|
|
PROMIS software.'
|
|
"The official reply on December 11th: 'We have checked
|
|
with Agency components that track data processing
|
|
procurement or that would be likely users of PROMIS,
|
|
and we have been unable to find any indication that the
|
|
Agency ever obtained PROMIS software.'
|
|
|
|
"But a retired CIA official whose job it was to
|
|
investigate the Inslaw allegations internally told
|
|
Wired that the DOJ gave PROMIS to the CIA. 'Well,' the
|
|
retired official told Wired, 'the congressional
|
|
committees were after us to look into allegations that
|
|
somehow the agency had been culpable of what would have
|
|
been, in essence, taking advantage of, like stealing,
|
|
the technology [PROMIS] We looked into it and there was
|
|
enough to it, the agency had been involved.'
|
|
|
|
"How was the CIA involved? According to the same
|
|
source, who requested anonymity, the agency accepted
|
|
stolen goods, not aware that a major scandal was
|
|
brewing. In other words, the DOJ robbed the bank, and
|
|
the CIA took a share of the plunder."
|
|
|
|
In its September 1992 Investigative Report, The INSLAW
|
|
Affair, the House Judiciary Committee reported that the CIA
|
|
finally admitted having a software product called PROMIS but
|
|
claimed that the CIA's PROMIS was purchased from a small
|
|
Cambridge, Massachusetts, software company called Strategic
|
|
Software Planning Corporation.9 That company acknowledges
|
|
marketing and supporting a software product called PROMIS for
|
|
project management in the construction industry. The CIA also
|
|
disclosed that the PROMIS software it claims to have acquired
|
|
from the Cambridge, Massachusetts, company included an
|
|
"Intelligence Report System," a curious capability for
|
|
construction industry project management software. This latter
|
|
CIA disclosure was contained in a letter to Mr. Terry D. Miller,
|
|
the President of Government Sales Consultants, Inc., on April 5,
|
|
1993.
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently made no effort to test the CIA's denial that
|
|
its PROMIS software product is based on INSLAW's PROMIS. Neither
|
|
apparently did he examine the claims that copies of PROMIS have
|
|
been implemented in the DIA and the National Security Council of
|
|
the White House.
|
|
|
|
Bua did make very limited inquiries about the alleged use of
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS by the DEA and the FBI within DOJ, and by the
|
|
NSA. However, Bua does not appear to have brought any of the U.S.
|
|
Government officials he contacted on this matter before the grand
|
|
jury or even to have placed them under oath. Neither did Bua have
|
|
anyone attempt to verify the denials of these officials by
|
|
comparing the source code in INSLAW's PROMIS with the source code
|
|
of the suspected cloned software systems.
|
|
|
|
1. The Implausibility That the Two
|
|
Principal DOJ Investigative Agencies,
|
|
the DEA and the FBI, Would Each Have
|
|
Developed a Complex On-line Case
|
|
Tracking and Workflow Management System
|
|
In-House at Approximately the Same Time.
|
|
|
|
Before discussing Bua's very limited investigation of the
|
|
DEA, the FBI, and the NSA, it is important to understand that the
|
|
odds against a federal agency developing internally, without
|
|
contractor assistance, a complex, on-line software system, such
|
|
as a case tracking and workflow management system, are very high.
|
|
The odds against two separate agencies of the same department,
|
|
such as the FBI and the DEA within DOJ, each developing a
|
|
complex, on-line case tracking system are even higher. Finally,
|
|
the odds against two such agencies developing the same kind of on-
|
|
line case tracking system in-house at virtually the same time,
|
|
i.e., during 1988 and 1989, are higher still.
|
|
|
|
Before considering claims from former and current senior DOJ
|
|
officials that both the DEA and the FBI have been operating
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS software since the late 1980's, and before
|
|
examining apparent inconsistencies, contradictions and possible
|
|
dissembling in the statements made by DEA and FBI officials on
|
|
this subject, one should keep in mind that the backdrop for their
|
|
statements is the highly implausible scenario just described.
|
|
|
|
2. Indications of Possible Dissembling to
|
|
Bua by a Key DEA Official
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently never questioned Carl Jackson, a recently
|
|
retired DEA deputy assistant administrator, about DEA's alleged
|
|
use of PROMIS, even though the September 1992 Investigative
|
|
Report by the House Judiciary Committee identified Jackson as the
|
|
source of allegations that the DEA had implemented PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
Bua did, however, ask DEA Deputy Assistant Administrator for
|
|
Information Systems Phillip Cammera, whether the DEA had
|
|
implemented a PROMIS-derivative case tracking system. Cammera
|
|
assured Bua that the DEA had developed in-house its new case-
|
|
tracking system called Case Status System (CAST). The House
|
|
Judiciary Committee reported that CAST was developed in the 1988-
|
|
1989 time-frame.
|
|
|
|
Cammera told a different story in late 1990, however, when
|
|
he was contacted by a former colleague, retired DEA Deputy
|
|
Assistant Administrator Carl Jackson.10 According to Jackson's
|
|
contemporaneous account to Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton of INSLAW,
|
|
Cammera confirmed Jackson's own recollection on the matter.
|
|
Jackson's recollection is that the Attorney General of the United
|
|
States issued "non-negotiable" orders to both the DEA and the FBI
|
|
in the summer of 1988 to "chuck" their existing case tracking
|
|
systems and replace them with PROMIS, and that the DEA at least
|
|
carried out the orders in the 1988-1989 time frame.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jackson told the Hamiltons in 1990 that he had no way of
|
|
verifying whether the FBI had implemented PROMIS as the DEA had
|
|
done, but that he would have been surprised if the FBI had not
|
|
implemented PROMIS because the Attorney General had made it
|
|
explicitly clear that the orders were "non-negotiable."
|
|
|
|
3. Indications of Possible Dissembling to
|
|
Bua by the FBI
|
|
|
|
In January 1992, INSLAW informed Bua in writing that it had
|
|
a source, described as a current senior DOJ career official, who
|
|
claims to have been told that the FBI did, in fact, at some point
|
|
in the late 1980s implement PROMIS as its investigative case
|
|
management system. The FBI calls its system FOIMS (Field Office
|
|
Information Management System). INSLAW's source, who is not
|
|
willing to be identified unless there is a guarantee of no
|
|
reprisal, claimed to have been told directly by John Otto, then
|
|
one of the top FBI officials, that the current version of FOIMS
|
|
is based on PROMIS. Otto served as Acting Director of the FBI
|
|
between the departure of William Webster and the arrival of
|
|
William Sessions.
|
|
|
|
Bua interviewed Otto, who had since retired from the FBI,
|
|
but apparently did not place Otto under oath or bring him before
|
|
the grand jury. According to Bua, Otto flatly denied the account
|
|
given to INSLAW by the current senior DOJ career official. Bua
|
|
simply accepted Otto's non-sworn denial as well as Otto's claim
|
|
that he is virtually "computer illiterate" and therefore could
|
|
not have been engaged in the kind of conversation claimed by
|
|
INSLAW's confidential DOJ source. Had Bua attempted to verify
|
|
Otto's claim of computer illiteracy, however, he would have
|
|
learned that it is a highly implausible claim. For example, Otto
|
|
had direct management responsibility within the FBI for both
|
|
FOIMS and the nationwide UCR (Uniform Crime Report) system,
|
|
including the computer software that is at the heart of these
|
|
systems. Moreover, until the radical FOIMS software transplant of
|
|
June 1988, the FBI's investigative case management system
|
|
reportedly suffered from a very poor reputation among FBI agents;
|
|
Otto would have had management responsibility for correcting a
|
|
software system problem that may have been hampering the
|
|
performance of the FBI mission.
|
|
|
|
In its September 1992 Investigative Report, The INSLAW
|
|
Affair, the House Judiciary Committee noted its inability to
|
|
finance the kind of independent analysis required to test the
|
|
claims that the FBI's FOIMS system is based on PROMIS. The
|
|
Committee noted, however, that
|
|
the question "could be resolved quickly if an independent
|
|
agency or expert was commissioned to conduct a code comparison of
|
|
the PROMIS and FOIMS systems."
|
|
|
|
FBI Director Sessions wrote to Bua on June 23, 1992,
|
|
agreeing to permit such an examination of the FOIMS code,
|
|
provided that the independent expert was acceptable to the FBI.
|
|
|
|
Bua chose Professor Dorothy Denning, the Chair of the
|
|
Computer Science Department of Georgetown University. Bua notes
|
|
in his report that "the FBI voiced no objection to our choice and
|
|
processed her security clearance."11
|
|
|
|
In his report, Bua states that he provided to Denning "a
|
|
copy of INSLAW's FOIMS analysis plan" that detailed how the
|
|
developers of PROMIS would approach the question of whether the
|
|
FBI's FOIMS system was, in fact, based on INSLAW's PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
One of the steps suggested by INSLAW was the use of a
|
|
software routine in the IBM operating system called SUPERC which
|
|
is able to do a code comparison at no cost to the Justice
|
|
Department, and the comparison can be accomplished in
|
|
approximately four (4) hours. The ease and short time within
|
|
which a code comparison could have been accomplished makes the
|
|
failure to conduct such a comparison utterly indefensible.
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, Denning, however, decided that the source
|
|
code comparison, recommended by both the House Judiciary
|
|
Committee and INSLAW, "would be a waste of her time and the
|
|
government's money."
|
|
|
|
INSLAW read the report Denning submitted to Bua, which
|
|
INSLAW obtained from FBI Director Sessions, to try to understand
|
|
the basis for this very surprising conclusion of Professor
|
|
Denning.
|
|
|
|
To begin with, Denning uncritically accepted representations
|
|
by the FBI about the history and technical characteristics of
|
|
FOIMS that are contradicted by other FBI disclosures about FOIMS.
|
|
|
|
For example, Denning accepted as fact that the original 1978
|
|
COBOL-language version of FOIMS was replaced by the claimed
|
|
current NATURAL-language version of FOIMS in 1983.12 Published
|
|
data about FOIMS from the national market research firm, INPUT,
|
|
however,
|
|
traces the current version of FOIMS to June 1988, rather
|
|
than to 1983. This timing is consistent with the statements
|
|
attributed to John Otto by INSLAW's confidential senior DOJ
|
|
source, and also consistent with Carl Jackson's recollection that
|
|
the FBI had been ordered in the summer of 1988 to implement
|
|
PROMIS in place of the then current version of FOIMS.
|
|
|
|
Denning then uncritically accepted FBI representations that
|
|
the current version of FOIMS is written in the NATURAL
|
|
programming language, rather than in COBOL, the programming
|
|
language used in INSLAW's PROMIS. As is evidenced in the
|
|
following paragraph and its footnote, this representation also
|
|
appears to be contradicted by other published data on FOIMS.
|
|
|
|
"FOIMS now contains over 570,000 lines of code, " according
|
|
to a June 7, 1991 letter from FBI Assistant Director Delbert C.
|
|
Toohey to Mr. Terry D. Miller, President of Government Sales
|
|
Consultants, Inc. The claim that an application with 570,000
|
|
lines of code is written in the NATURAL programming language is
|
|
"wrong by an order of magnitude," according to Mr. John A.
|
|
Maguire, the founder and, until recently, the Chief Executive
|
|
Officer of Software A.G. of North America, the U.S. company that
|
|
markets the NATURAL programming language.13
|
|
|
|
It is hard to escape the conclusion that the FBI dissembled
|
|
to Denning about the year of origin of the current version of
|
|
FOIMS and about the apparent use of the COBOL programming
|
|
language in the current version of PROMIS in an attempt to
|
|
diminish the credibility of the aforementioned claims that the
|
|
FBI "chucked" its earlier 1983 version of FOIMS, on orders from
|
|
the Attorney General in the summer of 1988, and replaced it with
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
There would be ample reason for both the FBI and the DEA to
|
|
try to conceal their implementations of PROMIS in 1988 and 1989.
|
|
In January 1988, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court had issued a permanent
|
|
injunction against any further unlicensed proliferation of PROMIS
|
|
by the U.S. Government. If Attorney General Meese issued the
|
|
claimed orders to the FBI and the
|
|
DEA in the summer of 1988, it would have been a willful,
|
|
secret violation of a federal court order by the chief law
|
|
enforcement officer of the United States.
|
|
|
|
Denning justified her decision not to do a code comparison
|
|
between FOIMS and PROMIS primarily on her professed belief that
|
|
FOIMS and PROMIS each support "entirely different" "application
|
|
domains," with FOIMS tracking investigations and PROMIS tracking
|
|
judicial proceedings; and that it is extremely difficult to
|
|
convert software that runs one application into software that
|
|
runs an entirely different application:
|
|
|
|
Because it is extremely difficult to convert software
|
|
that runs one application into software that runs an
|
|
entirely different application, the differences in just
|
|
the FOIMS and PROMIS application domains show almost
|
|
conclusively that FOIMS was not derived from PROMIS.
|
|
("Analysis of FOIMS and PROMIS," by Dorothy E. Denning,
|
|
January 10, 1993, Page 1)
|
|
|
|
The aforementioned conclusions by Denning demonstrate that
|
|
she is misinformed about the case management application domain
|
|
in general and about INSLAW's PROMIS case management software in
|
|
particular. For example, INSLAW's PROMIS software is currently
|
|
being used for investigative case management by both state and
|
|
local governments and by nationwide property and casualty
|
|
insurance companies. Moreover, as INSLAW pointed out to Bua in
|
|
its written submission of January 1992, the PROMIS software has
|
|
been successfully applied to case management "application
|
|
domains" much more removed from PROMIS's criminal prosecution
|
|
"application domain" than FOIMS's criminal investigation
|
|
"application domain." INSLAW provided to Bua the examples of the
|
|
use of PROMIS in a nationwide credit bureau and in land
|
|
conveyance record keeping in the Republic of Ireland.
|
|
|
|
Denning's analysis makes no sense whatsoever and is totally
|
|
inappropriate given the circumstantial evidence. The methodology
|
|
appears to be designed to rationalize and support a conclusion of
|
|
non-infringement rather than the conduct of an independent
|
|
objective analysis of the software programs in question to
|
|
ascertain the truth.
|
|
|
|
Bua also addressed the question of the alleged use of PROMIS
|
|
by the National Security Agency (NSA). Bua did confirm that the
|
|
NSA has a software product called PROMIS but, once again, simply
|
|
accepted the apparently unsworn statement of a U.S. Government
|
|
official that the PROMIS software in question is not a derivative
|
|
of INSLAW's PROMIS. NSA evidently claims to use a commercial
|
|
database management system (DBMS) called M204, from Computer
|
|
Corporation of America, as the "engine" for its PROMIS system,
|
|
and to have written the application code, i.e., "the car" by
|
|
analogy, in an unspecified programming language. As with many of
|
|
the other suspected PROMIS-clone software systems, NSA claims to
|
|
have developed its PROMIS application code in house. NSA also
|
|
claims, according to Bua, that its PROMIS tracks information
|
|
related to its published intelligence reports, called "products"
|
|
by the NSA. Without explaining the basis for his statement, Bua
|
|
asserts that such an application is different from the
|
|
application domain of PROMIS: "NSA's PROMIS serves different
|
|
purposes... " INSLAW's PROMIS would, in fact, be easily adaptable
|
|
to tracking either the workflow that produces NSA's intelligence
|
|
output or the names, places, dates and events in the intelligence
|
|
reports or both.
|
|
|
|
Bua also dismisses the possibility that NSA's PROMIS could
|
|
be based on INSLAW's PROMIS because INSLAW's PROMIS is "used with
|
|
a different database." Bua is apparently referring to the NSA
|
|
claim that it uses the commercial M204 DBMS as the engine for its
|
|
PROMIS application system. The choice of commercial DBMS "engine"
|
|
for PROMIS, however, has very little relevance to the question of
|
|
whether the application code is a clone of INSLAW's PROMIS.
|
|
INSLAW itself has incorporated a variety of different commercial
|
|
DBMS engines into its PROMIS software. There is no difficulty in
|
|
believing that NSA might have incorporated the M204 DBMS into its
|
|
copy of INSLAW's PROMIS or that the FBI may have incorporated the
|
|
ADABAS DBMS into its copy of INSLAW's PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
In actuality, NSA's admission that it too uses a software
|
|
product called PROMIS and that the application domain of NSA's
|
|
PROMIS has something to do with the tracking of its published
|
|
intelligence information lends further plausibility to the claims
|
|
that virtually every major U.S. intelligence agency is using
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS software. Bua, of course, could have easily
|
|
resolved the question by arranging for a code comparison, but
|
|
apparently chose not to do so.
|
|
|
|
Bua's failure to arrange for the code comparisons between
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS and its suspected clones in U.S. intelligence and
|
|
law enforcement agencies, where his federal grand jury's legal
|
|
authority to conduct such investigations was obvious, is all the
|
|
more mystifying in light of Bua's published statement that he
|
|
considered trying to do just such code comparisons with foreign
|
|
governments. Although a federal grand jury has no authority over
|
|
foreign governments, Bua made the following statement about what
|
|
he claimed he considered doing to check out the claimed
|
|
international distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS:
|
|
|
|
Theoretically, we could continue our investigation of
|
|
this subject by contacting various foreign governments,
|
|
asking them to provide us with the source code to their
|
|
law enforcement software, and then hiring an expert to
|
|
compare that software to PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
B. Bua's Investigation of the Alleged International
|
|
Distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
|
|
There are a number of individuals, with claimed ties to U.S.
|
|
and/or foreign intelligence agencies, who have told INSLAW a
|
|
remarkably consistent story about the alleged international
|
|
distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
Most of the accounts place Earl W. Brian at the center of
|
|
the worldwide sales and distribution. Virtually all of the
|
|
sources claim that U.S. intelligence, law enforcement and
|
|
national security agencies, including the Central Intelligence
|
|
Agency, the National Security Agency, the Drug Enforcement
|
|
Administration, and the White House National Security Council,
|
|
have supported Brian's worldwide sales and distribution of
|
|
PROMIS. The accounts are generally consistent about the
|
|
motivations for the sales: (1) the personal financial gain of
|
|
Earl Brian and colleagues; (2) the generation of extra funds for
|
|
financing U.S. covert intelligence operations that the U.S.
|
|
Congress has declined to finance, such as the mid-1980's covert
|
|
assistance to the Contras in Nicaragua; and (3) an initiative to
|
|
penetrate the secret files of foreign intelligence and law
|
|
enforcement agencies by inducing them to acquire and implement
|
|
the PROMIS database management software and the necessary
|
|
computer hardware, after the software and hardware have been
|
|
secretly modified to permit electronic eavesdropping by the U.S.
|
|
National Security Agency.
|
|
|
|
One account even identifies the name of the individual,
|
|
Lindsey, who was allegedly appointed by the U.S. Government to
|
|
package INSLAW's PROMIS software for Brian's alleged sales to
|
|
such foreign intelligence agencies as Egypt's military
|
|
intelligence agency. Moreover, this source claims that Lindsey
|
|
was instructed to package the version of INSLAW's PROMIS that the
|
|
CIA obtained from DOJ and which has been operational within the
|
|
CIA ever since 1983, tracking U.S. and foreign covert
|
|
intelligence operations.
|
|
|
|
Several of the accounts claim an important role for Israeli
|
|
intelligence in the international distribution of INSLAW's
|
|
PROMIS, with Israel brokering the sales to countries where it has
|
|
significant intelligence liaison and influence, such as
|
|
Singapore, South Africa, Eastern European countries, and Central
|
|
American countries.
|
|
|
|
One source claims personally to have participated in at
|
|
least one meeting in the Justice Command Center at DOJ
|
|
headquarters between representatives of Israeli military
|
|
intelligence and representatives of DOJ regarding the use of
|
|
PROMIS databases in Israel to track terrorists in the Middle
|
|
East.
|
|
|
|
An associate of the late journalist Danny Casolaro claims to
|
|
have seen U.S. Government communications intelligence documents
|
|
that Casolaro obtained from an employee of the National Security
|
|
Agency facility in Vint Hills, Virginia, concerning the sales of
|
|
PROMIS to Israel, Germany, South Africa and other countries, and
|
|
concerning the flow of the proceeds from some of the sales to
|
|
bank accounts in the Cayman Islands and in Switzerland. The NSA
|
|
employee identified by Casolaro's associate was found murdered in
|
|
his car at National Airport in January 1991.
|
|
|
|
Many of these sources express fear of reprisal by the United
|
|
States Government if they were to come forward. The specific
|
|
types of reprisals, mentioned most often by those who express
|
|
fear, are loss of security clearances vital to their employment,
|
|
and criminal prosecution by DOJ under the espionage laws of the
|
|
United States for disclosing U.S. national secrets.
|
|
|
|
Bua's consideration of the claims of the sale and
|
|
distribution of PROMIS to foreign governments was even more
|
|
superficial than his examination of whether PROMIS is being used
|
|
by the FBI, the DEA, and the National Security Agency.
|
|
|
|
The following are examples of the superficiality of the Bua
|
|
investigation in the area of international distribution: the
|
|
alleged distribution of PROMIS to Canada and the alleged
|
|
distribution of PROMIS to Israel, together with the alleged
|
|
partnership between DOJ and Israeli intelligence in the theft of
|
|
PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
1. The Alleged Distribution of PROMIS to
|
|
Canada
|
|
|
|
The first information that INSLAW received about the alleged
|
|
international distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS came from the
|
|
Government of Canada. In telephone calls and letters in late 1990
|
|
and early l991, the Government of Canada informed INSLAW that it
|
|
was using its PROMIS software in several departments and agencies
|
|
and wished to learn whether INSLAW also had available a French-
|
|
language version of the PROMIS computer software and
|
|
documentation because there are two official languages in Canada,
|
|
English and French, and the Canadian Government at that point
|
|
only had the English version of PROMIS. The Government of Canada
|
|
eventually disclosed to INSLAW that the Royal Canadian Mounted
|
|
Police (RCMP) alone was using INSLAW's PROMIS to support 900
|
|
separate office locations in Canada.
|
|
|
|
After the U.S. media began to report on this disclosure by
|
|
the Government of Canada and on INSLAW's claim that it had
|
|
neither sold PROMIS to Canada nor authorized others to do soon
|
|
its behalf, the Government of Canada retracted its earlier oral
|
|
and written statements to INSLAW. Canada attempted to explain the
|
|
matter as an unfortunate mistake on the part of the Canadian
|
|
officials who had originally contacted INSLAW. Ultimately, the
|
|
Government of Canada settled on the story that the Department of
|
|
Public Works, not the RCMP, had bought the PROMIS software; that
|
|
the Department of Public Works had purchased only six copies of
|
|
PROMIS, instead of 900 copies; and that the Department of Public
|
|
Works had purchased PROMIS not from INSLAW, but from a small
|
|
software company in Cambridge, Massachusetts, called Strategic
|
|
Software Planning Corporation. This Cambridge, Massachusetts,
|
|
company is the same company that the CIA told the House Judiciary
|
|
Committee was the source of its PROMIS software. The CIA also
|
|
subsequently disclosed in an April 5, 1993 letter to Mr. Terry D.
|
|
Miller, President of Government Sales Consultants, that the
|
|
PROMIS software it obtained from the Cambridge, Massachusetts,
|
|
company included an Intelligence Report System, an unlikely
|
|
subsystem for construction industry project management, whether
|
|
in Canada or the United States.
|
|
|
|
The only reference that Bua makes to the Canadian lead is in
|
|
footnote #90 on page 151 of his report, in which Bua appears to
|
|
scold the House Judiciary Committee for failing to accept at face
|
|
value Canada's claims that the original disclosures to INSLAW
|
|
were simply an unfortunate mistake.
|
|
Although INSLAW recognizes that Bua's federal grand jury had
|
|
no investigative jurisdiction over the Canadian Government, there
|
|
are other ways for a U.S. investigator to have pursued the
|
|
Canadian lead. To illustrate this point, we have attached as
|
|
Exhibit A a memorandum from John Belton, a former stockbroker in
|
|
Canada who has been attempting to investigate the Canadian PROMIS
|
|
distribution lead. In his memorandum, Belton first explains the
|
|
history of his interaction with Earl Brian and Hadron, Inc., and
|
|
recounts Brian's claims to Belton in early 1981 that Hadron's
|
|
future revenue stream was to come from Hadron's acquisition of a
|
|
computer software product for the administration of justice that
|
|
Brian described as having "great PROMIS(E)." Belton then
|
|
documents the fact that three reputable Canadian journalists have
|
|
each confirmed to him, based on their confidential informants
|
|
among senior current or former RCMP officials, that the RCMP is,
|
|
in fact, using PROMIS, despite the Government of Canada's public
|
|
denials. Finally, Belton quotes verbatim from his telephone
|
|
conversations during the past year with several U.S. businessmen.
|
|
These conversations document the existence of a business
|
|
relationship between Earl Brian's Hadron, Inc., and two Canadian
|
|
computer services companies on a large software sale to the
|
|
Government of Canada in 1983. Belton's memorandum also summarizes
|
|
leads that strongly suggest that these business transactions in
|
|
1983 involved the Privy Council of Canada and its intelligence
|
|
and security staff, and the acquisition of PROMIS by the RCMP
|
|
under the name Police Information Records System (PIRS).
|
|
|
|
INSLAW told Bua about Belton's research in a written
|
|
submission to Bua in January 1992, but Bua made no attempt to
|
|
interview Belton. Instead of attempting to exculpate Earl Brian
|
|
and Hadron of any complicity in the theft and unauthorized
|
|
distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS software, Bua could have used the
|
|
federal grand jury to interrogate the U.S. businessmen whom
|
|
Belton interviewed, and to compel the production of potentially
|
|
relevant documents by Hadron, Earl Brian and the U.S. subsidiary
|
|
of one of the two Canadian companies that were Hadron's partners
|
|
in the 1983 software sale to Canada.
|
|
|
|
2. The Alleged Distribution of PROMIS to
|
|
Israel and The Alleged Partnership of
|
|
DOJ and Israeli Intelligence in the
|
|
Theft of PROMIS
|
|
|
|
Bua devotes only a single paragraph to the alleged
|
|
distribution of PROMIS to the State of Israel, even though Bua
|
|
characterizes this distribution as the "one documented
|
|
international distribution" by DOJ of PROMIS. Predictably, Bua
|
|
accepts at face value DOJ's contention that the May 1983 internal
|
|
DOJ memorandum on the distribution of PROMIS to Dr. Ben Orr of
|
|
Israel was truthful when it memorialized the distribution to
|
|
Israel of the earlier, and by-then largely obsolete, public
|
|
domain version of PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
The first reason to be skeptical about the truthfulness of
|
|
the claim that it was the older, public domain version that DOJ
|
|
gave to Israel is that Israel is both a technologically
|
|
sophisticated country and a strategically important ally of the
|
|
United States and, therefore, may not have been satisfied with
|
|
obtaining the public domain version of PROMIS in May 1983, after
|
|
that version had already become obsolete.
|
|
|
|
The second reason for skepticism is that it would have been
|
|
an admission of wrongdoing for DOJ to have memorialized the
|
|
distribution of the proprietary version of PROMIS to Israel. In
|
|
April 1983, just one month before the internal DOJ memorandum on
|
|
the transfer of PROMIS
|
|
to Israel, DOJ had stolen the proprietary version of PROMIS
|
|
from INSLAW "through trickery, fraud and deceit, " according to
|
|
the findings of the U.S . Bankruptcy Court, affirmed by the U.S.
|
|
District Court, and confirmed and supplemented by the September
|
|
1992 Investigative Report by the House Judiciary Committee. In
|
|
modifying INSLAW's contract on April 11, 1983, DOJ had committed
|
|
itself contractually not to distribute the proprietary version
|
|
outside the 22 largest U.S. Attorneys' Offices.
|
|
|
|
The third reason for skepticism is that DOJ did not produce
|
|
for the House Judiciary Committee any of the kinds of records
|
|
that should have accompanied such an international transfer of
|
|
computer software. Examples would be an export license from the
|
|
Commerce Department and documents explaining how it came to be
|
|
that mid-echelon DOJ officials were conveying a computer software
|
|
product to a foreign government.
|
|
|
|
The fourth reason for skepticism is that Israeli
|
|
intelligence appears to have been working hand-in-glove with DOJ
|
|
officials during the winter and spring of 1983 on the theft of
|
|
the proprietary version of PROMIS from INSLAW. DOJ, in fact, sent
|
|
a very high-level Israeli intelligence official over to INSLAW in
|
|
February 1983 for a demonstration of the very proprietary version
|
|
of PROMIS that DOJ misappropriated from INSLAW in April 1983.
|
|
|
|
In his report, Bua asks "why the DOJ would go to all the
|
|
trouble of documenting the fact that it was giving a copy of
|
|
PROMIS to Israel if this was some sort of covert operation." The
|
|
answer to Bua's evidently rhetorical question is that the DOJ
|
|
actions vis-a-vis INSLAW in the winter and spring of 1983 were,
|
|
in fact, apparently part of a covert DOJ-Israeli intelligence
|
|
operation, and the internal DOJ memorandum from May 1983 can be
|
|
understood as an integral part of the "trickery, fraud and
|
|
deceit" of the joint DOJ-Israeli intelligence covert operation.
|
|
|
|
INSLAW discovered the apparent 1983 DOJ-Israeli intelligence
|
|
initiative on PROMIS by following up on leads in the September
|
|
1992 Investigative Report by the House Judiciary Committee. These
|
|
leads were, of course, available to Bua too.
|
|
|
|
In February 1983, DOJ's Brewer telephoned INSLAW President
|
|
William Hamilton to ask if INSLAW would be willing to provide a
|
|
technical briefing and demonstration of the PROMIS software to a
|
|
visiting prosecutor from the Israeli Ministry of Justice. Brewer
|
|
identified this Israeli visitor as Dr. Ben Orr, the same person
|
|
to whom DOJ claims to have given the obsolete, public domain
|
|
version of PROMIS in May 1983, according to the contemporaneous
|
|
DOJ memorandum. Brewer told Hamilton that the visiting Israeli
|
|
prosecutor was heading a project to computerize the prosecutors'
|
|
offices in Israel.
|
|
|
|
Following through on DOJ's request, INSLAW demonstrated the
|
|
proprietary version of PROMIS to the Israeli visitor in February
|
|
1983 . This is the same version of PROMIS, i. e., the version for
|
|
operation on Digital Equipment Corporation VAX computers, that
|
|
DOJ stole from INSLAW in April 1983. The Israeli visitor
|
|
displayed enthusiasm for the proprietary VAX version of PROMIS
|
|
when INSLAW demonstrated it to him.
|
|
|
|
After the House Judiciary Committee published its report,
|
|
INSLAW wrote to the Israeli Ministry of Justice seeking
|
|
confirmation about whether there had actually been a Dr. Ben Orr
|
|
employed by the Ministry in February 1983 and, if so, where to
|
|
find him.
|
|
|
|
The Ministry replied by letter that there indeed had been a
|
|
Dr. Ben Orr employed by the Israeli Ministry of Justice in 1983,
|
|
but that Dr. Ben Orr had since retired and is currently
|
|
practicing law in Jerusalem.
|
|
|
|
Working with information supplied to INSLAW by the Israeli
|
|
Ministry of Justice, the foreign editor of a major Israeli daily
|
|
newspaper tracked down Dr. Ben Orr at his home in Jerusalem. The
|
|
foreign editor described Dr. Ben Orr as tall by Israeli standards
|
|
(5'10-1/2"), thin, having a full head of hair and possessing a
|
|
dignified demeanor. Dr. Ben Orr also disclosed to the foreign
|
|
editor that he had been stationed at the U.S. Department of
|
|
Justice in Washington, DC, for one year under an exchange
|
|
program, returning to Israel in May 1983 from his one-year stint
|
|
in Washington, DC. Most curiously, while the Israeli journalist
|
|
was visiting him in his home, Dr. Ben Orr produced what he
|
|
claimed was the very PROMIS computer tape given to him by DOJ in
|
|
May 1983. This is the kind of computer software tape that can
|
|
only be operated on large and very expensive computers, not the
|
|
kind of computers one would expect to find in a private
|
|
residence.
|
|
|
|
Nothing about this Dr. Ben Orr fits the actual Israeli
|
|
visitor to INSLAW in February 1983. That visitor was very short
|
|
in height and quite stocky. He had a deeply receding hairline.
|
|
His demeanor could not easily be described as "dignified."
|
|
Moreover, unlike the real Dr. Ben Orr who had already been in
|
|
Washington, DC, for the better part of one year by the time of
|
|
the February 1983 visit, the Israeli visitor to INSLAW had come
|
|
directly from Tel Aviv to Washington, DC, after a brief layover
|
|
in New York City. In fact, the visitor to INSLAW telephoned from
|
|
New York City to delay the meeting at INSLAW for 24 hours because
|
|
he claimed that some friends in New York City were giving a party
|
|
in honor of his arrival in the United States from Israel.
|
|
|
|
In retrospect, both DOJ and the visitor himself had deceived
|
|
INSLAW about the visitor's real identity.
|
|
|
|
At approximately the same time that INSLAW discovered this
|
|
apparent DOJ-Israeli subterfuge from a decade earlier, INSLAW
|
|
received a lead that the name, Dr. Ben Orr, had, from time to
|
|
time, been used as a pseudonym by Rafi Eitan, a legendary Israeli
|
|
espionage official. Rafi Eitan was, for example, the Israeli
|
|
spymaster for Jonathan Pollard, a civilian U.S. Navy intelligence
|
|
analyst convicted in 1986 of spying for the Government of Israel.
|
|
|
|
After locating a photograph of Rafi Eitan in a book on the
|
|
Pollard case, William Hamilton recognized Rafi Eitan as the
|
|
February 1983 Israeli visitor to INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
Immediately thereafter, INSLAW arranged for a former INSLAW
|
|
vice president, who had spent several hours briefing the Israeli
|
|
visitor in February 1983, and who knew nothing about INSLAW's
|
|
recent investigation of the matter, to attempt to identify the
|
|
visitor from a photographic line-up of six reasonably similar
|
|
looking Caucasian males. INSLAW also arranged for the videotaping
|
|
of the process. The former INSLAW officer, without hesitation,
|
|
identified photograph #2 as the photograph of the February 1983
|
|
visitor. That, of course, was a photograph of Rafi Eitan.
|
|
This identification of Rafi Eitan as the February 1983
|
|
visitor to INSLAW obviously increases the credibility of the
|
|
sworn statements in 1991 by Ari Ben Menashe to the effect that
|
|
Rafi Eitan obtained a copy of the PROMIS software while on a
|
|
visit to the United States in the early 1980's, and that Rafi
|
|
Eitan worked with U.S. intelligence and Earl W. Brian on the
|
|
international distribution of PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
Bua, however, dismisses Ben Menashe as a credible witness.
|
|
Bua contends that Ben Menashe abandoned the clear implications of
|
|
his sworn affidavits to INSLAW and of the chapter on PROMIS in
|
|
his recently published book, Profits of War, and cynically
|
|
confessed to Bua that he had no personal knowledge of Earl
|
|
Brian's sale of INSLAW's PROMIS software. Moreover, according to
|
|
Bua, Ben Menashe altered his story to say that Earl Brian was
|
|
selling a different software product called PROMIS that was
|
|
developed by the National Security Agency, independently of
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
Ben Menashe has denied to INSLAW that he ever made any such
|
|
statements to Bua or Bua's staff. INSLAW has no way of knowing
|
|
for certain what Ben Menashe said or did not say before Bua's
|
|
federal grand jury, but it seems unlikely that Ben Menashe would
|
|
have made statements to Bua that are totally inconsistent with
|
|
his earlier sworn testimony both to INSLAW and to the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee, and totally inconsistent with the thrust of
|
|
his recently published book, Profits of War.
|
|
|
|
For example, in affidavits given to INSLAW in 1991, Ben
|
|
Menashe claims to have attended a PROMIS computer software sales
|
|
presentation by Earl Brian in 198714 to Israeli intelligence
|
|
agencies in Tel Aviv. Ben Menashe further claims in these sworn
|
|
statements that Earl Brian stated during this sales presentation
|
|
that the PROMIS software he was marketing to Israel was the same
|
|
PROMIS software then operating in DOJ, CIA, NSA and DIA. The DOJ
|
|
version in 1987 could only have been INSLAW's proprietary PROMIS
|
|
software installed in the 42 largest U.S. Attorneys' Offices.
|
|
|
|
Ben Menashe's understanding that it was INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
software that Earl Brian and Rafi Eitan were marketing
|
|
internationally is also clearly evidenced in his book, Profits of
|
|
War. For example, Ben Menashe claims in the book that Rafi Eitan,
|
|
Earl Brian, and Washington, DC, attorney Leonard Garment
|
|
conspired in 1986 or 1987 to deprive INSLAW of the ability to
|
|
seek redress in the courts for DOJ's theft of the PROMIS
|
|
software. Specifically, Ben Menashe claims in the book that Rafi
|
|
Eitan authorized the wire transfer of $600,000 from an Israeli
|
|
intelligence slush fund to Earl Brian's Hadron, Inc., in Fairfax,
|
|
Virginia, and that Hadron was thereafter to provide this money to
|
|
Leonard Garment at the law firm of Dickstein, Shapiro and Morin
|
|
in order to finance that law firm's separation agreement with
|
|
Leigh Ratiner. At the time of his firing by Dickstein, Shapiro
|
|
and Morin, where he had been a partner for 10
|
|
years, Ratiner was the lead counsel on INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
lawsuit against DOJ, which he had filed only four months before.
|
|
|
|
In his report, Bua refers to Ben Menashe's published claim
|
|
of a payoff which, if true, would constitute obstruction of
|
|
justice. Bua explains, however, that he felt no obligation to
|
|
investigate the claim because he had decided that Ben Menashe had
|
|
very little credibility, and because he had assessed the claim as
|
|
implausible.
|
|
|
|
Even the most cursory investigation would have contradicted
|
|
Bua's assertion that this claim by Ben Menashe is implausible.
|
|
Ratiner, for example, told the Hamiltons in October 1986 that his
|
|
firing was precipitated by his naming of Deputy Attorney General
|
|
D. Lowell Jensen in the INSLAW complaint against DOJ.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, on October 6, 1986, the week before the law firm's
|
|
Senior Policy Committee met and voted to fire Ratiner, Leonard
|
|
Garment, a member of the Senior Policy Committee, had had a
|
|
social lunch with Deputy Attorney General Arnold Burns15 about the
|
|
INSLAW case. Garment never disclosed the lunch at the time either
|
|
to his partner, Leigh Ratiner, or to INSLAW, his firm's client.
|
|
According to the September 1989 Staff Report of the Senate
|
|
Permanent Investigations Subcommittee, Burns disclosed that he
|
|
met with Garment on October 6, 1986 to signal his readiness to
|
|
negotiate a settlement on the INSLAW case, as well as to
|
|
criticize the litigation strategy that Ratiner was then pursuing
|
|
in the INSLAW case.16
|
|
|
|
After Ratiner was fired, the law firm sent INSLAW a letter
|
|
containing an ultimatum that INSLAW authorize the law firm to
|
|
negotiate a settlement of INSLAW's claims, on terms proposed in
|
|
the letter, or else find new litigation counsel. The proposed
|
|
terms of settlement were payment of at least $1,000,000 of the
|
|
$2,000,000 that DOJ had withheld for INSLAW's implementation
|
|
services and the acknowledgment that DOJ was not obliged to pay
|
|
PROMIS license fees to INSLAW. The proposed terms were strikingly
|
|
close to Deputy Attorney General Burns' terms, as implied by his
|
|
August 1986 letter to Leigh Ratiner. INSLAW rejected the
|
|
ultimatum, found new litigation counsel, prosecuted and won the
|
|
case against DOJ at trial.
|
|
|
|
Not only did Garment have an undisclosed communication with
|
|
DOJ on INSLAW at the time of Ratiner's firing, but Garment was
|
|
also simultaneously representing the State of Israel in the Rafi
|
|
Eitan-Jonathan Pollard espionage case. Although INSLAW did not
|
|
then know it, Rafi Eitan had also apparently collaborated with
|
|
DOJ on the 1983 theft of PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
The Government of Israel reportedly hired Garment to help
|
|
prevent the Rafi Eitan- Jonathan Pollard espionage scandal from
|
|
spreading and leading to the criminal indictment of other co-
|
|
conspirators, such as Israeli Air Force Colonel Aviem Sella. The
|
|
Government of Israel
|
|
and Rafi Eitan would presumably have had a strong incentive
|
|
to conceal Rafi Eitan's role as a partner of DOJ in the theft of
|
|
the PROMIS software. DOJ, for example, granted Rafi Eitan
|
|
immunity from prosecution for his cooperation in the Pollard
|
|
espionage case. If it had become publicly known that Rafi Eitan
|
|
and DOJ had, in fact, been partners in the theft of the PROMIS
|
|
software and in its illegal distribution internationally, DOJ
|
|
might have been obliged to recuse itself from the prosecution of
|
|
the Pollard espionage case. At the very least, such DOJ decisions
|
|
as granting immunity from prosecution to Rafi Eitan would have
|
|
come under intense public scrutiny.
|
|
|
|
Bua could presumably have investigated Ben Menashe's claim
|
|
by having the grand jury subpoena financial and accounting
|
|
records of Dickstein, Shapiro and Morin and Hadron, Inc., and by
|
|
interrogating appropriate individuals before the grand jury. It
|
|
is difficult to imagine a more serious instance of obstruction of
|
|
justice in the INSLAW case than that represented by Ben Menashe's
|
|
published claim. INSLAW has intelligence information that
|
|
Ratiner's settlement agreement with Dickstein, Shapiro and Morin
|
|
was in the approximate amount of the alleged wire transfer from
|
|
Israel and that the funds from which the Ratiner severance
|
|
payments were drawn were provided from outside the law firm.
|
|
|
|
C. Bua's Investigation of Leads Relating to the Role
|
|
of DOJ Officials in Either Facilitating or
|
|
Covering Up the Use of INSLAW's PROMIS in
|
|
Intelligence/National Security Programs
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. Ronald LeGrand
|
|
|
|
In his report, Bua quotes extensively from William
|
|
Hamilton's December 1989 affidavit about what INSLAW had been
|
|
told in 1988 by Mr. Ronald LeGrand, when LeGrand was Chief
|
|
Investigator of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
|
|
|
|
LeGrand attributed his information to a trusted source whom
|
|
he said he had by then known for 15 years and whom he described
|
|
as a senior DOJ career official with a title. The gist of the
|
|
information that LeGrand passed on from his source is that
|
|
Presidential appointee D. Lowell Jensen, who headed the Criminal
|
|
Division from early 1981 until approximately mid-1983, engineered
|
|
INSLAW's contract disputes with DOJ in order "to get INSLAW out
|
|
of the way" and be able to award the PROMIS-related case
|
|
management business to "friends."17 According to LeGrand, his
|
|
source identified two senior Criminal Division aides to Jensen as
|
|
among the several individuals through whom Jensen carried out the
|
|
alleged scheme: James Knapp, whom Jensen had brought with him
|
|
from California to be his principal political Deputy Assistant
|
|
Attorney General in the Criminal Division, and Miles Matthews, a
|
|
Knapp subordinate whom Jensen had elevated to the position of
|
|
Executive Officer for the Criminal Division.
|
|
|
|
According to LeGrand, his source also identified three other
|
|
senior Criminal Division officials whom he described as knowing
|
|
the whole story of the alleged Jensen-directed scheme: These
|
|
officials are John Keeney, the highest ranking career lawyer in
|
|
the Criminal Division; Mark Richard, the career Deputy Assistant
|
|
Attorney General responsible in 1983 for intelligence, national
|
|
security and international terrorism issues within the Criminal
|
|
Division; and Philip White, who served under Mark Richard as
|
|
Director of International Affairs, starting in 1983.
|
|
|
|
Bua quotes Hamilton's December 1989 affidavit as follows:
|
|
|
|
Although Richard and White were 'pretty upset' about
|
|
it, the source did not believe that either of them
|
|
would disclose what they know _except in response to a
|
|
subpoena and under oath_. The source added that he did
|
|
not think that either Richard or White would commit
|
|
perjury. (Emphasis added.)
|
|
|
|
Although Bua placed LeGrand before the grand jury, he merely
|
|
"interviewed" Keeney, Richard and White, who each denied knowing
|
|
anything. Bua apparently ignored the cautionary warning that Bua
|
|
himself quoted from Hamilton's December 1989 affidavit: "the
|
|
source did
|
|
not believe that either of them [Mark Richard or Philip
|
|
White] would disclose what they know except in response to a
|
|
subpoena and under oath."
|
|
|
|
U.S. Government officials who are given access to classified
|
|
information are bound by security oaths not to disclose such
|
|
classified information except to individuals who have both the
|
|
required security clearance and the "need to know." If a highly
|
|
classified U.S. Government program, considered vital to the U.S.
|
|
national security, also included U.S. Government activities that
|
|
were approved at the highest levels of the United States
|
|
Government but which constituted violations of the federal
|
|
criminal laws, the security oaths could operate so as to
|
|
constrain the ability of U.S. Government officials to volunteer
|
|
information about the criminal activity embedded within the
|
|
classified U.S. intelligence/national security program.
|
|
|
|
Mark Richard's and Philip White's official duties in 1983
|
|
would have included collaboration with foreign intelligence and
|
|
law enforcement agencies on the problem of acts of terrorism
|
|
against U.S. citizens. During the past decade, the Middle East
|
|
has been the principal center of terrorism against U.S. citizens,
|
|
and Israel has been one of the most important allies of the
|
|
United States in the fight against Middle Eastern terrorism.
|
|
|
|
If DOJ and the Government of Israel decided to collaborate
|
|
on an initiative against Middle Eastern terrorism, such
|
|
collaboration might well have included an effort to obtain
|
|
whatever information on suspected terrorists exists from the law
|
|
enforcement and intelligence files of other governments,
|
|
particularly in the Middle East. If other governments could be
|
|
induced to implement the PROMIS database management software
|
|
system in their intelligence and law enforcement agencies, and if
|
|
both the software system and the computer hardware acquired to
|
|
operate the software had been secretly modified to permit
|
|
electronic eavesdropping by U.S. and Israeli intelligence, the
|
|
joint DOJ-Israeli intelligence initiative against terrorism would
|
|
have been positioned in such a way as to maximize the potential
|
|
success of the DOJ-Israeli intelligence joint venture. One of
|
|
INSLAW's sources, Ari Ben Menashe, claims to have attended a
|
|
meeting in DOJ's Justice Command Center between DOJ officials and
|
|
Israeli military intelligence officials, where data on terrorists
|
|
were exchanged between the representatives of the two
|
|
governments. Ben Menashe claims that both governments were using
|
|
the PROMIS software to track terrorists.
|
|
|
|
As noted in the preceding section, III.B.2., DOJ's PROMIS
|
|
Project Manager, C. Madison Brewer, sent over to INSLAW in
|
|
February 1983, under the guise of a visiting Israeli prosecutor,
|
|
one of the top Israeli espionage officials, Rafi Eitan. Brewer
|
|
asked that INSLAW provide a technical briefing on and
|
|
demonstration of PROMIS for this Israeli visitor, which INSLAW
|
|
did. At the time, Rafi Eitan was Anti-Terrorism Advisor to the
|
|
Prime Minister of Israel. According to the September 1992
|
|
Investigative Report of the House Judiciary Committee, Brewer
|
|
testified that Jensen pre-approved virtually every action he took
|
|
with regard to INSLAW. Although it is unlikely that Brewer, as
|
|
the computer systems executive for U.S. Attorneys' Offices, would
|
|
normally have interacted with the top Anti-Terrorism Advisor to
|
|
the Prime Minister of another country, it is not implausible that
|
|
Jensen, Mark Richard and Philip White of DOJ's Criminal Division
|
|
would have had dealings with Rafi Eitan on such subjects as
|
|
extraditing suspected terrorists from abroad for criminal
|
|
prosecution in the United States.
|
|
|
|
An American citizen's oath not to disclose classified
|
|
information must, under the law, give way to the obligation to
|
|
testify truthfully when compelled by appropriate legal process to
|
|
answer questions under oath. Bua's failure either to bring
|
|
Keeney, Richard and White before his grand jury or to place them
|
|
under oath, in spite of being warned of the necessity to do so,
|
|
is difficult to understand. Moreover, it invites concerns about a
|
|
purposeful effort to avoid placing DOJ witnesses in a position
|
|
where they would have to choose between perjury and damaging
|
|
disclosures about the use of a national security initiative to
|
|
conceal violations of the federal criminal law.
|
|
|
|
Such concerns are fueled further by Bua's silence in his
|
|
report about another disturbing development regarding DOJ and
|
|
LeGrand. In 1991, DOJ sought to block INSLAW's request to the
|
|
U.S. District Court to re-open discovery. One tactic employed by
|
|
DOJ was to sponsor a sworn statement by LeGrand purporting to
|
|
cast doubt on the accuracy of Hamilton' s December 1989 affidavit
|
|
about LeGrand. Unfortunately for LeGrand and DOJ, Senator Sam
|
|
Nunn had, in the meantime, confirmed the accuracy of Hamilton's
|
|
statements about LeGrand in a letter to the editor of the New
|
|
Republic magazine. According to Senator Nunn, LeGrand had
|
|
repeated the same story that he told the Hamiltons to the staff
|
|
of the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee chaired by
|
|
Senator Nunn. Bua's report devoted almost four pages to LeGrand's
|
|
testimony before the grand jury. All of it has been redacted.
|
|
From the questions that Bua reports asking DOJ officials,
|
|
however, it appears that LeGrand's grand jury testimony was
|
|
consistent with his earlier statements to the Hamiltons. Bua
|
|
makes no mention of LeGrand's subsequent contradictory statement
|
|
sponsored by DOJ in 1991 in the U.S. District Court for the
|
|
District of Columbia.
|
|
|
|
2. Garnett Taylor and the Alleged DOJ
|
|
Destruction of Classified
|
|
Intelligence/National Security Documents
|
|
Relating to INSLAW
|
|
|
|
INSLAW urged Bua to subpoena Garnett Taylor, a former DOJ
|
|
security officer, before Bua's grand jury and to interrogate him
|
|
about several matters, including the alleged destruction by DOJ
|
|
officials of classified national security/intelligence documents
|
|
relating to INSLAW. As with LeGrand, Taylor's testimony before
|
|
the grand jury has been redacted from Bua's report, but it is
|
|
possible to draw some inferences about Taylor's grand jury
|
|
testimony from Bua's narrative about his interview with James
|
|
Walker, Taylor's former DOJ supervisor.
|
|
|
|
Bua's narrative about his interview with James Walker
|
|
implies that Walker's former subordinate, Taylor, testified
|
|
before the grand jury that Walker had instructed Taylor to
|
|
retrieve classified intelligence/national security documents
|
|
relating to the INSLAW case from the files of a Civil Division
|
|
attorney who had left DOJ, and then to destroy those documents.
|
|
There is also the further implication in the Bua Report that
|
|
Taylor also alleged that Walker later cancelled the instructions
|
|
to Taylor and, thereafter, carried out the retrieval and
|
|
destruction of the classified INSLAW documents himself.
|
|
|
|
In its September 1992 Investigative Report, the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee reported that over 50 sensitive files or
|
|
documents relating to INSLAW had disappeared from the Civil
|
|
Division's litigation files while the House Judiciary Committee
|
|
sought access to the Civil Division's files on INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
Bua states that the House Judiciary Committee's report
|
|
contains the suggestion that a missing Civil Division file on
|
|
INSLAW "may have been destroyed because it contained documents
|
|
that implicated DOJ officials in a criminal conspiracy relating
|
|
to INSLAW."
|
|
|
|
Bua disposes of this suspicion by describing it as
|
|
unfounded. Bua accomplishes this by accepting at face value the
|
|
account given by Sandra Spooner, the lead Civil Division
|
|
litigation counsel on INSLAW. Bua does confirm that one file of
|
|
privileged documents is missing, but instead of conducting an
|
|
investigation, Bua snidely insinuates that the House Judiciary
|
|
Committee's investigators could have stolen it: "Even the
|
|
Committee investigators had limited access to the storage room
|
|
and therefore the missing file. By no means do we suggest that
|
|
one of the investigators stole the file."
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, James Walker confirmed that Garnett
|
|
Taylor's official responsibilities, when he worked for Walker,
|
|
included "responsibility for shredding classified documents once
|
|
a determination was made that the documents need not be
|
|
retained." Bua also claimed that "Walker stated that it was
|
|
conceivable that Taylor had been dispatched to take care of a
|
|
file cabinet belonging to a DOJ employee who had left."
|
|
|
|
When it came to Taylor's apparent claim that Walker had
|
|
"reassigned Taylor to another task and handled the disposition of
|
|
the documents in the file cabinet himself," Bua accepts at face
|
|
value Walker's statement that he had "no recollection" of such an
|
|
incident. If Walker were to recollect such an incident, of
|
|
course, Walker might well expose himself to criminal prosecution
|
|
for obstruction of justice. Bua also uncritically accepts
|
|
Walker's statement that "there were never any INSLAW documents in
|
|
any of the safes he controlled or any of the safes he knew
|
|
about."
|
|
|
|
Walker is DOJ's Special Security Officer with responsibility
|
|
for administering the facility on the 6th floor of DOJ
|
|
headquarters that houses Sensitive Compartmented Information.18
|
|
|
|
Walker's apparently unsworn denials of Taylor's sworn
|
|
statements were good enough for Bua. INSLAW has other U.S.
|
|
Government witnesses, however, who claim to know about the
|
|
incident that Walker claims he cannot recollect. One of these
|
|
witnesses claims to have been an eye witness to at least part of
|
|
the incident. These witnesses are unwilling to be identified
|
|
unless given guarantees that there will be no reprisals.
|
|
It is difficult to understand why Bua would not have
|
|
insisted on inspecting the Sensitive Compartmented Information
|
|
Facility (SCIF) administered by James Walker to determine whether
|
|
SCIF vault houses materials relating to the PROMIS software
|
|
and/or INSLAW, whether in the form of documents, microfiche or
|
|
remotely-located computer-based PROMIS data accessible by
|
|
computer terminals within the confines of the SCIF. It is
|
|
difficult to justify Bua's failure to attempt to resolve
|
|
empirically the apparent discrepancy between the grand jury
|
|
testimony of Taylor and the unsworn "failure to recollect"
|
|
statements by Walker. Bua presumably could have brought Walker
|
|
and other DOJ security officers before the federal grand jury,
|
|
and also subpoenaed DOJ's records on the destruction or
|
|
relocation of classified intelligence and national security
|
|
records.
|
|
|
|
D. Bua's Investigation of Leads About Earl W. Brian,
|
|
the Principal Alleged Private Sector Co-
|
|
Conspirator of DOJ and U.S. Intelligence Agencies
|
|
in the Theft and Distribution of PROMIS
|
|
|
|
|
|
As noted in Section III.B., Bua's Investigation of the
|
|
Alleged International Distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS, most of
|
|
the accounts of the foreign sales and distribution of PROMIS
|
|
place Earl W. Brian at the center of the activity.
|
|
|
|
Bua subdivides his investigation of this question into two
|
|
parts: the Claimed Direct Evidence of a Conspiracy and the
|
|
Claimed Circumstantial Evidence of a Conspiracy.
|
|
|
|
1. Bua's Investigation of the Claimed
|
|
Direct Evidence of a Conspiracy
|
|
|
|
Bua begins this section by claiming to have interviewed
|
|
individuals whom INSLAW and others have identified as having
|
|
personal knowledge of the activities of Earl Brian in connection
|
|
with the distribution of PROMIS software. Bua then addresses in
|
|
particular Michael Riconosciuto, Ari Ben Menashe, and Charles
|
|
Hayes.
|
|
|
|
(a) Michael Riconosciuto
|
|
|
|
Michael Riconosciuto served as Director of Research during
|
|
the early 1980's for the Joint Venture between the Wackenhut
|
|
Corporation of Coral Gables, Florida, and the Cabazon Band of
|
|
Mission Indians in Indio, California. The Wackenhut Corporation
|
|
reportedly regularly conducts highly classified contract work for
|
|
U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies.19 Riconosciuto
|
|
claims that Earl W. Brian and Peter Videnieks, DOJ's PROMIS
|
|
Contracting Officer, were frequent visitors to the Joint Venture
|
|
in Indio, California, because the Joint Venture was modifying the
|
|
PROMIS software so that Earl Brian could sell it to foreign
|
|
governments for their intelligence and law enforcement agencies.
|
|
|
|
(1) Bua's Claimed Inconsistencies in
|
|
Riconosciuto's Various Statements about
|
|
When and From Whom He Claims to Have
|
|
Obtained the PROMIS Software
|
|
|
|
Bua claims to have found inconsistencies among several sworn
|
|
statements by Riconosciuto, relating both to the number of copies
|
|
of the PROMIS software that Riconosciuto claims to have received
|
|
and to the identification of the party or parties from whom
|
|
Riconosciuto claims to have received the PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
In both his affidavit to INSLAW and in his sworn statement
|
|
to the House Judiciary Committee, Riconosciuto is apparently
|
|
consistent in claiming to have received a single copy of
|
|
PROMIS, as well as in claiming to have obtained PROMIS from
|
|
Earl Brian and Peter Videnieks, the Justice Department's PROMIS
|
|
Contracting Officer. In testimony at his criminal trial in
|
|
Tacoma, Washington, in January 1992, however, Riconosciuto made
|
|
references to receiving several copies of PROMIS and to receiving
|
|
those copies from Dr. John P. Nichols, the Administrator of the
|
|
Joint Venture.
|
|
|
|
These accounts may not, in fact, be in conflict.
|
|
Riconosciuto may have focused his testimony to the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee and to INSLAW on the one incident that
|
|
combines the proprietary version of PROMIS and direct evidence of
|
|
DOJ complicity in its dissemination; i.e., the chain of custody
|
|
from DOJ Contracting Officer Peter Videnieks to Brian to
|
|
Riconosciuto. This is the kind of evidence that both INSLAW and
|
|
the House Judiciary Committee were seeking. Riconosciuto's
|
|
testimony about receiving the proprietary version of PROMIS from
|
|
Earl Brian and Peter Videnieks would not necessarily mean that
|
|
Riconosciuto did not receive other copies of PROMIS from
|
|
individuals such as John P. Nichols. Moreover, Riconosciuto's
|
|
testimony to INSLAW and the House Judiciary Committee would not
|
|
exclude the possibility that Riconosciuto also obtained copies of
|
|
the earlier public domain version of PROMIS for modification
|
|
under the auspices of the Joint Venture. This could also account
|
|
for Riconosciuto's apparent inconsistencies about the years when
|
|
he claims to have worked on PROMIS, which Bua noted as additional
|
|
reasons to question Riconosciuto's credibility.
|
|
|
|
Bua also apparently does not realize that INSLAW had another
|
|
DOJ customer, in addition to the Executive Office for U.S.
|
|
Attorneys, to which it delivered the proprietary version of
|
|
PROMIS: DOJ's Land and Natural Resources Division. That DOJ
|
|
division has been subscribing to INSLAW's PROMIS software support
|
|
services since January 1982 and receiving proprietary
|
|
enhancements to PROMIS pursuant to the Annual INSLAW Software
|
|
Support Agreements ever since.20 These standard INSLAW Software
|
|
Support Agreements legally bar DOJ from copying or disseminating
|
|
the proprietary enhancements in the same way as INSLAW's standard
|
|
PROMIS license agreement does. Bua's failure to understand this
|
|
point also led to the following statement by Bua that is patently
|
|
untrue:
|
|
|
|
It is undisputed that INSLAW did not produce a copy of
|
|
enhanced PROMIS to DOJ until April 20, 1983.21
|
|
|
|
(2) Bua's Investigation of Riconosciuto's
|
|
Claim to Have Worked on PROMIS Under the
|
|
Auspices of the Wackenhut/Cabazon Joint
|
|
Venture
|
|
|
|
Bua states that his investigators "interviewed a number of
|
|
people whom Riconosciuto identified as having knowledge of the
|
|
activities involving PROMIS at the Cabazon Reservation,"
|
|
including Robert Nichols and Peter Zokosky, and that his
|
|
"interviews" led him to the tentative conclusion "that there were
|
|
absolutely22" no activities undertaken by Wackenhut, Riconosciuto,
|
|
or the Cabazons that had anything to do with PROMIS or any other
|
|
software."
|
|
|
|
Robert Nichols and Peter Zokosky have each reportedly had
|
|
extensive employment in classified U.S. Government intelligence
|
|
and national security activities. Nichols, in fact, testified
|
|
under oath at a civil trial in Los Angeles in 1993 about his
|
|
claimed 18 year association with the CIA. Each presumably took an
|
|
oath not to disclose voluntarily any classified information that
|
|
he may have acquired as part of his U.S. Government work, except
|
|
to individuals who possess both the requisite security clearances
|
|
and the "need to know." The only way to overcome that sworn
|
|
obligation to silence is to use compulsory legal process, such as
|
|
a federal grand jury, to require such an individual to answer
|
|
highly detailed questions under oath. Bua apparently did not do
|
|
this.
|
|
|
|
If Riconosciuto is telling the truth about modifying
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS software with a "trap door" for electronic
|
|
eavesdropping by the U.S. Government, the U.S. intelligence
|
|
agency whose vital interests would be most clearly implicated in
|
|
any such project is the National Security Agency (NSA).
|
|
|
|
That the Joint Venture was carrying out contract R&D for the
|
|
National Security Agency and that Michael Riconosciuto was
|
|
personally involved in such work can be inferred from statements
|
|
and actions of Robert Nichols and Peter Zokosky.
|
|
|
|
Robert Nichols told Mr. and Ms. Hamilton about an incident
|
|
in the early 1980's when a colonel from the NSA Headquarters at
|
|
Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, allegedly flew out to the Cabazon
|
|
Reservation for the day for the single purpose of assuring that
|
|
FBI agents, investigating a triple homicide of the Vice Chairman
|
|
of the Cabazon Tribe and two associates, did not attempt to probe
|
|
the classified U.S. Government work being performed under the
|
|
auspices of the Wackenhut-Cabazon Joint Venture.
|
|
|
|
Robert Nichols also told the Hamiltons about having
|
|
accompanied Michael Riconosciuto on a visit to a classified NSA
|
|
contractor facility in the Silicon Valley and to have observed
|
|
Riconosciuto's apparently unrestricted and unescorted access to
|
|
both the contractor's employees and to offices within the
|
|
contractor facility that were prominently marked as off-limits to
|
|
any unescorted visitors.
|
|
|
|
Robert Nichols also told the Hamiltons about frequent
|
|
alleged telephone conversations at the Wackenhut-Cabazon Joint
|
|
Venture between Michael Riconosciuto and Bobby Inman. Bobby Inman
|
|
served in the early 1980's consecutively as Director of the
|
|
National Security Agency and Deputy Director of the Central
|
|
Intelligence Agency.
|
|
|
|
For his part, Peter Zokosky sent Mr. and Ms. Hamilton an
|
|
excerpt from Public Law 86-36 of 1959 on NSA, with the following
|
|
words highlighted:
|
|
|
|
Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
|
|
nothing in this Act or any other law ... shall be
|
|
construed to require the disclosure of the organization
|
|
or any function of the National Security Agency, or any
|
|
information with respect to the activities thereof ...
|
|
|
|
(3) Bua's Attempt to Discredit Riconosciuto
|
|
Based on Bua's Own Misinformation about
|
|
the Wackenhut Corporation, and Bua's
|
|
Failure to Investigate Riconosciuto's
|
|
Claim That He and Earl Brian Worked
|
|
Together in 1980 as Contract Employees
|
|
of Wackenhut
|
|
|
|
Riconosciuto claims that he and Earl Brian made a trip to
|
|
Iran in 1980 as independent contractors with a subsidiary of the
|
|
Wackenhut Corporation known as the Wackenhut Research
|
|
Corporation.
|
|
|
|
Bua states that the Wackenhut Research Corporation does not
|
|
exist. While that statement is true for 1993, what is important,
|
|
is that the Wackenhut Research Corporation did exist in 1980, as
|
|
a subsidiary of the Wackenhut Corporation, according to the 1980
|
|
Annual Report for the parent company. Rather than diminishing
|
|
Riconosciuto's credibility, the reference to a subsidiary that
|
|
has not been in existence for a decade but that was in existence
|
|
when Riconosciuto claims it was, actually enhances Riconosciuto's
|
|
credibility.
|
|
|
|
Bua further criticizes Riconosciuto for failing to produce,
|
|
as he promised Mr. and Ms. Hamilton in a May 1990 telephone
|
|
conversation memorialized by the Hamiltons, copies of Internal
|
|
Revenue Service (IRS) 1099 independent contractor forms for his
|
|
and Earl Brian's claimed contract work for the Wackenhut Research
|
|
Corporation in 1980. Bua's federal grand jury presumably could
|
|
have issued a subpoena to the IRS and/or to the Wackenhut
|
|
Corporation for the records in question and, in so doing,
|
|
determined whether Earl Brian and Michael Riconosciuto each
|
|
worked for the same unit of the Wackenhut Corporation at the same
|
|
time in 1980. Because Earl Brian has repeatedly denied Michael
|
|
Riconosciuto's claims, Bua could have used this opportunity to
|
|
determine empirically whether it is Michael Riconosciuto or Earl
|
|
Brian who is lying.
|
|
|
|
(4) Bua's Investigation of Riconosciuto's
|
|
Claimed Involvement With Earl Brian and
|
|
Peter Videnieks
|
|
|
|
Bua states that Sam Cross, who was Chief of Police in Indio,
|
|
California, in the early 1980's, "made a point of staying aware
|
|
of what was going on at the Cabazon Reservation during that
|
|
period, and that he never heard any mention of the name Earl
|
|
Brian." If the NSA could send a colonel 3,000 miles across the
|
|
United States to make certain that FBI agents investigating a
|
|
triple homicide near the reservation did not find out anything
|
|
about the classified projects undertaken by the reservation's
|
|
Joint Venture, there is no reason to believe that a local police
|
|
chief would fare any better in gaining access to classified Joint
|
|
Venture projects. Bua's
|
|
reliance on Sam Cross' ability to know about such classified
|
|
activities would, therefore, appear to be misplaced.
|
|
|
|
Bua quotes John P. Nichols, the Director of the Wackenhut-
|
|
Cabazon Joint Venture, as being "emphatic that Riconosciuto's
|
|
allegations concerning PROMIS are fabricated" "and that he had
|
|
never heard of Earl Brian or any of his companies prior to
|
|
Riconosciuto's allegations." Although Bua details Riconosciuto's
|
|
criminal history, he fails to mention that John P. Nichols was
|
|
incarcerated in the mid-1980's following a conviction for
|
|
contracting with professional "hit men" for a number of
|
|
assassinations. The disclosure of such information is relevant
|
|
for anyone trying to determine how much weight to give to John P.
|
|
Nichols' statements. Moreover, Bua apparently did not place
|
|
Nichols before the grand jury or even under oath.
|
|
|
|
Bua states that Brian's presence at the September 10, 1981
|
|
weapons demonstration, as reported in the September 1992
|
|
Investigative Report of the House Judiciary Committee, "would be
|
|
significant" because Brian "has steadfastly denied having been to
|
|
the Cabazon reservation, or ever having met Riconosciuto or any
|
|
one affiliated with the Cabazons."
|
|
|
|
The Indio Police Department conducted surveillance of the
|
|
September 10, 1981 weapons demonstration and recorded both Earl
|
|
Brian and Michael Riconosciuto as attending, with Earl Brian
|
|
arriving as a passenger in a Rolls Royce automobile driven by
|
|
Wayne Reeder, whom Bua describes as a real estate developer. Bua
|
|
reports that Wayne Reeder claims that Earl Brian was not present
|
|
with him on September 10, 1981. Wayne Reeder's character and
|
|
integrity are, however, currently under challenge by the United
|
|
States Government. Reeder was indicted for insurance fraud by the
|
|
U.S. Attorney's Office in Rhode Island in June 1993.23 Moreover,
|
|
Bua apparently did not place Reeder before the grand jury or even
|
|
under oath.
|
|
|
|
Bua also credits Earl Brian's denial that he was at the
|
|
September 10, 1981 weapons demonstration in Indio, California,
|
|
and notes that Brian's denial is supported by various documents,
|
|
including Brian's personal calendar and expense records
|
|
purporting to show Earl Brian as being on the East Coast of the
|
|
United States on the day in question. Bua further notes that the
|
|
notations on some of these documents were made by one of Brian's
|
|
subordinates.
|
|
|
|
Earl Brian's veracity and the reliability of documents
|
|
furnished by Earl Brian are open to question, however, as the
|
|
result of Brian's decision not to contest a civil lawsuit filed
|
|
by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on June 28,
|
|
1993 against Earl W. Brian and several former subordinates at
|
|
Financial News Network (FNN). In a 60-page civil complaint filed
|
|
in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the SEC
|
|
charged Brian with securities fraud, with causing the creation of
|
|
fraudulent documents, with executing and backdating fraudulent
|
|
documents, with directing a subordinate to execute a fraudulent
|
|
and backdated document, and with making materially false or
|
|
misleading statements. Brian settled his part of the SEC lawsuit
|
|
the very day it was filed by agreeing to be bound by a permanent
|
|
injunction not
|
|
to commit securities fraud in the future, and not to make or
|
|
cause others to make a materially false or misleading statement
|
|
in the future.
|
|
|
|
Bua determined that Riconosciuto is not to be believed, but
|
|
that Earl Brian and Peter Videnieks are "credible witnesses, both
|
|
in their demeanor and in the substance of their statements."
|
|
|
|
In reaching that conclusion, Bua apparently did not speak to
|
|
the former FNN Director of Administrative Services, Ms. Margaret
|
|
Wiencek. INSLAW, however, not only spoke to Margaret Wiencek but
|
|
also obtained from her a copy of a sworn statement she gave
|
|
recently to the U.S. Customs Service Internal Affairs
|
|
investigators who were interviewing Wiencek about Peter
|
|
Videnieks. Videnieks left DOJ in September 1990 to become
|
|
Director of Operational Procurement at the U.S. Customs Service.
|
|
|
|
In her sworn statement, Wiencek describes a file at FNN
|
|
Headquarters that contained copies of correspondence to and from
|
|
Dominick Laiti, then Chairman of Earl Brian's Hadron, Inc.,
|
|
relating to the PROMIS software and INSLAW, Inc. Wiencek also
|
|
claims personally to have taken telephone messages at FNN
|
|
Headquarters from Peter Videnieks and Michael Riconosciuto during
|
|
the first quarter of 1987. That is the quarter when INSLAW filed
|
|
a pleading in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Columbia
|
|
concerning the covert DOJ effort in 1985 to force INSLAW into
|
|
Chapter 7 liquidation.
|
|
|
|
(b) Ari Ben-Menashe
|
|
|
|
Section III.B.2., Bua's Investigation of the Alleged
|
|
International Distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS, contains a
|
|
detailed analysis of Bua's statements about Ari Ben Menashe's
|
|
claims and alleged claims. That analysis is not repeated in this
|
|
section. One example of Ben Menashe's credibility regarding the
|
|
international distribution of PROMIS is his sworn statement in
|
|
1991 about the pivotal role played in this area by an Israeli
|
|
espionage official, Rafi Eitan. In early 1993, INSLAW was able
|
|
independently to corroborate Eitan's collaboration with DOJ in
|
|
the 1983 theft of PROMIS.
|
|
|
|
Bua states that Ben Menashe's claims have been "convincingly
|
|
denied by two witnesses whose statements we believe," ... "Earl
|
|
Brian, under oath, and Robert McFarlane, in a telephone
|
|
interview."
|
|
|
|
As noted earlier, Brian's acceptance on Monday, June 28,
|
|
1993 in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia of the
|
|
permanent injunction sought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange
|
|
Commission (SEC) not to engage in securities fraud in the future,
|
|
raises valid questions about the veracity and integrity of Earl
|
|
Brian, one of the witnesses upon whom Bua relied.
|
|
|
|
Although Bua detailed Riconosciuto's criminal record, he
|
|
failed to mention that the other witness upon whom he relied in
|
|
dismissing Ben Menashe's claims, Robert McFarlane, also has a
|
|
federal criminal record, arising from his conduct in the
|
|
Iran/Contra affair as National Security Advisor to the President
|
|
of the United States. McFarlane's conviction was for lying.
|
|
(c) Charles Hayes
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report contains several redacted pages relating to
|
|
the grand jury testimony of Charles Hayes.
|
|
|
|
INSLAW, of course, has no way of knowing what Charles Hayes
|
|
said or did not say before Bua's grand jury, but Hayes executed
|
|
an affidavit on November 30, 1992 claiming that on or about
|
|
August 26, 1992 he had appeared to testify before the grand jury
|
|
in Chicago; that he gave testimony concerning his "direct
|
|
knowledge of the commission of felonies" "related to the INSLAW
|
|
affair"; that he submitted a list of names of witnesses who have
|
|
direct knowledge of the INSLAW affair and supplied the addresses
|
|
and telephone numbers of those witnesses; and that none of the
|
|
witnesses had been contacted as of November 30, 1992.
|
|
|
|
Hayes had previously told Mr. and Ms. Hamilton that he met
|
|
with Earl Brian, Richard Secord and Oliver North in Sao Paulo,
|
|
Brazil, in the mid-1980's while those three individuals were
|
|
purchasing weapons for the Contras in Nicaragua, and Brian was
|
|
marketing INSLAW's PROMIS software to the Government of Brazil.
|
|
|
|
(d) Richard Babayan
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently did not bring before the grand jury or even
|
|
interview Richard H. Babayan, who provided an affidavit to INSLAW
|
|
on March 22, 1991, concerning a PROMIS software sales
|
|
presentation by Earl W. Brian and Richard Secord to the
|
|
Government of Iraq during 1987. In his affidavit, Babayan also
|
|
claims that a Miami, Florida, resident, Sarkis Saghanolian,
|
|
assisted Earl Brian in completing the sale of the PROMIS software
|
|
to Iraq "for use primarily in intelligence services, and
|
|
secondarily in police and law enforcement agencies."
|
|
|
|
INSLAW furnished a copy of this affidavit to Bua in January
|
|
1992, but Bua apparently never interrogated Babayan; Richard
|
|
Secord, named by both Babayan and Hayes as a Brian colleague
|
|
during PROMIS marketing forays abroad; or Sarkis Saghanolian.
|
|
|
|
2. Bua's Investigation of the Claimed
|
|
Circumstantial Evidence of a Conspiracy
|
|
|
|
(a) The September 1983 Fund raising
|
|
Trip to New York City by Earl
|
|
Brian, Dominick Laiti, and Paul
|
|
Wormeli
|
|
|
|
Bua quotes from William Hamilton's December 1989 affidavit
|
|
about Earl Brian, Hadron Chairman Dominick Laiti, and Hadron
|
|
Executive Paul Wormeli gathering in New York City in September
|
|
1983 to raise equity capital from the Wall Street Investment
|
|
Bank, Allen and Company. In his affidavit, Hamilton quotes
|
|
Wormeli as stating that the equity capital was to finance
|
|
Hadron's expansion in criminal justice information systems. In
|
|
his affidavit, Hamilton also quotes Wormeli's former secretary,
|
|
Marilyn Titus, as stating that the purpose of the trip was "to
|
|
raise capital to buy the court software."
|
|
|
|
Bua quotes Titus as stating that "she does not believe she
|
|
ever told William Hamilton that the purpose of the 1983 fund
|
|
raising trip was to raise capital _to obtain PROMIS or
|
|
INSLAW_." (Emphasis added.) Titus was apparently not placed
|
|
under oath, and she was also apparently asked to confirm a
|
|
statement that is different from the one that Hamilton claims
|
|
that Titus made.
|
|
|
|
Bua states that Laiti insisted the equity capital was
|
|
intended to be used by Simcon, Hadron's police information
|
|
systems subsidiary in 1983. Bua also claims that "Wormeli
|
|
essentially confirmed what Laiti told us." What Wormeli had told
|
|
INSLAW, however, is that he was shocked to discover that Laiti
|
|
was seeking to raise $7 million in equity capital for criminal
|
|
justice information systems because Simcon could only use $2
|
|
million. Wormeli told INSLAW that he never was told how the other
|
|
$5 million was going to be used.
|
|
|
|
Wormeli also told INSLAW that during the September 1983 fund
|
|
raising visit to Allen and Company, he and Laiti not only met
|
|
with Mark Kesselman, a Vice President, but also met with Herbert
|
|
A. Allen, Jr., then the Chief Executive Officer of Allen and
|
|
Company. Wormeli told INSLAW that at the time of the 1983 visit,
|
|
Allen and Company owned about $5 million of Hadron's common
|
|
stock.
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently did not subpoena records of Allen and Company
|
|
about the Hadron fund raising effort in 1983, and did not
|
|
interview Herbert A. Allen, Jr. What Bua did do is have a trans-
|
|
Atlantic telephone interview with Kesselman in Switzerland.
|
|
Kesselman claims that he could not even remember the name of the
|
|
company seeking the funds. With a $5 million equity investment in
|
|
Hadron, Herbert A. Allen, Jr., presumably, would have been able
|
|
to remember the name of the company and possibly important
|
|
details concerning the intended use of the proceeds. With such a
|
|
substantial investment in Hadron in 1983, Allen and Company may
|
|
also have had documents relating to Hadron's planned expansion in
|
|
criminal justice information systems that could explain the $5
|
|
million for which Wormeli cannot account.
|
|
|
|
(b) The 53rd Street Ventures Connection
|
|
|
|
(1) Patricia Cloherty's Alleged Claims About
|
|
Earl Brian
|
|
|
|
On Thursday, May 5, 1988, the CBS Evening News with Dan
|
|
Rather broadcast an unusually long, approximately seven minute,
|
|
segment on the INSLAW affair, highlighting the alleged role of
|
|
Earl W. Brian in the DOJ theft of the PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
The annual meeting of the National Association of Venture
|
|
Capitalists was at that very time taking place in Washington, DC,
|
|
and both Richard D'Amore and Patricia Cloherty were in
|
|
attendance. D'Amore was on INSLAW's board of Directors and was a
|
|
partner in Hambro Venture Capital, then the lead venture capital
|
|
investor in INSLAW. Cloherty and her husband, Daniel Tessler,
|
|
controlled 53rd Street Ventures, which also then had an equity
|
|
investment in INSLAW. Cloherty also had by this time become the
|
|
Chief Operating Officer of Alan Patricoff and Associates, a very
|
|
large venture capital firm in New York City that had controlled
|
|
53rd Street Ventures until 1984, when Cloherty and Tessler took
|
|
it over.
|
|
|
|
On Friday, May 6, 1988, Richard D'Amore visited William
|
|
Hamilton at INSLAW's offices in Washington and told him that he
|
|
had seen Patricia Cloherty at the venture capitalists conference
|
|
and had mentioned to her the previous evening's telecast on
|
|
INSLAW and the alleged
|
|
role of a venture capitalist by the name of Earl Brian.
|
|
According to D'Amore, Cloherty responded by stating, in words or
|
|
substance, that she "knew all about Earl Brian's role in the
|
|
INSLAW case."
|
|
|
|
According to William Hamilton's desk calendar for Tuesday,
|
|
May 10, 1988, Hamilton telephoned Patricia Cloherty at Alan
|
|
Patricoff and Associates. Without disclosing to her that D'Amore
|
|
had recounted his conversation with Cloherty, Hamilton asked
|
|
whether Earl Brian or his InfoTechnology, Inc., venture capital
|
|
firm had ever done any deals with Alan Patricoff and Associates
|
|
or 53rd Street Ventures through early 1984 when Patricoff and
|
|
Associates managed 53rd Street Ventures. Cloherty claimed not to
|
|
know and did not commit to try to find out when Hamilton asked
|
|
that she do so. Hamilton did tell Cloherty about the alleged role
|
|
of venture capitalist Earl Brian as a partner in the DOJ
|
|
corruption against INSLAW, and Cloherty did not disclose to
|
|
Hamilton that she knows Earl Brian and, in fact, had served on a
|
|
board of directors with him during the 1980's, disclosures that
|
|
Cloherty made to Bua.
|
|
|
|
In his December 1989 affidavit, Hamilton quotes the
|
|
statement about Earl Brian that Cloherty allegedly made to
|
|
D'Amore in May 1988, without providing the aforementioned
|
|
background details about the CBS Evening News story being
|
|
telecast while Richard D'Amore and Patricia Cloherty, each with
|
|
venture capital investments in INSLAW, were in Washington, DC,
|
|
for a national conference of venture capitalists.
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, both Cloherty and D'Amore denied having
|
|
had such a conversation in May 1988, and D'Amore denied having
|
|
told Hamilton about such a conversation. Bua apparently did not
|
|
place Cloherty or D'Amore under oath. Bua never asked Hamilton
|
|
for further information, such as some of the contextual details
|
|
described above, that Bua could have used in trying to refresh
|
|
the recollections of Cloherty and D'Amore or, alternatively, in
|
|
trying to impeach their testimony. Moreover, Bua could have
|
|
easily verified the CBS telecast on Brian and INSLAW occurring
|
|
while Cloherty and D'Amore were together in Washington, DC, at a
|
|
venture capital conference.
|
|
|
|
Instead of doing such work, however, Bua uncritically
|
|
accepted Cloherty's and D'Amore's non-sworn denials and then
|
|
irresponsibly used those denials to support his conclusion that
|
|
Hamilton's sworn representations cannot be relied upon.
|
|
|
|
Bua quotes Daniel Tessler as stating that "his wife,
|
|
Patricia Cloherty, has no knowledge of Earl Brian ..." Bua then
|
|
quotes Patricia Cloherty as not only admitting that she knows
|
|
Earl Brian but also admitting to have served with Earl Brian
|
|
during the 1980's on the Board of Directors of the National
|
|
Association of Small Business Investment Companies. 53rd Street
|
|
Ventures is, in fact, a Small Business Investment Company.
|
|
|
|
Bua should also have wondered how Hamilton could have
|
|
correctly associated Patricia Cloherty with Earl Brian, when
|
|
Cloherty's own husband professes not to have known of any such
|
|
association, unless Hamilton's highly plausible account of his
|
|
May 1988 conversation with D'Amore in Washington, DC, is true and
|
|
accurate.
|
|
|
|
|
|
(2) Daniel Tessler's Non-Sworn Denial of
|
|
Hamilton's Sworn Statement About Tessler
|
|
Demanding Voting Rights to the
|
|
Hamiltons' Common Stock on the Eve of
|
|
INSLAW's Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Filing
|
|
|
|
In his December 1989 affidavit, Hamilton states that Daniel
|
|
Tessler appeared at INSLAW in December 1984, just several weeks
|
|
before INSLAW was finally forced to file for Chapter 11
|
|
bankruptcy protection, and gave William Hamilton an ultimatum to
|
|
turn over to Tessler by the close of business that day the voting
|
|
rights to Mr. and Ms. Hamilton's controlling interest in INSLAW.
|
|
Otherwise, neither 53rd Street Ventures nor Hambro Venture
|
|
Capital would even attempt to help INSLAW raise new capital to
|
|
avoid financial collapse, according to Hamilton's sworn statement
|
|
about Tessler's ultimatum.
|
|
|
|
Bua reports that Tessler denied Hamilton's sworn testimony,
|
|
and Bua apparently accepts Tessler's non-sworn denial without any
|
|
further investigation. Someone who cannot remember his wife's
|
|
business relationship with Earl Brian may not, however, have the
|
|
most reliable memory. Moreover, if Tessler was acting secretly on
|
|
behalf of Earl Brian when he sought the voting rights of the
|
|
Hamiltons' controlling interest in INSLAW, he may have violated
|
|
the Federal Banking Criminal Statute, 18 U.S.C. 215 because
|
|
Tessler was then an officer of a Small Business Investment
|
|
Company (SBIC). 53rd Street Ventures, as an SBIC, is a "financial
|
|
institution" as defined in section 103 of the Small Business
|
|
Investment Act of 1958. Section (2) of 18 U.S.C. 215 makes it a
|
|
federal crime for anyone who
|
|
|
|
"as an officer, director, employee, agent or attorney
|
|
of a financial institution, corruptly solicits or
|
|
demands for the benefit of any person, or corruptly
|
|
accepts or agrees to accept anything of value from any
|
|
person, intending to be influenced or rewarded in
|
|
connection with any business or transaction of such
|
|
institution;"
|
|
|
|
It may be unrealistic to expect Tessler to admit to Bua
|
|
conduct that could arguably expose Tessler to prosecution under
|
|
18 U.S.C. 215.
|
|
|
|
(3) Bua's Investigation of Hamilton's Claims
|
|
About Jonathan Ben Cnaan of 53rd Street
|
|
Ventures
|
|
|
|
In his December 1989 affidavit, Hamilton recounts a
|
|
conversation with Jonathan Ben Cnaan of 53rd Street Ventures.
|
|
According to Hamilton, Ben Cnaan disclosed to Hamilton, in
|
|
October 1983, a meeting that Ben Cnaan had had in September 1983
|
|
in New York City with someone whom Ben Cnaan described at the
|
|
time as a businessman with ties to the highest level of the
|
|
Reagan Administration. Ben Cnaan said that the businessman had
|
|
told 53rd Street Ventures about Hadron's acquisition overture to
|
|
INSLAW in April 1983; about his absolute determination to gain
|
|
control of the PROMIS software for use in federal government
|
|
contracts; about the contract disputes having arisen in INSLAW's
|
|
contract with DOJ following INSLAW's refusal to sell out to
|
|
Hadron; and about the fact that those disputes would never be
|
|
able to be resolved as long as INSLAW refused to let the unnamed
|
|
businessman use PROMIS for federal government contracts.
|
|
Bua describes at length his efforts to find Ben Cnaan. He
|
|
states that he would have liked to have talked with Ben Cnaan but
|
|
then implies that it is not that important because Earl Brian has
|
|
already denied being the businessman depicted in the statements
|
|
attributed to Ben Cnaan, and, moreover, Hamilton does not
|
|
actually quote Ben Cnaan as claiming that the unnamed businessman
|
|
was Earl Brian.
|
|
|
|
Earl Brian, Dominick Laiti, and Paul Wormeli were in New
|
|
York City the very same month that Ben Cnaan had the meeting with
|
|
the unnamed businessman. Brian was, according to the Bua Report,
|
|
on the Board of Directors of the National Association of Small
|
|
Business Investment Companies. 53rd Street Ventures is a Small
|
|
Business Investment Company.
|
|
|
|
Conducting a sworn interrogation of Ben Cnaan, under the
|
|
circumstances, would have been extremely important. If Ben Cnaan
|
|
were to identify either Earl Brian or Dominick Laiti as the
|
|
businessman to whom he referred in his October 1983 meeting with
|
|
William Hamilton and if Ben Cnaan would confirm the essence of
|
|
the statements attributed to him in Hamilton's affidavit24, it
|
|
would directly tie Earl Brian and Hadron into the DOJ use of
|
|
contract disputes with INSLAW as leverage to help Hadron wrest
|
|
control of the PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
Ben Cnaan apparently visited New York City in early 1993,
|
|
from Israel where he currently lives. With a modest effort,
|
|
INSLAW was able to discover Ben Cnaan's current address and
|
|
telephone number in Israel:
|
|
|
|
Ha' Adamit #6
|
|
Herzlia, Israel
|
|
Telephone 258-7787.
|
|
|
|
(c) The Systems and Computer
|
|
Technology, Inc. (SCT) Connection
|
|
|
|
Bua professes not to understand how INSLAW's "allegations
|
|
about SCT would fit into INSLAW's theory of a Hadron conspiracy."
|
|
Bua further states that "there would be no apparent reason for
|
|
Brian or Hadron to be attempting to control INSLAW (through SCT)
|
|
in 1986."
|
|
|
|
SCT launched a "hostile takeover" bid for INSLAW in May
|
|
1986, the very month that DOJ issued its Request for Proposals
|
|
for the Uniform Office Automation and Case Management Project,
|
|
code-named Project EAGLE. This was the largest procurement in DOJ
|
|
history. INSLAW believes that the PROMIS software was intended by
|
|
DOJ to be the uniform case management software for the Project
|
|
EAGLE computers.25 INSLAW further believes that Earl
|
|
Brian's Hadron, Inc. was originally slated to receive the
|
|
Project EAGLE contract award by DOJ as a sweetheart gift from
|
|
Brian's long-time friend, then Attorney General Meese. INSLAW
|
|
believes that Brian and DOJ abandoned the plan to use Hadron as
|
|
the vehicle for the contract in the fall of 1985, following the
|
|
failure of the covert DOJ effort to force INSLAW's liquidation.
|
|
|
|
INSLAW believes that, by January 1986, Brian and DOJ had
|
|
substituted Tisoft, Inc. as the vehicle for the planned
|
|
sweetheart Project EAGLE award.26 That month, Tisoft was
|
|
awarded a $30 million computer systems contract by Meese's
|
|
Justice Department, and Tisoft also amended its articles of
|
|
incorporation to permit the sale of common stock to new outside
|
|
owners who would then have majority control of the company.
|
|
|
|
Margaret Wiencek, the former Director of Administrative
|
|
Services at Earl Brian's Financial News Network (FNN), claims
|
|
that Patrick R. Gallagher of Tisoft, Inc. was also someone who
|
|
regularly telephoned the chairman's office at Earl Brian's FNN
|
|
Headquarters in Los Angeles during at least 1987.
|
|
|
|
INSLAW believes that DOJ encouraged the SCT hostile takeover
|
|
bid for INSLAW in 1986 in order to preclude INSLAW from seeking
|
|
redress in the courts for DOJ's 1983 theft of the PROMIS software
|
|
and to remove INSLAW as an obstacle to the planned award of
|
|
Project EAGLE to Tisoft and the planned implementation of PROMIS
|
|
on the Project EAGLE computers.
|
|
|
|
Bua placed quotation marks around the word "hostile" in
|
|
referring to SCT's effort to purchase INSLAW in early 1986,
|
|
suggesting that he doubted INSLAW's characterization of the SCT
|
|
initiative as a "hostile takeover" initiative. Through third-
|
|
party discovery in 1987, however, INSLAW obtained an internal SCT
|
|
document prepared in conjunction with SCT's investment bankers in
|
|
December 1985. That SCT document uses the words "hostile
|
|
takeover" to describe the then-planned effort to acquire INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
E. Bua's Investigation of the Death of the
|
|
Investigative Journalist, Danny Casolaro
|
|
|
|
1. Evidence That Casolaro Broke the INSLAW
|
|
Case the Week He Died
|
|
|
|
In August 1990, Mr. Terry D. Miller, President of Government
|
|
Sales Consultants, Inc., encouraged a free-lance investigative
|
|
journalist by the name of Danny Casolaro to consider
|
|
investigating DOJ's theft of the PROMIS software. Casolaro and
|
|
Miller had previously worked together on the publication of a
|
|
newsletter that focused, at least in part, on federal government
|
|
computer procurement fraud, and Miller thought Casolaro had the
|
|
ideal background for the INSLAW investigation. Miller is also a
|
|
friend of Mr. and Ms. Hamilton.
|
|
|
|
On Saturday, August 10, 1991, approximately one year after
|
|
Casolaro began his full-time, self-financed investigation of the
|
|
INSLAW affair, Casolaro was found dead in the bathtub of his room
|
|
in the Sheraton Hotel in Martinsburg, West Virginia. Casolaro's
|
|
wrists on both arms had been slashed, with almost a dozen
|
|
slashes, some deep enough to have severed the tendons. The local
|
|
Martinsburg, West Virginia, authorities ruled Casolaro's death a
|
|
suicide.
|
|
|
|
In the late afternoon of the Monday before his death, i.e.,
|
|
on August 5, 1991, Casolaro had telephoned Miller to tell him
|
|
that the INSLAW case, to which Miller had directed him one year
|
|
earlier, had proved to be the story of his lifetime.
|
|
|
|
Later that night, Casolaro telephoned Robert Booth Nichols
|
|
in Los Angeles. Nichols has a background in CIA covert
|
|
intelligence operations and, in the course of about 100 hours of
|
|
telephone conversations with Casolaro during the previous 12
|
|
months, Nichols had served as a sounding board for Casolaro's
|
|
probe of the clandestine world of U.S. and foreign intelligence
|
|
operations. According to Nichols' statement to William Hamilton,
|
|
Monday night's telephone call from Casolaro was the first time in
|
|
their year-long colloquy when Casolaro was not seeking any
|
|
information. Casolaro told Nichols that he had just come back
|
|
from a meeting with a source on the INSLAW case, that he now knew
|
|
everything there was to know about the INSLAW case, that the
|
|
Hamiltons were going to be quite excited, and that Casolaro had
|
|
to return right away for another meeting with the same source to
|
|
collect the final piece of documentary evidence. Nichols
|
|
described Casolaro that night as "euphoric."
|
|
|
|
Also Monday night, Casolaro met with Ann Klenk, a fellow
|
|
journalist and long-time friend, at a pub frequented by Casolaro.
|
|
According to Klenk, Casolaro said he had just returned from West
|
|
Virginia, where he had met with a source on the INSLAW case, and
|
|
that he had already broken the INSLAW case, but that he had to
|
|
return right away to West Virginia to pick up a final piece of
|
|
the evidence.
|
|
|
|
The next day, Tuesday, August 6, 1991, Casolaro telephoned
|
|
William Turner in Winchester, Virginia, and told him that he
|
|
would be having a follow-up meeting later in the week in
|
|
Martinsburg, West Virginia, with some employees from the office
|
|
of Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia. Casolaro described one
|
|
of the employees as a relative of Ms. Barbara Videnieks and
|
|
further described that person as his source on INSLAW. According
|
|
to Turner,
|
|
Casolaro asked him to remove two numbered and sealed packets
|
|
of Casolaro's INSLAW documents from Turner's home safe and bring
|
|
them the 20-mile distance to Martinsburg, West Virginia, on the
|
|
afternoon of Friday, August 9, 1991 so that Casolaro could show
|
|
them to Ms. Videnieks' relative. Ms. Barbara Videnieks is the
|
|
Chief of Staff to Senator Robert Byrd. Her husband, Peter
|
|
Videnieks, was the DOJ Contracting Officer on INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
contract. According to Michael Riconosciuto, Peter Videnieks was
|
|
also a close associate of Earl Brian in Brian's alleged
|
|
international sales and distribution of PROMIS. Ms. Margaret
|
|
Wiencek, former Director of Administrative Services at Financial
|
|
News Network (FNN) Headquarters in Los Angeles, claims, in sworn
|
|
testimony, to have taken telephone messages from Peter Videnieks
|
|
in 1987 in the office of the FNN Chairman. Earl Brian was
|
|
Chairman of FNN in 1987. Both Videnieks and Brian have, however,
|
|
denied under oath even knowing each other.
|
|
|
|
On Wednesday, August 7, 1991, Casolaro socialized with a
|
|
friend by the name of Ben Mason. Casolaro told Mason that he had
|
|
broken the INSLAW case but had to return to Martinsburg, West
|
|
Virginia, the following day for a final meeting with some
|
|
individuals with whom he had just recently met.
|
|
|
|
On Thursday, August 8, 1991, Casolaro traveled to
|
|
Martinsburg, West Virginia, and checked into the Sheraton Hotel.
|
|
|
|
On Friday afternoon, August 9, 1991, Turner met with
|
|
Casolaro in the parking lot of the Sheraton Hotel and delivered
|
|
both sealed packets of Casolaro's INSLAW documents, as well as
|
|
documents relating to Turner's own case. Turner's own case
|
|
involved alleged federal contract fraud at Hughes Aircraft, where
|
|
Turner had apparently been employed as a flight simulation
|
|
engineer. Casolaro reconfirmed to Turner that his meeting with
|
|
Ms. Barbara Videnieks' relative and one other employee from
|
|
Senator Byrd's office was still on for Friday night. Casolaro
|
|
warned Turner "to watch his rear," and made arrangements to meet
|
|
Turner the following day, Saturday, in the Washington, DC, area
|
|
to celebrate.
|
|
|
|
On Saturday morning, August 10, 1991, Casolaro was found
|
|
dead in the bathtub of his Sheraton Hotel room.
|
|
|
|
Turner has contemporaneous handwritten notes about his
|
|
conversations with Casolaro on Tuesday and Friday of the week
|
|
Casolaro died. Bua neither questioned Turner nor sought copies of
|
|
his notes.
|
|
|
|
Bua never questioned Terry Miller or Ben Mason either.
|
|
Although Bua or one of his Assistant U.S. Attorneys spoke by
|
|
telephone with both Ann Klenk and Robert Nichols, no one from
|
|
Bua's team ever attempted to probe their knowledge of Casolaro's
|
|
investigative work in the days preceding his death.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding these facts, Bua stated that he was
|
|
persuaded from his review of the investigative records of the
|
|
local Martinsburg authorities "that Mr. Casolaro's death was
|
|
fully and fairly investigated and that the conclusion of the
|
|
local authorities that his death was a suicide was amply
|
|
supported by the facts."
|
|
|
|
Bua details various items of physical evidence from
|
|
Casolaro's hotel room that he claims "strongly supports the
|
|
conclusion of the local authorities that the death was a
|
|
suicide." Bua fails, however, to take any cognizance of the fact
|
|
that none of Casolaro's investigative working papers was found in
|
|
the hotel room. Casolaro always carried such files with him, was
|
|
seen leaving Washington for Martinsburg with the files, and was
|
|
seen in Martinsburg with the files. Moreover, the two packets of
|
|
Casolaro's sensitive INSLAW documents and the Hughes aircraft
|
|
documents that Turner claims to have personally delivered to
|
|
Casolaro in Martinsburg, West Virginia, Friday afternoon were
|
|
also missing.
|
|
|
|
Riconosciuto claimed in a sworn affidavit, prior to his
|
|
arrest in early 1991, that Peter Videnieks had threatened him
|
|
with prosecution and conviction if he testified about the INSLAW
|
|
matter. Casolaro was evidently having a secret follow-up meeting
|
|
in Martinsburg, West Virginia, with someone in Senator Byrd's
|
|
office who is related to Peter Videnieks' wife, Barbara.
|
|
|
|
In a telephone conversation one weekend shortly before his
|
|
death, Casolaro read to William Hamilton detailed biographical
|
|
data about various employees in Senator Robert Byrd's office and
|
|
told Hamilton that he believed he could break the INSLAW case by
|
|
penetrating Senator Byrd's office.
|
|
|
|
Casolaro had told the Hamiltons of other connections to
|
|
Peter and Barbara Videnieks and Senator Robert Byrd's office
|
|
during the final two months of his life. On June 12, 1991, for
|
|
example, Casolaro said that he had spoken by telephone with Peter
|
|
Videnieks at Videnieks' office at the U.S. Customs Service but
|
|
that Videnieks had declined to answer Casolaro's questions about
|
|
INSLAW and had, instead, referred Casolaro to Charles Ruff, the
|
|
Washington, DC, attorney whom DOJ was paying to represent Peter
|
|
Videnieks in the House Judiciary Committee's investigation of the
|
|
INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
Casolaro also told the Hamiltons about a series of meetings
|
|
he had had during the final month of his life with a covert
|
|
intelligence operative of the U.S. Army Special Forces whose name
|
|
is Joseph Cuellar. According to Casolaro, Cuellar, during a
|
|
purportedly chance encounter at Casolaro's neighborhood pub in
|
|
mid-July 1991, asked Casolaro what line of work he was in and,
|
|
upon hearing Casolaro describe his journalistic investigation of
|
|
the INSLAW case, asserted that he knew all about INSLAW because
|
|
Peter Videnieks was one of his closest friends. According to
|
|
Casolaro, Cuellar also stated that his ex-wife worked for Ms.
|
|
Barbara Videnieks in Senator Byrd's office. Casolaro told the
|
|
Hamiltons that Cuellar had later persuaded Peter Videnieks to
|
|
meet Casolaro and discuss the INSLAW case with him. The Hamiltons
|
|
never heard whether the meeting actually took place, however.
|
|
|
|
Lynn Knowles, a friend of Casolaro's, attended at least two
|
|
of the meetings between Casolaro and Cuellar. Bua never sought to
|
|
interview Knowles, and there is no reason to suspect that Bua
|
|
sought to interrogate Cuellar either. She told William Hamilton
|
|
that she and Cuellar had spoken by telephone several days after
|
|
Casolaro's death and that Cuellar said the following to Knowles,
|
|
in words or substance:
|
|
|
|
What Danny Casolaro was investigating is a business. If
|
|
you don't want to end up like Danny or like the
|
|
journalist who died a horiffic death in Guatemala,27
|
|
you'll stay out of this. Anyone who asks too many
|
|
questions will end up dead.
|
|
|
|
2. The Question of the FBI's Role in the
|
|
Investigation of Casolaro's Death
|
|
|
|
Bua also absolves DOJ of having exerted any influence on the
|
|
investigation executed by the West Virginia authorities, "beyond
|
|
the normal and expected assistance law enforcement agencies
|
|
typically provide one another." Bua further describes this
|
|
exception as "assistance and information sharing between the
|
|
local authorities and the regional FBI office..."
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently did not look into the FBI's role in the
|
|
execution of a search warrant in William Turner's home in
|
|
September 1991 or in the refusal, long after criminal charges
|
|
against Turner were dismissed, to return to Turner documents
|
|
taken from Turner's home safe. About six weeks after Casolaro's
|
|
death, Turner, who has one artificial leg, was arrested and
|
|
charged with the robberies of two local area banks. That same
|
|
month, the FBI assisted local authorities in executing a search
|
|
warrant in Turner's home. The official inventory of the search
|
|
lists the seizure of a spiral notebook that Turner claims
|
|
contains detailed notes about his collaboration with Casolaro and
|
|
that Turner says was taken by the FBI from Turner's home safe.
|
|
This is the same home safe where Turner claims he stored sealed
|
|
packets of Casolaro's sensitive documents on INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
The local authorities dropped the bank robbery charges
|
|
against Turner after keeping him in pre-trial incarceration in
|
|
the county jail for over six months. FBI "enhancements" of the
|
|
photographs taken by hidden bank cameras reportedly established
|
|
that Turner was not the robber. At a preliminary hearing, an eye
|
|
witness to one of the robberies, a bank teller, also reportedly
|
|
acknowledged that Turner could not have been the robber she saw
|
|
run out the bank because his artificial leg would obviously have
|
|
prevented Turner from running.
|
|
|
|
Turner claims that the local FBI office in Winchester,
|
|
Virginia, has refused to return the documents seized from his
|
|
home in September 1991, on the grounds that the Martinsburg, West
|
|
Virginia, authorities do not wish to have those documents
|
|
returned. On May 26, 1993, Turner filed a motion in the U.S.
|
|
District Court for the Western District of Virginia in
|
|
Harrisonburg, Virginia, seeking to compel the FBI to return his
|
|
documents and other personal property. The motion is pending.
|
|
|
|
In its September 1992 Investigative Report, the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee stated that it had deposed for two days FBI
|
|
Special Agent Thomas Gates, who had been discussing the INSLAW
|
|
investigation with Casolaro during the final four weeks of
|
|
Casolaro's life. Gates evidently testified that Casolaro had told
|
|
him about a specific threat on his life, shortly before Casolaro
|
|
was found dead. Gates also testified to the House Judiciary
|
|
Committee that the FBI
|
|
may have jurisdiction to investigate the possible murder of
|
|
Casolaro under the Interstate Transportation in Aid of
|
|
Racketeering (ITAR) statute.
|
|
|
|
Bua, apparently, inexplicably failed to interview FBI
|
|
Special Agent Thomas Gates. Notwithstanding this failure, Bua
|
|
makes the following statement in his report on page 247:
|
|
|
|
A private citizen's death, whether a suicide or a
|
|
murder, is outside the normal jurisdiction of the
|
|
federal government. Instead, it is a state or local
|
|
matter. Accordingly, we find nothing unusual in the
|
|
fact that DOJ did not undertake to investigate
|
|
Casolaro's death.
|
|
|
|
F. Bua's Comments About the Alleged Sham Contract
|
|
Disputes
|
|
|
|
In Section III, C.1., INSLAW details Bua's seemingly
|
|
superficial investigation of specific allegations from a credible
|
|
source that Presidential appointee D. Lowell Jensen engineered
|
|
INSLAW's contract disputes in the spring of 1983 in order to
|
|
force INSLAW out of business so that DOJ's PROMIS-based business
|
|
could be awarded to political friends and supporters of the then
|
|
current administration. As demonstrated in this section, there is
|
|
an obvious contrived quality to each of the two major contract
|
|
disputes and additional evidence suggestive of a key role for
|
|
Jensen in either engineering the dispute, e.g., the dispute about
|
|
the amount of fee owed INSLAW in light of the termination for
|
|
convenience of the word processing part of the contract, or in
|
|
perpetuating a wholly contrived dispute, e.g., apparently
|
|
refusing to allow DOJ attorney Janis Sposato to act independently
|
|
in seeking to resolve the computer time-sharing billing dispute
|
|
on the merits.
|
|
|
|
In Section III, D.2(3), INSLAW details Bua's failure to
|
|
interrogate Jonathan Ben Cnaan about what he was told in
|
|
September 1983 by someone he would only identify as a
|
|
"businessman with ties to the highest level of the Reagan
|
|
Administration" who was determined to wrest control of PROMIS
|
|
from INSLAW for use in federal government contracts. Ben Cnaan,
|
|
in a meeting with William Hamilton in October 1983, quoted the
|
|
unnamed businessman as boasting that INSLAW had been hit with
|
|
contract disputes at DOJ right after INSLAW refused to be
|
|
purchased by Earl Brian's Hadron and further boasting that the
|
|
contract disputes would prove insoluble unless and until INSLAW
|
|
agreed to allow the businessman to use the PROMIS software in
|
|
federal government contracts.
|
|
|
|
Either of the two aforementioned investigative leads could,
|
|
if properly pursued, have produced external evidence in support
|
|
of INSLAW'S claim that the contract disputes that arose in the
|
|
spring of 1983 were sham disputes concocted in order to drive
|
|
INSLAW out of business so that DOJ could award the PROMIS case
|
|
management software business to political friends and supporters.
|
|
|
|
Bua stated that he "did not believe it was appropriate ...
|
|
to attempt to determine the esoteric government cost accounting
|
|
issues..." underpinning those contract disputes, but that he did
|
|
examine the disputes sufficiently in order to be able "to
|
|
determine whether the DOJ's positions and actions leading up to
|
|
the parties' disputes were so clearly baseless or without
|
|
foundation as to give rise to a reasonable inference that the
|
|
origins of the disputes must have been motivated by improper
|
|
purpose and a desire to force INSLAW into bankruptcy."
|
|
|
|
1. DOJ's Refusal, Apparently at the Behest
|
|
of Presidential Appointee D. Lowell
|
|
Jensen, to Resolve, on the Merits, Its
|
|
Main Contract Dispute with INSLAW, a
|
|
Dispute That is Self-Evidently Contrived
|
|
|
|
Bua's inquiry led him to conclude that "the government's
|
|
positions about overcharging and cost overruns were founded upon
|
|
legitimate, good faith concerns and the desire to
|
|
protect the government's interests, and not out of the
|
|
desire to bankrupt INSLAW or to force its liquidation."
|
|
|
|
Bua bases his conclusion in part, at least, on the fact that
|
|
both DOJ's Audit Staff and the Defense Contract Audit Agency
|
|
(DCAA) agreed that INSLAW's computer time-sharing costs under its
|
|
PROMIS Implementation Contract were "essentially unauditable."
|
|
Moreover, Bua quotes DCAA as finding that DOJ overpaid INSLAW for
|
|
the computer time-sharing services by approximately $590,000.
|
|
|
|
In examining the criticism that INSLAW's computer time-
|
|
sharing costs are "essentially unauditable," it is important to
|
|
position that criticism in context: The U.S. Government has never
|
|
had any problem auditing the costs in INSLAW's computer cost
|
|
center, and there has never been any material disagreement
|
|
between DOJ and INSLAW on the "actual and allowable" costs in the
|
|
computer cost center. For the peak year of INSLAW's PROMIS time-
|
|
sharing services under the DOJ contract, i.e., Fiscal Year 1983,
|
|
the computer cost center had slightly more than $2.5 million in
|
|
"actual costs, allowable under U.S. Government contracts." (This
|
|
amount includes $344,229 of Fiscal Year 1982 computer center
|
|
costs that DOJ "carried forward" into Fiscal Year 1983 for
|
|
reimbursement purposes.)
|
|
|
|
Almost all of the business of INSLAW's computer center in
|
|
1983 was with various U.S. Government customers, and, in light of
|
|
the fact that INSLAW and the U.S. Government have always been in
|
|
basic agreement about the amount of "actual and allowable"
|
|
computer center costs that fiscal year, one might reasonably ask
|
|
what is the problem.
|
|
|
|
The problem is what subset of the $2.5 million in actual and
|
|
allowable computer center costs during Fiscal Year 1983 should be
|
|
allocated to one particular U.S. Government contract, i.e., DOJ's
|
|
PROMIS Implementation Contract.
|
|
|
|
When DOJ and INSLAW negotiated the PROMIS Implementation
|
|
Contract during the winter of 1982, DOJ officials told INSLAW
|
|
that DOJ wished to pay only for successful use of INSLAW's
|
|
computer time-sharing services by U.S. Attorneys' Offices as
|
|
measured by such indices as the number of successfully completed
|
|
update or inquiry transactions and the number of devices used to
|
|
access the time-sharing service by the U.S. Attorneys' Offices.28
|
|
DOJ told INSLAW, further, that it would not reimburse computer
|
|
time-sharing costs except in relationship to such measures of
|
|
successful use of the time-sharing service by U.S. Attorneys'
|
|
Offices.
|
|
|
|
Based on these DOJ guidelines, INSLAW and DOJ negotiated a
|
|
time-sharing billing formula that both parties believed would
|
|
fairly compensate INSLAW for its expected computer time-sharing
|
|
costs by measuring not costs, but the aforementioned indices of
|
|
successful use of the PROMIS time-sharing service. Once the
|
|
parties to a contract negotiate the terms for the computer time-
|
|
sharing billing formula or algorithm, the vendor writes a piece
|
|
of computer software that automatically keeps track of the very
|
|
indices that the parties have agreed will serve
|
|
as the basis for the billings. Conversely, the piece of the
|
|
computer software is not written to track factors that are not to
|
|
be taken into consideration in computing the computer time-
|
|
sharing billings such as the subset of the computer center's
|
|
actual and allowable costs that are allocable on any given day to
|
|
the PROMIS Implementation Contract.
|
|
|
|
DOJ has consistently refused to acknowledge the fact that
|
|
the reason that the subset of INSLAW's actual and allowable
|
|
computer center costs that should properly be allocated to the
|
|
PROMIS Implementation Contract cannot be verified through a
|
|
standard U.S. Government cost incurred audit is that the time-
|
|
sharing billings were not supposed to be either based on incurred
|
|
costs or subject to an incurred cost audit.
|
|
|
|
In 1985, Deputy Attorney General D. Lowell Jensen arranged,
|
|
at INSLAW's request, an effort to negotiate a settlement of the
|
|
computer time-sharing billing question and the other disputes
|
|
under the contract. Janis Sposato, who chaired the negotiations
|
|
for DOJ, insisted on DOJ's right to try to reconstruct, by rule
|
|
of thumb, the estimated subset of actual and allowable computer
|
|
center costs for Fiscal Year 1983 that were actually incurred in
|
|
performance of the computer time-sharing service under the PROMIS
|
|
Implementation Contract. DOJ and INSLAW had about 10 negotiation
|
|
sessions in 1985, with most of the time spent on trying to
|
|
reconstruct the actual time-sharing costs for 1983. DOJ and
|
|
INSLAW had already managed to establish the reasonableness of
|
|
most of the Fiscal Year 1983 computer time-sharing billings under
|
|
the DOJ contract when Sposato and INSLAW discovered another cost
|
|
category that was sufficiently large by itself to remove any
|
|
remaining question about the billings under the negotiated
|
|
formula.29 In other words, the negotiations had led to the
|
|
inescapable conclusion that DOJ would not have overcompensated
|
|
INSLAW for computer time-sharing costs during Fiscal Year 1983 if
|
|
DOJ had honored its Negotiated Agreement on computer time-sharing
|
|
billings under that contract.
|
|
|
|
Instead of disposing of the computer time-sharing question,
|
|
however, Sposato announced shortly thereafter, in words or
|
|
substance, as follows: "My management upstairs is unwilling to
|
|
allow me to make any more concessions." At the time, Sposato
|
|
reported directly to the Assistant Attorney General for
|
|
Administration, whose offices were on the same floor as
|
|
Sposato's. That individual, however, reported, in turn, directly
|
|
to Deputy Attorney General Lowell Jensen, whose offices were
|
|
several floors upstairs. INSLAW inferred then and infers now that
|
|
Sposato was alluding to Deputy Attorney General Lowell Jensen's
|
|
unwillingness to permit a resolution on the merits of the Fiscal
|
|
Year 1983 computer time-sharing issue because it was DOJ's main
|
|
"fig leaf" for its wrongful withholding of payments under the
|
|
contract.
|
|
|
|
Although Sposato did not disclose it to INSLAW, DOJ already
|
|
knew that INSLAW's computer time-sharing billings for Fiscal Year
|
|
1983 were reasonable. In 1987, INSLAW obtained through discovery
|
|
an internal DOJ memorandum authored in 1981 by the Assistant
|
|
Attorney General for Administration, purporting to estimate what
|
|
it should cost for a vendor in
|
|
Washington, DC, to provide 12 months of PROMIS computer time-
|
|
sharing services to the very same U.S. Attorneys' Offices
|
|
supported by INSLAW in Fiscal Year 1983. DOJ's "should cost"
|
|
estimate was slightly higher than INSLAW's billings for Fiscal
|
|
Year 1983 under the Negotiated Agreement for time-sharing
|
|
billings. The DOJ memorandum also explicitly anticipated the need
|
|
for the very kinds of contractor technical support personnel that
|
|
DOJ had ignored in determining that INSLAW's computer time-
|
|
sharing costs were excessively high.
|
|
|
|
How, then, did DCAA decide that DOJ had overpaid INSLAW for
|
|
such services? Number one, DOJ strenuously resisted INSLAW's
|
|
repeated requests before the Department of Transportation Board
|
|
of Contract Appeals (DOTBCA) to produce to INSLAW and to DCAA
|
|
DOJ's records and notes on the 1985 so-called negotiations on
|
|
this very subject. DOJ never produced the documents, and the
|
|
DOTBCA judge declined to order DOJ to produce them. Number two,
|
|
DCAA, in applying its own rules of thumb without talking to
|
|
INSLAW, made some very significant mistakes of fact. Although Bua
|
|
makes no mention of it, INSLAW filed before DOTBCA a sworn
|
|
affidavit from the senior DCAA auditor on INSLAW acknowledging
|
|
such material errors of fact in the DCAA audit and stating that
|
|
DCAA "should have considered the materiality of such
|
|
reallocations of cost once it had been advised of the issues
|
|
above and of the cost impact to the PROMIS Implementation
|
|
Contract for Fiscal Year ended 30 September 1983."
|
|
|
|
The total costs under the three-year PROMIS Implementation
|
|
Contract that are in dispute between the DCAA audit report and
|
|
INSLAW are about $1.2 million. The computer timesharing billing
|
|
question alone accounts for all but $100,000 of that amount.
|
|
|
|
2. Presidential Appointee D. Lowell Jensen
|
|
Leads DOJ Effort to Withhold Payment of
|
|
INSLAW's Profit by Blaming INSLAW for
|
|
DOJ's Own Delays in the Word-Processing
|
|
Part of the INSLAW Contract
|
|
|
|
DCAA and INSLAW also have a disagreement on one other issue:
|
|
the amount of fee or profit payable to INSLAW under the PROMIS
|
|
Implementation Contract. As with the negotiated time-sharing
|
|
billing algorithm, the amount of fee earned is not properly
|
|
subject to an incurred cost audit. INSLAW is claiming $1,145,000
|
|
in fee, and DCAA has recommended $687,000 in fee, a difference of
|
|
$458,000.
|
|
|
|
The amount of fee earned by INSLAW is related primarily to
|
|
the legal effect on "target costs" under INSLAW's contract of the
|
|
DOJ's February 1984 termination, for the convenience of the
|
|
government, of the word processing part of the PROMIS
|
|
Implementation Contract. In other words, it is primarily a legal
|
|
question, not an incurred cost audit question. As with the
|
|
computer time-sharing billing issue, however, an honest decision
|
|
by DOJ would expose the truth about the contrived and wrongful
|
|
basis for the withholding and, thereby, deprive DOJ of its other
|
|
principal "fig leaf. "
|
|
|
|
DOJ had required the winning vendor to implement in each of
|
|
the 70 smaller U.S. Attorneys' Offices, on government-furnished
|
|
word processing machines, a rudimentary case management software
|
|
capability. In February 1984, Presidential appointee D. Lowell
|
|
Jensen
|
|
approved a DOJ decision to terminate the word processing
|
|
part of the contract for the convenience of the government. The
|
|
legal effect of a convenience termination is that the contractor
|
|
bears no financial responsibility for the partial termination.
|
|
|
|
In December 1983, however, Jensen had secretly pre-approved
|
|
a plan for DOJ Contracting Officer Peter Videnieks to terminate
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS Implementation Contract, apparently in its
|
|
entirety, for INSLAW's alleged default on the word processing
|
|
part of the contract. INSLAW did not find out about this until it
|
|
obtained DOJ documents in litigation discovery in 1987.
|
|
|
|
What prompted the Jensen decision to transform an apparent,
|
|
planned complete termination for default into a partial
|
|
termination for convenience was an internal February 1984 legal
|
|
opinion by DOJ's internal contract administration counsel,
|
|
William Snider. Snider pointed out that DOJ could not sustain a
|
|
case against INSLAW for delay in the word processing phase of the
|
|
contract because DOJ itself had been late in selecting the word
|
|
processing hardware for this portion of the contract, a
|
|
prerequisite to INSLAW's ability to begin the work, and because
|
|
DOJ had failed thereafter to negotiate with INSLAW a new, legally
|
|
binding schedule for the word processing part of the contract.
|
|
|
|
DOJ Administrative Counsel William Snider authored the
|
|
internal legal opinion in the month of February 1984, when the
|
|
Senate Judiciary Committee commenced its hearings on the
|
|
confirmation of Edwin Meese as Attorney General of the United
|
|
States, and when Judiciary Committee member, Senator Max Baucus,
|
|
sent a team of General Accounting Office auditors into DOJ on an
|
|
emergency investigation of INSLAW's PROMIS Implementation
|
|
Contract. Senator Baucus' office had received a tip from a DOJ
|
|
whistleblower to the effect that as soon as Meese was confirmed
|
|
as Attorney General, he and Jensen planned to award a "massive
|
|
sweetheart contract" to unnamed "friends" to implement the PROMIS
|
|
software in every litigative office of DOJ.
|
|
|
|
Jensen's wrongful role in the word processing dispute is
|
|
even more obvious than his role in the computer time-sharing
|
|
billing dispute. DOJ has been unwilling, however, to admit the
|
|
increasingly inescapable fact that DOJ officials concocted the
|
|
contract disputes in order to get leverage over INSLAW in DOJ's
|
|
theft of the PROMIS software.
|
|
|
|
G. Bua's Investigation into Possible DOJ Complicity
|
|
in the Failure of Judge Bason to Obtain
|
|
Reappointment to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
|
|
|
|
A Merit Selection Panel, headed by U.S. District Judge Norma
|
|
Johnson, was appointed in 1987 to make recommendations to the
|
|
D.C. Judicial Council, as well as to the ultimate appointing
|
|
authority, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
|
|
Columbia, about the ranking of various applicants, including
|
|
incumbent Judge George F.. Bason, Jr., for the new, 14-year term
|
|
of sole U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Columbia.
|
|
|
|
The Merit Selection Panel gave its number one ranking to a
|
|
DOJ attorney, S. Martin Teel, who had no judicial experience and
|
|
very little bankruptcy law experience. Teel had represented the
|
|
U.S. Government before Judge Bason in the INSLAW bankruptcy
|
|
proceeding in an attempt in 1987 to convince Judge Bason to force
|
|
INSLAW into liquidation.
|
|
|
|
On September 18, 1987, while the Merit Selection Panel was
|
|
sitting, Judge Bason announced his oral ruling in the adversary
|
|
proceeding of INSLAW, Inc. v. the U.S. Department of Justice. In
|
|
that ruling, Judge Bason found that DOJ officials "took,
|
|
converted, stole" INSLAW's proprietary PROMIS computer software
|
|
product "through trickery, fraud and deceit." S. Martin Teel
|
|
argued for INSLAW's liquidation before Judge Bason approximately
|
|
a month after the aforementioned oral ruling.
|
|
|
|
1. The Merit Selection Panel Determined
|
|
That It Would Be Inappropriate to Permit
|
|
Judge Bason's Inslaw Ruling to Influence
|
|
Its Evaluation of Bason
|
|
|
|
Bua reports that the Panel members agreed that the Inslaw
|
|
opinion should not influence their evaluation of Judge Bason and
|
|
that based on his inspection of the notes of the Panel and of the
|
|
Judicial Council, "There is no indication that the Inslaw ruling
|
|
played any role in the process."
|
|
|
|
Bua noted that the Merit Selection Panel extended
|
|
invitations to both DOJ and to INSLAW counsel Charles R. Work to
|
|
appear before the Panel to discuss their respective views of
|
|
Judge Bason and that INSLAW counsel Charles Work did make such an
|
|
appearance, but that DOJ declined the opportunity. Bua then makes
|
|
the following statement:
|
|
|
|
It would be odd, however, if DOJ had foregone an
|
|
opportunity to fully express its views of Judge Bason
|
|
in an ex-parte proceeding with a pledge of
|
|
confidentiality, in favor of a covert mission to unseat
|
|
him. We found no evidence of any such covert effort by
|
|
DOJ.
|
|
|
|
In view of Bua's aforementioned statement that Panel members
|
|
did not consider it appropriate for Judge Bason's adverse ruling
|
|
against DOJ to influence their evaluation of Bason's candidacy,
|
|
DOJ would have been well advised not to have proceeded openly. As
|
|
is explained hereafter, Bua found that DOJ did, in fact, wish to
|
|
unseat Judge Bason, and that one DOJ
|
|
attorney, at least, conveyed his negative view of Judge
|
|
Bason directly to the Chair of the Merit Selection Panel.
|
|
|
|
2. DOJ Civil Division Attorney Stuart
|
|
Schiffer, Currently the Acting Assistant
|
|
Attorney General for the Civil Division,
|
|
Assumes the Leadership Role to Separate
|
|
the Inslaw Case from Judge Bason
|
|
|
|
According to the House Judiciary Committee's September 1992
|
|
Investigative Report entitled The INSLAW Affair, Deputy Attorney
|
|
General Arnold Burns, in approximately July 1987, asked the Civil
|
|
Division to "consider initiatives for achieving a more favorable
|
|
disposition" of the INSLAW adversarial proceeding against DOJ
|
|
being tried before Judge Bason. The Committee also reported that,
|
|
based on Burns' request, Stuart Schiffer, Deputy Assistant
|
|
Attorney General in the Civil Division, initiated research by
|
|
Civil Division attorneys in July 1987 "to investigate the
|
|
possibility of having Judge Bason disqualified from the INSLAW
|
|
case on the grounds of bias."
|
|
|
|
3. Schiffer Had a Long-Term Friendship with
|
|
the Chair of the Merit Selection Panel
|
|
|
|
In addition to being the chief DOJ official concerned with
|
|
finding a way "to achieve a more favorable disposition" by
|
|
separating the INSLAW case from Judge Bason," Schiffer also had a
|
|
long-term personal relationship with Judge Norma Johnson, the
|
|
Chair of the Merit Selection Panel. For example, according to
|
|
Bua, "Judge Johnson and Stuart Schiffer were office partners when
|
|
both began their legal careers as staff attorneys with DOJ in
|
|
the early 1960's," and "they have stayed in touch over the years,
|
|
mostly when Judge Johnson has called Schiffer to recommend one of
|
|
her clerks for employment with DOJ."
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, "Judge Johnson did call Schiffer during
|
|
the merit selection process," but Judge Johnson was only seeking
|
|
"Schiffer's candid appraisal of two candidates from DOJ who were
|
|
in the panel's short list." According to Bua, Judge Johnson told
|
|
Schiffer "that she was not calling about Bason and that she did
|
|
not want to hear anything about Bason," and that "Schiffer said
|
|
nothing about Bason."
|
|
|
|
4. After Discussing the Inslaw Case with
|
|
Schiffer, Another DOJ Attorney Contacts
|
|
the Chair of the Merit Selection Panel
|
|
about INSLAW
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, Schiffer did make known "his displeasure
|
|
with Bason" to another DOJ attorney, Royce Lambreth, who
|
|
subsequently turned over directly to Judge Johnson a copy of a
|
|
transcript of Judge Bason's September 25, 1987 oral ruling
|
|
against DOJ, using "a tone of voice that allowed Judge Johnson to
|
|
surmise Lambreth's negative view of Bason's ruling." Shortly
|
|
thereafter, Lambreth was confirmed as a U.S. District Judge for
|
|
the District of Columbia.
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, "although Judge Johnson presented the
|
|
opinion without commentary, at least one Panel member perceived
|
|
that the opinion was presented, not because it revealed great
|
|
wisdom and scholarship but because it reflected unfavorably on
|
|
Judge Bason's suitability for the bench."
|
|
|
|
According to Bua, Judge Lambreth cannot recall where he
|
|
obtained the transcript of Judge Bason's oral ruling in the
|
|
INSLAW case. Retired Assistant U.S. Attorney Froman "has no
|
|
recollection of being asked to obtain or of obtaining the INSLAW
|
|
ruling," although she was the subordinate to Lambreth with
|
|
responsibility for maintaining the file on INSLAW within the U.S.
|
|
Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia.
|
|
|
|
Until the Bua investigation, Judge Johnson, according to the
|
|
Bua Report, had maintained to the Senate Permanent Investigations
|
|
Subcommittee and possibly also to the House Judiciary Committee
|
|
"that she had no contacts with DOJ regarding Judge Bason and she
|
|
received no negative input from DOJ regarding the INSLAW case."
|
|
|
|
Bua states that "the Senate and the House Reports both found
|
|
no evidence that anyone from DOJ had attempted to influence the
|
|
selection process." According to the Bua Report, however, the
|
|
failure of Judge Johnson to recall the communication from then
|
|
DOJ Attorney Royce Lambreth would have deprived the two
|
|
investigations of any knowledge of just such an attempt.
|
|
|
|
"It was the only judicial opinion that was circulated,"
|
|
according to the Bua Report. During his tenure on the U.S.
|
|
Bankruptcy Court, Judge Bason reportedly had approximately 70
|
|
published opinions.
|
|
|
|
Bua absolves Royce Lambreth of any questions of impropriety
|
|
in regard to his previously undisclosed communications with the
|
|
Chair of the Merit Selection Panel about his criticism of Judge
|
|
Bason's ruling against DOJ in the INSLAW case. Bua separately
|
|
absolves Lambreth whether he was acting in his then capacity as a
|
|
DOJ attorney or in his then future capacity as a U.S. District
|
|
Court judge. Bua was apparently ready to absolve Lambreth of
|
|
wrongdoing irrespective of any final determination of the facts
|
|
about his motivation.
|
|
|
|
5. The Attempt by Judge Bason's
|
|
Predecessor, Roger Whelan, to Disparage
|
|
Bason to the Merit Selection Panel for
|
|
the Administrative Disarray in the
|
|
Clerk's Office That the Chief Judge of
|
|
the U.S. District Court Traces to the
|
|
Tenure of Whelan Himself
|
|
|
|
The House Judiciary Committee stated as follows in its
|
|
September 1992 Investigative Report: "According to [then Chief
|
|
U.S. District] Judge Robinson, Judge George Bason inherited a
|
|
mess (administratively) in the clerk's office when he took over
|
|
from Judge Roger Whelan."
|
|
|
|
According to the House Judiciary Committee's report, Chief
|
|
Judge Robinson also stated that "Judge Bason was getting the
|
|
system under control"..." by May 1986, and so reported that
|
|
fact in the Judicial Conference report for the D.C. Circuit
|
|
that year." The Committee also quotes Mr. Martin Bloom, who took
|
|
over as clerk of the D.C. Circuit Bankruptcy Court in 1986, to
|
|
the effect that by "the latter part of 1987, administratively, I
|
|
think the court was up to par. "
|
|
|
|
With Chief Judge Aubrey Robinson blaming the administrative
|
|
problems in the bankruptcy court clerk's office on the tenure of
|
|
former Judge Roger Whelan and with both Judge Robinson and the
|
|
new clerk, brought in by Judge Bason, agreeing that the
|
|
administrative problems had been cured at the latest by the
|
|
latter part of 1987, it is curious that the Merit Selection Panel
|
|
had concluded that the administrative problems still existed and
|
|
that they were the fault of Judge Bason. Even more disturbing is
|
|
the evidence from the Bua Report that the Panel reached this
|
|
conclusion in large part on the basis of ex-parte communications
|
|
from Judge Whelan himself:
|
|
|
|
One lawyer who commented negatively about Judge Bason
|
|
to the Panel was Roger Whelan, the bankruptcy judge who
|
|
preceded Bason.
|
|
|
|
What is relevant is the perception that Judge Bason was
|
|
a poor administrator. That perception, accurate or not,
|
|
was made known to the Panel at least by former Judge
|
|
Whelan.
|
|
|
|
We note only that the Panel's apparent perception that
|
|
Judge Bason was an inefficient administrator was not
|
|
totally baseless, and, more importantly, was not
|
|
attributable to a DOJ campaign against Bason. The Panel
|
|
had heard that criticism at least from former
|
|
Bankruptcy Judge Whelan ...
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report makes it clear that Whelan's ex-parte
|
|
criticisms of Judge Bason to the Merit Selection Panel were
|
|
influential in the Panel' s deliberations about Judge Bason's
|
|
suitability for reappointment. This fact makes it most unusual
|
|
that the Panel failed to interview any of the individuals most
|
|
responsible for the administration of the court about Whelan's
|
|
allegations that Judge Bason was a poor administrator. According
|
|
to the House Judiciary Committee's September 1992 Investigative
|
|
Report, the Panel failed to interview Judge Bason, Bankruptcy
|
|
Court Clerk Martin Bloom, the former bankruptcy court clerk, or
|
|
Chief Judge Robinson about Whelan's representations concerning
|
|
Judge Bason's responsibility for the administrative problems.
|
|
Moreover, according to the Committee, the Panel also failed to
|
|
examine any statistics in order to determine empirically the
|
|
administrative condition of the court.
|
|
|
|
6. At the Time of Whelan's Effort to
|
|
Discredit Judge Bason to the Merit
|
|
Selection Panel, Whelan Was Representing
|
|
One of INSLAW's Creditors, a Creditor
|
|
That Appeared to Have Been Acting in
|
|
Collusion with DOJ in the INSLAW Affair
|
|
|
|
During 1987, Roger Whelan became counsel of record for AT&T
|
|
in the INSLAW bankruptcy. AT&T has employed no fewer than five
|
|
law firms of record to represent its interests in the INSLAW
|
|
bankruptcy. AT&T's interests arose from its having contracted in
|
|
August 1984 with INSLAW to port the INSLAW case management
|
|
software for operation on AT&T's then-new line of mini-computers
|
|
and from AT&T's having advanced to INSLAW that month
|
|
approximately $380,000 to perform the software port. AT&T
|
|
expected to recover the advance from future royalties payable to
|
|
INSLAW on the basis of AT&T's sale of the INSLAW software to
|
|
AT&T's law firm customers.
|
|
|
|
On February 8, 1985, the day after INSLAW filed for
|
|
bankruptcy protection, AT&T's first outside counsel in the INSLAW
|
|
bankruptcy proceeding filed his Notice of Appearance with the
|
|
U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Washington, DC. Kenneth Rosen had
|
|
previously been employed in DOJ's U.S. Trustee's Office for the
|
|
Southern District of New York under Cornelius Blackshear, and
|
|
Blackshear's then First Assistant Harry Jones.30 In a deposition,
|
|
Jones, whom Bankruptcy Judge Bason ruled was supposed to relocate
|
|
temporarily to Washington, DC, in 1985 in order to force INSLAW
|
|
into a Chapter 7 liquidation, acknowledged that he and Rosen had
|
|
continued a close social relationship since working together in
|
|
the DOJ Trustee's Office in New York City, but denied ever
|
|
discussing the INSLAW matter with Rosen
|
|
|
|
AT&T had become a member of INSLAW's Unsecured Creditors
|
|
Committee in an unusual fashion, through assistance from DOJ
|
|
itself. DOJ's U.S. Trustee's Office for the Washington, DC, area
|
|
appointed the Unsecured Creditors Committee from the creditors
|
|
listed by INSLAW, in a mandatory filing with the bankruptcy
|
|
court, as the 20 largest unsecured creditors. AT&T was not on the
|
|
INSLAW list. After announcing the appointment of the Committee,
|
|
DOJ's Trustee's Office announced the supplementary appointment of
|
|
AT&T to the Committee.
|
|
|
|
Between February and August 1985, when the covert DOJ scheme
|
|
to force INSLAW into liquidation was under way, Rosen was
|
|
extraordinarily active in the INSLAW bankruptcy. For example,
|
|
Rosen deluged INSLAW, its bankruptcy counsel, the counsel for the
|
|
Unsecured Creditors Committee, and the bankruptcy court with
|
|
written and/or telephonic questions and objections relating to
|
|
the most routine business decisions by INSLAW such as hiring a
|
|
replacement financial controller. Rosen's behavior was so
|
|
striking that it elicited two letters of rebuke from the
|
|
Unsecured Creditors Committee, the first from the Committee's
|
|
counsel and the second from a businessman on the Committee.
|
|
Rosen's co-counsel in the INSLAW bankruptcy was Shea and Gould, a
|
|
firm that does not normally represent AT&T. Shea and Gould had,
|
|
however, served for many years, including 1985, as the mergers
|
|
and acquisition counsel for Hadron, Inc. and for Earl Brian's
|
|
other companies. This was also Rosen's first time representing
|
|
AT&T.
|
|
|
|
In June 1986, AT&T told INSLAW that it had fired Rosen as
|
|
its counsel in the INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
In April 1986, Dixon and Dixon, an Omaha, Nebraska, law
|
|
firm, filed its Notice of Appearance in the INSLAW bankruptcy on
|
|
behalf of AT&T. Roger Whelan became Washington co-counsel for
|
|
Dixon and Dixon in the INSLAW bankruptcy, although INSLAW does
|
|
not know the exact date of Whelan's retention by AT&T.
|
|
|
|
The first move that Dixon and Dixon made on behalf of AT&T
|
|
was an attempt to strip INSLAW of protection against hostile
|
|
takeover bids, by trying to convince the Unsecured Creditors
|
|
Committee, which had always supported INSLAW's periodic requests
|
|
for extensions in the "period of exclusivity," to refuse any more
|
|
extensions. This AT&T initiative occurred in April 1986. Several
|
|
weeks after this unsuccessful effort by AT&T's new lead counsel,
|
|
a Pennsylvania-based computer services company, Systems and
|
|
Computer Technology (SCT), secretly approached INSLAW's Unsecured
|
|
Creditors Committee with an offer of several millions of dollars
|
|
in cash for INSLAW's creditors if the Committee would support the
|
|
forced sale of INSLAW to SCT. SCT had met with DOJ officials, in
|
|
advance of its hostile takeover attempt, to discuss the prospects
|
|
for settling INSLAW's contract disputes once SCT acquired INSLAW
|
|
and removed William A. Hamilton as President. One of the DOJ
|
|
officials that SCT met with was a Presidential appointee from the
|
|
same California county as Edwin Meese and Lowell Jensen.
|
|
|
|
Sidley and Austin, which normally serves as AT&T's outside
|
|
general counsel and bankruptcy counsel, became the fifth counsel
|
|
of record for AT&T in the INSLAW bankruptcy.31 Sidley and Austin
|
|
and Dixon and Dixon attended virtually every bankruptcy court
|
|
hearing on INSLAW during 1988 and early 1989 and sought
|
|
aggressively to block INSLAW's Plan of Reorganization on behalf
|
|
of their client, AT&T.
|
|
|
|
7. At the Time of Roger Whelan's Ex-Parte
|
|
Denigration of Judge Bason to the Merit
|
|
Selection Panel, Thomas C. Papson, a
|
|
member of the Panel, was Counsel of
|
|
Record to AT&T in an Unrelated U.S.
|
|
Government Contract Appeals Proceeding,
|
|
and Whelan was Counsel of Record to AT&T
|
|
in the INSLAW Bankruptcy
|
|
|
|
Thomas C. Papson, a member of the Merit Selection Panel, was
|
|
counsel of record for AT&T at the General Services Board of
|
|
Contract Appeals (GSBCA) during 1987 on litigation relating to
|
|
contract awards.32 The contracts in question were precursors to
|
|
the award by the General Services Administration of the massive
|
|
FTS-2000 contract for a new telephone service for the United
|
|
States Government, one of the largest, if not the largest,
|
|
contracts in the history of the United States Government. AT&T
|
|
eventually won the majority position in the FTS-2000 contract
|
|
award.
|
|
8. The Mysterious "Read and Destroy"
|
|
"Confidential Memorandum" to the Chair
|
|
of the Merit Selection Panel Highly
|
|
Critical of Judge Bason, a Memorandum
|
|
That No One Acknowledges Authoring
|
|
|
|
According to the House Judiciary Committee, a federal judge
|
|
gave the Committee a "Confidential Memorandum" dated December 8,
|
|
1987, that contained instructions at the top that it should be
|
|
destroyed after reading. The judge who furnished the copy to the
|
|
Committee told the Committee that "it was an important document
|
|
and that it would be improper to destroy it." The memorandum was
|
|
addressed to Judge Norma Johnson, but the author's name is not
|
|
shown on the document. The author of the unsigned confidential
|
|
memorandum is a member of the Merit Selection Panel, according to
|
|
the federal judge who furnished the copy to the Committee and
|
|
according to one other member of the Merit Selection Panel, as
|
|
reported by the House Judiciary Committee.
|
|
|
|
The November 24, 1987 written report of the Merit Selection
|
|
Panel did not include any of the observations contained in the
|
|
December 8, 1987 Confidential Memorandum, according to the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee. One of the observations in the confidential
|
|
memorandum, according to the Committee, reads as follows:
|
|
|
|
Judge Bason evidenced no inclination to come to grips
|
|
personally with the management challenge posed by the
|
|
terrible shortcomings of the Office of the Clerk of our
|
|
Bankruptcy Court.
|
|
|
|
The Bua Report disclaims knowledge of who authored the
|
|
confidential memorandum, except to say that "the heart of the
|
|
memo suggests that it is intended to reflect only an individual
|
|
Panel member's views."
|
|
|
|
Although Bua claims not to know who authored the
|
|
confidential memorandum that appears to contain untrue,
|
|
derogatory information about Judge Bason's administrative
|
|
abilities, he is prepared to absolve DOJ of any role in the
|
|
creation or distribution of the memo:
|
|
|
|
There is no indication that someone from DOJ either
|
|
prepared or planted the memo. The views expressed in
|
|
the memo do not contain any criticism of Bankruptcy
|
|
Judge Bason's rulings in the INSLAW matter.
|
|
|
|
Bua apparently did not entertain the possibility that DOJ
|
|
could have "prepared or planted" or otherwise caused to be
|
|
"prepared or planted" by others a confidential memorandum that
|
|
would derail Judge Bason's appointment on grounds that, however
|
|
spurious and unfounded, would obscure any possible linkage to
|
|
DOJ's real motivation in getting rid of Judge Bason: anger at his
|
|
ruling against DOJ in the INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
A sitting federal bankruptcy judge was denied what should
|
|
have been a relatively routine reappointment to the bench. His
|
|
replacement was a clearly less qualified DOJ attorney who had
|
|
unsuccessfully argued just weeks earlier for INSLAW's liquidation
|
|
before the very same federal
|
|
bankruptcy judge. This overt DOJ effort to force INSLAW's
|
|
liquidation occurred shortly after Judge Bason had condemned DOJ
|
|
for an earlier, covert effort to force INSLAW's liquidation.
|
|
|
|
The written record of the Merit Selection Panel's
|
|
deliberations indicates that the failure of Judge Bason to win
|
|
reappointment was largely the result of criticisms of Judge
|
|
Bason's administrative abilities. According to the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee's published interviews with the individuals
|
|
best able to assess the conditions of the Office of the Clerk of
|
|
the Bankruptcy Court during Judge Bason's tenure, the criticisms
|
|
are without foundation. The Merit Selection Panel, however,
|
|
accepted them as true without subjecting the allegations to even
|
|
the most minimal due diligence verification.
|
|
|
|
Roger Whelan, the primary source of the disparagement of
|
|
Judge Bason to the Merit Selection Panel, either knew or should
|
|
have known that the criticisms he was voicing to the Panel were
|
|
without foundation, because the problems he was attributing to
|
|
Judge Bason were, in fact, the legacy of Whelan's own tenure as
|
|
sole bankruptcy judge for the District of Columbia, according to
|
|
then U.S. District Court Chief Judge Aubrey Robinson. Moreover,
|
|
Judge Bason had already remedied the administrative problems he
|
|
had inherited, according to the House Judiciary Committee.
|
|
|
|
Confidence in the reliability of the Merit Selection Panel's
|
|
written record is, moreover, called into question by the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee's discovery of a "Read and Destroy"
|
|
"Confidential Memorandum" containing harsh and false criticism of
|
|
Judge Bason' s administrative abilities. Both the House Judiciary
|
|
Committee and the Bua Report agree that the Confidential
|
|
Memorandum appears to have been written by a member of the Merit
|
|
Selection Panel. No member of the Panel has, however,
|
|
acknowledged authorship.
|
|
|
|
Although the reasons cited in the record of the Merit
|
|
Selection Panel for replacing Judge Bason do not withstand any
|
|
serious scrutiny, there is evidence that DOJ was seeking to
|
|
remove Judge Bason because of his unfavorable rulings against DOJ
|
|
in the INSLAW case, combined with the fact that there were more
|
|
cases still be tried in the INSLAW case. DOJ, in fact, had
|
|
secretly communicated to the Chair of the Merit Selection Panel
|
|
its strong disapproval of Judge Bason's then recent oral ruling
|
|
against DOJ in the INSLAW case. The Chair thereafter circulated
|
|
to the other members of the Panel a transcript of Judge Bason's
|
|
oral ruling, secretly furnished by a DOJ attorney. These
|
|
communications between DOJ and the Merit Selection Panel were
|
|
kept secret during two separate Congressional investigations into
|
|
the question of whether DOJ had influenced the decision on Judge
|
|
Bason's reappointment.
|
|
|
|
At the same time that Roger Whelan was disparaging Judge
|
|
Bason to the Merit Selection Panel, Whelan was counsel of record
|
|
for AT&T in the INSLAW bankruptcy. Whelan's client, AT&T, had
|
|
evidently been working in collusion with DOJ throughout the
|
|
INSLAW bankruptcy in an effort to obstruct INSLAW's successful
|
|
reorganization.
|
|
|
|
While Whelan was disparaging Judge Bason to the Merit
|
|
Selection Panel, Thomas C. Papson, also then an attorney of
|
|
record for AT&T in an unrelated U.S. Government contract
|
|
proceeding, was a member of the Panel. The Chair of the Panel,
|
|
Judge Norma Johnson, who failed to disclose to two Congressional
|
|
investigations ex parte communications with a DOJ attorney
|
|
disparaging Judge Bason's ruling in the INSLAW case, is a long-
|
|
time friend of Stuart
|
|
Schiffer, currently the Acting Assistant Attorney General
|
|
for the Civil Division and the DOJ official who spearheaded the
|
|
effort to remove Judge Bason from the INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
In light of the foregoing, the following statement in the
|
|
Bua Report would appear to be open to question in any serious,
|
|
independent investigation:
|
|
|
|
The Panel also heard from bankruptcy practitioners,
|
|
including a former bankruptcy judge, who opposed
|
|
Bason's reappointment for reasons wholly unrelated to
|
|
INSLAW.
|
|
_______________________________
|
|
1 The Bua Report criticized the Investigative Report of the
|
|
House Committee on the Judiciary for creating the impression that
|
|
Judge Bryant reviewed the evidence de novo. It is the Bua Report
|
|
that should be criticized. While Judge Bryant did not find that
|
|
he was required to review the evidence de novo, effectively, he
|
|
did so anyway. In so doing, he stated:
|
|
|
|
It is not necessary to duplicate the bankruptcy court's
|
|
exhaustive findings of fact here. It is sufficient to state that
|
|
_after careful review of all of the volumes of transcripts of the
|
|
hearings before the bankruptcy court. the more than 1.200 pages
|
|
of briefs and supporting appendices and all other relevant
|
|
documents in the record_, there is convincing, perhaps compelling
|
|
support for the findings set forth by the bankruptcy court.
|
|
(Emphasis added.)
|
|
|
|
Judge Bryant went on to say:
|
|
|
|
In accordance with the principles set out in Anderson v
|
|
Bessimer City, 470 U.S. 564, 571-75 (1985), the court has
|
|
examined the bankruptcy judge's findings of fact in the light of
|
|
the entire record, and finds that his account of the evidence is
|
|
eminently plausible; and _this court is not left with any notion
|
|
that a "mistake has been committed_." Id. at 574. This conclusion
|
|
is reached without regard to the deference to be accorded the
|
|
judge's opportunity to assess credibility. _The cold record
|
|
adequately supports his findings under any standard of review_.
|
|
Accordingly the findings will not be disturbed. (Emphasis added.)
|
|
(D. Ct. Mem. Op., p. 37)
|
|
|
|
2 Notwithstanding, Brewer conceded on November 24, 1982,
|
|
that there was no factual support for any allegation that INSLAW
|
|
did not perform its best efforts on the BJS contract. (PX 45)
|
|
|
|
3 Brewer misconstrued the BJS contract as a commitment to
|
|
produce specified enhancements at a fixed price instead of a
|
|
"best efforts" commitment for development of an unspecified
|
|
number of enhancements within a cost-plus contract. (Hamilton,
|
|
257-258; Deroy, T. 2460-2462)
|
|
|
|
4 Moreover, the suggestion of the authors of the Bua Report
|
|
that "we have not found that INSLAW has demonstrated any
|
|
proprietary rights in the software" is outrageous given the
|
|
extensive record that obviously was ignored totally by them. It
|
|
is noteworthy that Judge Bason devoted over 31 pages and 74
|
|
separate findings of fact establishing the unquestionable
|
|
conclusion that INSLAW created an enhanced version of PROMIS,
|
|
that was proprietary to it, using private funds. To suggest
|
|
otherwise in light of this record, and especially given the
|
|
obvious fact that the authors of the Bua Report did absolutely
|
|
nothing to review the findings of the bankruptcy court, as fully
|
|
adopted by the federal district court, is unconscionable.
|
|
|
|
5 According to the Bua Report, Videnieks asserted at trial
|
|
that he was told by INSLAW's comptroller that INSLAW had missed
|
|
at least one payroll. This was not true. Had the authors of the
|
|
Bua Report inquired of INSLAW, they would have found that INSLAW
|
|
never missed a payroll during the three years of the contract,
|
|
notwithstanding the fact that DOJ held back almost $2 million in
|
|
payments under the contract. Not surprisingly, as in virtually
|
|
every other instance in which DOJ's testimony supported the
|
|
conclusions that the authors of the Bua Report intended to reach,
|
|
they made no effort to verify the accuracy of that information
|
|
with INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
6 These words, that served as the theme for INSLAW's
|
|
prosecution of its civil claims, are taken from the
|
|
contemporaneous handwritten notes of DOJ Contracting Officer
|
|
Peter Videnieks for March 28, 1983:
|
|
|
|
Letter was Brick's idea - and I thought/think its the best
|
|
way -- Why do you need signature _if you got the goods?_"
|
|
(Emphasis added.)
|
|
|
|
7 At trial, Brewer denied this fact three times. (Brewer, T.
|
|
1692, 1694, 1702) This was the only circumstance in which
|
|
Videnieks could recall not following a Brwer guidance which would
|
|
have resulted in a destriment to INSLAW. (Videnieks, T. 1859-
|
|
1860, 1861) Even with this single exception, Videnieks
|
|
acknowledged that the only reason he ignored Brewer's guidance is
|
|
that DOJ's Administrative Counsel Snider applied pressure on
|
|
Videnieks to proceed on the basis of a bilateral contract
|
|
modification. (Videnieks, T. 1861-1862)
|
|
|
|
8 "Our computer" refers to a PRIME mid-range computer
|
|
belonging to DOJ's Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys that was
|
|
housed temporarily in INSLAW's Computer Center in Lanham,
|
|
Maryland. INSLAW used that computer temporarily to support the
|
|
PROMIS operation in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District
|
|
of Maryland via telecommunications, while a computer center was
|
|
being built in the Baltimore U.S. Attorney's Office. This
|
|
activity is separate from INSLAW's use of its own VAX mid-range
|
|
computer at the same Lanham, Maryland computer center for
|
|
temporary computer time sharing of PROMIS in the 10 largest U.S.
|
|
Attorneys' Offices. It is the latter time-sharing that DOJ
|
|
refused to compensate INSLAW for in accordance with a Negotiated
|
|
Agreement. The wrongful withholding of payments for the later
|
|
PROMIS computer time sharing service is the principal sham
|
|
contract dispute described in Section C.6 of this document.
|
|
|
|
9 In late 1990 and early 1991, the Government of Canada
|
|
contacted INSLAW by telephone and by letter seeking information
|
|
about the availability of a French-language version of PROMIS and
|
|
disclosing that the English language version of PROMIS was then
|
|
operating in several departments and agencies of Canada's federal
|
|
government. The Canadian officials also told INSLAW that one of
|
|
these agencies, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), was
|
|
using PROMIS to support 900 office locations throughout Canada.
|
|
After the U.S. and Canadian media began reporting on this
|
|
disclosure and on INSLAW's claim that it had neither sold PROMIS
|
|
to the Government of Canada nor authorized others to do so on its
|
|
behalf, the Government of Canada retracted its prior oral and
|
|
written disclosures to INSLAW, attributing them to an unfortunate
|
|
mistake by the Canadian officials involved. Eventually, Canada
|
|
settled on the explanation that its Department of Public Works
|
|
had purchased six copies of the PROMIS software product
|
|
manufactured by Strategic Software Planning Corporation of
|
|
Cambridge, Massachusetts. According to that company, its PROMIS
|
|
software product is for project management in the construction
|
|
industry. Canada has never disclosed whether its Department of
|
|
Public Works also uses the Intelligence Report System that the
|
|
CIA claims to have acquired with its copy of PROMIS from the same
|
|
vendor.
|
|
|
|
10 INSLAW President, William Hamilton, recited in a sworn
|
|
affidavit filed in camera in U.S. District Court for the District
|
|
of Columbia on October 17, 1990 in support of INSLAW's request to
|
|
re-open discovery against DOJ, the statements that Carl Jackson
|
|
made to Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton and Jackson's claim to have
|
|
confirmed those facts in 1990 with Phillip Cammera.
|
|
|
|
11 This account by Bua cannot possibly do justice to the
|
|
PBI's probable reaction to the appointment of Denning as the
|
|
independent expert. Denning is the leading proponent within U.S.
|
|
academia for a controversial joint initiative of the FBI and the
|
|
NSA called the Clipper Chip. According to press accounts, Denning
|
|
is one of the few people outside of the U.S. Government who has
|
|
received a security briefing on the Clipper Chip. The Clipper
|
|
Chip was developed by NSA and proposed by the NSA and the FBI for
|
|
incorporation into computer hardware manufactured in the United
|
|
States. It is designed to preserve the technical capability of
|
|
the FBI and the NSA to eavesdrop on the computer-to-computer
|
|
communications of U.S. businesses.
|
|
|
|
12 Denning states that a new version of FOIMS created in 1983
|
|
was written in the NATURAL programming language and used the
|
|
ADABAS database management system (DBMS). A DBMS can be
|
|
analogized to an engine in a car, and the case tracking
|
|
application code can be analogized to the car itself. FBI
|
|
information system officials directly informed INSLAW in 1983,
|
|
however, that the new 1983 version of FOIMS would use ADABAS as
|
|
the DBMS, but would have newly-written COBOL-language application
|
|
code. Because of these representations to INSLAW in 1983, INSLAW
|
|
provided oral and written briefings to the FBI that year on how
|
|
it could avoid the delay and costs associated with writing a new
|
|
COBOL-language application system by, alternatively, inserting
|
|
the ADABAS "engine" into the tried and proven and thoroughly
|
|
debugged PROMIS COBOL code. Prior to providing these briefings to
|
|
the FBI, INSLAW consulted with technical representatives of
|
|
Software A.G. of North America, the vendor of both ADABAS and the
|
|
NATURAL programming language.
|
|
|
|
13 The ratio of numbers of line of code between COBOL and
|
|
NATURAL is 10 to 20 times as many COBOL lines of code as NATURAL
|
|
lines of code for the same application, according to Maguire. If,
|
|
therefore, FOIMS contained 570,000 lines of code written in the
|
|
NATURAL programming language, a corresponding case tracking
|
|
system written in COBOL would consist of 5.5 to 11 million lines
|
|
of COBOL code. INSLAW's PROMIS software is widely regarded as
|
|
extremely rich in case tracking functionality and yet it has only
|
|
about 500,000 to 600,000 lines of COBOL, code, with the exact
|
|
number dependent upon each customer's application of the on-line
|
|
DESIGN subsystem and its automated COBOL code generator. An
|
|
application software system such as a case tracking system that
|
|
contains the equivalent of millions of lines of COBOL is
|
|
extremely unlikely. If the PROMIS software were translated into
|
|
the NATURAL programming language, for example, it would have
|
|
about 30-60,000 lines of NATURAL code instead of 500-600,000
|
|
lines of COBOL code.
|
|
|
|
14 In these 1991 affidavits, Ben Menashe distinguishes
|
|
between the copy of PROMIS that Rafi Eitan allegedly obtained
|
|
during the early 1980's on a visit to the United States, and the
|
|
copy of PROMIS that Brian was marketing in Tel Aviv in 1987.
|
|
According to Ben Menashe, Israel was authorized by the United
|
|
States to use the initial Rafi Eitan copy of PROMIS solely for
|
|
the signal intelligence penetration of other governments, whereas
|
|
the copy of PROMIS that Israel allegedly purchased from Earl
|
|
Brian in 1987 was for the internal database management of Israeli
|
|
intelligence files.
|
|
|
|
15 Burns had succeeded Jensen as Meese's Deputy Attorney
|
|
General in July 1986, when Jensen became a U.S. District Judge in
|
|
San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
16 Deputy Attorney General Bums had himself written to
|
|
Ratiner in late August 1986, signaling DOJ's readiness to settle
|
|
rapidly the disputes underlying the $'~,000,000 in payments
|
|
withheld by DOJ for INSLAW's implementation services, provided
|
|
that INSLAW would agree to recognize the U.S. Government's right
|
|
to use PROMIS wherever it wished, without paying license fees to
|
|
INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
17 In the same December 1989 affidavit cited by Bua, Hamilton
|
|
stated that Jensen's private secretary at DOJ, Marilyn Jacobs,
|
|
had made a similar disclosure to a DOJ informant who does not
|
|
wish to be identified until assured of protection against
|
|
reprisal. Bua took no initiative to provide such assurances
|
|
against reprisal.
|
|
|
|
18 Sensitive Compartmented Information is defined as follows
|
|
in Bob Woodward's book, VEIL:
|
|
|
|
"the process of further restricting access to the most
|
|
sensitive information by imposing special controls and handling.
|
|
Compartments of such information for a particular operation or
|
|
sensitive source or method of collecting intelligence are
|
|
generally given code words. Individuals in the government from
|
|
the President on down must be granted specific code-word access
|
|
to each compartment. Code words are selected at random. Some
|
|
employed by the NSA for signals intelligence include RUFF, ZARF,
|
|
SPOKE, MORAY and two of the most restrictive involving decoded
|
|
messages, UMBRA and GAMMA. VEIL was the code word for the covert
|
|
action compartment during the last several years of the Reagan
|
|
Administration."
|
|
|
|
19 See, for example, an article about the Wackenhut
|
|
Corporation in the September 1992 issue of SPY Magazine by John
|
|
Connolly entitled "Inside the Shadow CIA."
|
|
|
|
20 DOJ's Land and Natural Resources Division has the version
|
|
of INSLAW's proprietary PROMIS software that operates on IBM and
|
|
IBM-clone mainframe computers under the MVS operating system. In
|
|
contrast, the version of PROMIS stolen by DOJ in April 1983
|
|
contained the proprietary enhancements that are prepared for
|
|
operation on Digital Equipment Corporation VAX mid-range
|
|
computers under the VMS operating system.
|
|
|
|
21 Upon information and belief, DOJ stole both the
|
|
proprietary version of PROMIS for IBM mainframe computers, which
|
|
DOJ has had in its possession since 1982, and the version for VAX
|
|
mid-range computers, which DOJ misappropriated from INSLAW in
|
|
April 1983. The timing of the April 1983 theft of the VAX version
|
|
of proprietary PROMIS was, based on information and belief,
|
|
dictated by unmet, urgent customer needs in the
|
|
intelligence/national security arena.
|
|
|
|
22 Bua states that the evidence "suggests" "that there were
|
|
absolutely no activities...." The juxtaposition of "suggests" and
|
|
"absolutely" is, of course, inconsistent.
|
|
|
|
23 See The United States of America vs. Charles S.
|
|
Christopher, a/k/a Chris Christopher, and George Wayne Reeder,
|
|
a/k/a Wayne Reeder, filed in the District Court of the United
|
|
States for the District of Rhode Island concerning the violation
|
|
of Title 18, U.S.C., Sections 371, 1343, 2314, and 2.
|
|
|
|
24 As INSLAW informed Bua in its January 1992 written
|
|
submission, the Washington Business Journal confirmed the
|
|
accuracy of Hamilton's account in an interview with Ben Cnaan in
|
|
January 1990.
|
|
|
|
25 DOJ officials have consistently been less than candid
|
|
about the relationship between Project EAGLE and case management
|
|
software in general and the PROMIS case management software in
|
|
particular. For example, Stephen Colgate, currently the Assistant
|
|
Attorney General for Administration, during Congressional
|
|
testimony on March 2, 1989, deflected an inquiry from Congressman
|
|
Early about the connection between Project EAGLE and DOJ's case
|
|
management system by insisting that Project EAGLE "is a uniform
|
|
office automation system." One of Colgate's subordinates,
|
|
however, was more candid in a private August 25, 1989 letter to
|
|
the General Services Administration (GSA). Frank A. Guglielmo,
|
|
Director of DOJ's Computer Technology and Telecommunications
|
|
Staff, informed GSA that DOJ plans to develop a case management
|
|
software system for implementation on every Project EAGLE
|
|
computer: " ... it will take approximately three years to develop
|
|
and install the caseload management system for the EAGLE
|
|
project." Moreover, Guglielmo blamed the U.S. Bankruptcy Court's
|
|
permanent injunction against further unauthorized use of INSLAW's
|
|
PROMIS software as preventing DOJ from porting PROMIS to the
|
|
Project EAGLE computers. Guglielmo further informed GSA in the
|
|
letter that DOJ would have to purchase $4 million worth of new
|
|
computers from PRIME to continue operating the PROMIS software
|
|
that U.S. Attorneys' Offices had been operating on older model
|
|
PRIME computers during the three-year period required for the
|
|
development of the new Project EAGLE case management software
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
Another example is the contradiction between DOJ's published
|
|
answers to the questions from Project EAGLE bidders, on the one
|
|
hand, and DOJ's statements in federal court in the INSLAW
|
|
litigation against DOJ, on the other hand. On September 26, 1986,
|
|
DOJ published to the bidders an unequivocal denial that certain
|
|
technical requirements mandated in the August 1986 Amendment to
|
|
the EAGLE Request for Proposals implied an undisclosed DOJ plan
|
|
to implement the PROMIS software on the EAGLE computers: "The
|
|
equipment acquired from this solicitation will not be required to
|
|
run either PROMIS ... " On April 15, 1988, however, DOJ told
|
|
Senior U.S. District Judge William B. Bryant, Jr. that it had
|
|
mandated the very same August 1986 technical requirements "so
|
|
that the EOUSA [Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys] can make
|
|
PROMIS, which is written in the COBOL language, run on the new
|
|
[EAGLE] hardware, if it decides to do so."
|
|
|
|
26 In an investigative report dated November 26, 1991 and
|
|
entitled Deficiencies in the Department of Justice Award and
|
|
Management of Its Project Eagle ADP Procurement, the House
|
|
Judiciary Committee noted the following anomalies:
|
|
|
|
o DOJ was negligent in keeping vendors other than Tisoft
|
|
fully informed of material facts;
|
|
|
|
o DOJ allowed Tisoft to substitute its maintenance
|
|
subcontractor after the award even though that
|
|
subcontractor had been a major factor in DOJ's
|
|
justification for making the award to Tisoft;
|
|
|
|
o Each vendor, except Tisoft, was challenged on
|
|
statistics regarding its system's performance;
|
|
|
|
o DOJ contributed $200,000 to Tisoft to help finance the
|
|
settlement of bid protests by other vendors with the
|
|
provision that the settlement documents be sealed from
|
|
public view;
|
|
|
|
o Tisoft agreed to pay up the $6.1 million to the
|
|
protesting vendors, depending upon Tisoft's gross
|
|
revenues during the life cycle of the contract, to help
|
|
induce those vendors to drop their protests, indicating
|
|
that Tisoft envisioned earning very substantial profits
|
|
under the EAGLE contract;
|
|
|
|
o Tisoft paid for at least one golfing outing for a
|
|
member of DOJ's technical evaluation team during the
|
|
pendency of the EAGLE procurement;
|
|
|
|
o One of Tisoft's proposed computer systems failed to
|
|
support user demand when installed; and
|
|
|
|
o DOJ officials misused the technology upgrade clause in
|
|
Tisoft's contract in order to correct weaknesses in
|
|
Tisoft's bid.
|
|
|
|
27 Anson Ng, described as a stringer for the Financial Times
|
|
of London, was found dead in Guatemala in July 1991, the month
|
|
before Casolaro died.
|
|
|
|
28 Increases in the number of devices such as computer
|
|
terminals and printers that the U. S . Attorneys' Offices elected
|
|
to use in accessing the PROMIS time-sharing service were assumed
|
|
by DOJ and INSLAW to be a proxy for satisfaction with the
|
|
quality, reliability and usefulness of the time-sharing service.
|
|
|
|
29 DOJ had inexplicably overlooked this entire category of
|
|
costs, i.e., the costs of highly paid operating system software
|
|
specialists and statistical analysts who adjust the time-sharing
|
|
system daily in reaction to fluctuations in demand among the 10
|
|
major city U.S. Attorneys' Offices. Because these employees
|
|
worked on the computer time-sharing system remotely from INSLAW's
|
|
headquarters, rather than locally from the Lanham, Maryland,
|
|
physical computer center, DOJ simply disregarded the obvious need
|
|
for such technical support personnel in deciding that INSLAW's
|
|
time-sharing costs were too high.
|
|
|
|
30 In an affidavit filed in U.S. District Court on behalf of
|
|
INSLAW in 1991, Ari Ben Menashe claims that Kenneth Rosen, like
|
|
Earl Brian, had a close working relationship with Rafi Eitan, a
|
|
legendary Israeli intelligence official whose apparent
|
|
involvement with DOJ in the theft of PROMIS is summarized in C3,
|
|
Bua's Investigation of Leads Relating to the Role of DOJ
|
|
Officials in Either Facilitating or Covering Up the Use of
|
|
INSLAW's PROMIS in Intelligence/National Security Programs.
|
|
|
|
31 Sidley and Austin replaced Roger Whelan as co-counsel of
|
|
record in the INSLAW bankruptcy in February 1988.
|
|
|
|
32 See, for example, GSBCA No. 9252-P, a Protest by AT&T
|
|
Communications, Inc. regarding Solicitation No. ETN-87-0001,
|
|
where Thomas C. Papson and two other attorneys from McKenna,
|
|
Conner and Cuneo made appearances on November 9, 1987 on behalf
|
|
of AT&T Communications, Inc.
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Exhibit A
|
|
|
|
MEMORANDUM 10 June 1993
|
|
To: William A. Hamilton
|
|
Subject: The Relevance of My Records and Investigative
|
|
Files in Earl Brian and Hadron to Any
|
|
Investigation of the INSLAW Affair in the
|
|
United States and the Failure of Judge
|
|
Nichols Bua or His Staff to Seek Information
|
|
from me
|
|
|
|
From: Jon A. Belton
|
|
|
|
FOR THE RECORD
|
|
|
|
At your request, I am addressing in this memorandum three points:
|
|
|
|
A. The Potential Significance to the INSLAW Affair in
|
|
the United States of My Contemporaneous Records
|
|
and Investigative Files Regarding an Alleged Major
|
|
Securities Fraud in Canada in the Early 1980's
|
|
Involving Earl W. Brian, a United States Citizen,
|
|
and several U.S. Corporations Then Controlled by
|
|
Brian, Including Hadron, Inc.;
|
|
|
|
B. Whether U.S. Justice Department Special Counsel
|
|
Nichols J. Bua or His Staff Sought to Interview Me
|
|
or Obtain Copies of my Records and Files; and
|
|
|
|
C. Highlights of my Investigative Leads Regarding the
|
|
Role of Earl W. Brian and Hadron, Inc., in the
|
|
Alleged Unauthorized Distribution of INSLAW's
|
|
PROMIS Software Product to Canada in 1983.
|
|
|
|
A. The Potential Significance to the INSLAW Affair in the
|
|
United States of My Contemporaneous Records and
|
|
Investigative Files Regarding an Alleged Major
|
|
Securities Fraud in Canada in the Early 1980's
|
|
Involving Earl W. Brian, a United States citizen, and
|
|
Several U.S. Corporations Then Controlled by Brian,
|
|
Including Hadron, Inc.
|
|
|
|
I became acquainted with Earl W. Brian and various U.S.
|
|
Corporations controlled by Brian during the 1980-1982 time
|
|
period. As a Canadian stockbroker during that period, I had
|
|
clients investing money in the publicly-traded securities of such
|
|
Brian-controlled corporations as Hadron, Inc. of Fairfax,
|
|
Virginia.
|
|
|
|
Over time, I became concerned that Brian and his associates had
|
|
engineered and executed a massive securities fraud in Canada, and
|
|
I have been attempting ever since the 1980-1982 time period to
|
|
get the Government of Canada to conduct a credible investigation,
|
|
and, failing that, I have been conducting my own investigation.
|
|
In the normal course of business, I make detailed contemporaneous
|
|
notes of meetings and telephone conversations. These notes have
|
|
been invaluable in my investigative work.
|
|
|
|
For example, notes that I took at a dinner meeting with Earl
|
|
Brian in Montreal on 23 February 1981 reveal that Brian expected
|
|
Hadron, Inc., to acquire an unnamed company that marketed a
|
|
computer software product for the administration of justice.
|
|
Brian said the software product had "great PROMIS[E]." Brian
|
|
linked Hadron's future revenue stream to its planned acquisition
|
|
of this software product. I believe now that Brian was already
|
|
foretelling his planned acquisition of INSLAW, Inc., and the use
|
|
of its PROMIS case management software product to obtain
|
|
sweetheart contracts from the United States government through
|
|
his friendship with Edwin Meese. During this same Brian visit to
|
|
Montreal, I also became aware of plans for a follow-up meeting
|
|
between Edwin Meese and one of the Canadian financiers with whom
|
|
Brian was dealing.
|
|
|
|
It is also my belief that Earl Brian's connections with U.S.
|
|
intelligence agencies have accounted for the failure of the
|
|
Government of Canada and its Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)
|
|
to conduct any credible criminal investigation of the alleged
|
|
Brian securities fraud in Canada. According to my contemporaneous
|
|
written notes for 25 November 1985, for example, RCMP officer
|
|
Wayne Dunn, who was then directing an investigation of Brian,
|
|
said as follows to me: "Re: Earl Brian - Play low - We don't want
|
|
the CIA taking shots at you."
|
|
|
|
B. Whether U.S. Justice Department Special Counsel
|
|
Nicholas J. Bua or His Staff Sought to Interview me or
|
|
Obtain Copies of My Records and Files.
|
|
|
|
You have advised me that INSLAW made a written submission to
|
|
Justice Department Special Counsel Nicholas Bua in January 1992
|
|
on the crimes that were committed, the persons who appeared to
|
|
have committed the crimes, and the state of the evidence
|
|
uncovered as of that date, and that INSLAW identified me as a
|
|
potential source of information on the subject. Free-lance
|
|
journalist Richard Fricker, who himself had reviewed my files,
|
|
also informed me that on a number of occasions he personally
|
|
related to Judge Nicholas Bua the significance of certain data
|
|
from my ongoing investigation that would be of material
|
|
assistance to Bua's investigation of the INSLAW affair.
|
|
|
|
Neither Judge Bua nor any of his staff has ever contacted me or
|
|
sought copies of any of my records or files.
|
|
|
|
C. Highlights of my Investigative Leads Regarding the Role
|
|
of Earl W. Brian and Hadron in the Alleged Unauthorized
|
|
Distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS Case Management
|
|
Software Product to Canada in 1983
|
|
|
|
In early 1991 the Department of Communications of the Government
|
|
of Canada notified INSLAW by letter that its PROMIS computer
|
|
software product was being used in several departments and
|
|
agencies of the federal government of Canada and asked INSLAW to
|
|
complete a questionnaire about the availability of French-
|
|
language versions of its software and documentation.
|
|
Subsequently, Department of Communications officials told INSLAW
|
|
representatives that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) was
|
|
using PROMIS in approximately 900 offices.
|
|
|
|
After the U.S. press began reporting on this disclosure and on
|
|
INSLAW's revelations that it had neither licensed the PROMIS
|
|
software to the Canadian Government nor authorized others to do
|
|
so on its behalf, the Government of Canada retracted its earlier
|
|
statements and attributed those statements to a mistake on the
|
|
part of the Department of Communications officials.
|
|
|
|
Several Canadian journalists, including Eric Reguly of the
|
|
Financial Post in Toronto, Zuhair Kashmeri, then of the Globe
|
|
and Mail in Toronto, and Charles Greenwell of CJOH-TV in Ottawa,
|
|
have, however, told me that current and/or former officials of
|
|
the RCMP have privately confirmed to each of them that the RCMP
|
|
is, in fact, using the PROMIS software. PROMIS is apparently
|
|
known within the RCMP by the name of P.I.R.S. (Police Information
|
|
Records System). The RCMP publicly insists that it developed
|
|
P.I.R.S. internally. Reporter Greenwell told me that one of his
|
|
trusted sources claimed that the RCMP does not have the internal
|
|
technical software resources to have developed a complex
|
|
investigative tracking software system such as P.I.R.S. and that
|
|
the RCMP claims to have developed P.I.R.S. internally are an
|
|
important clue that the RCMP is not telling the truth about
|
|
P.I.R.S.
|
|
|
|
Documents released under the Access to Information Act, moreover,
|
|
reveal the participation of at least one Canadian contractor in
|
|
P.I.R.S software development work at the RCMP: I.P. Sharp Company
|
|
in Toronto, and also that 1983 was the year for nationwide
|
|
implementation of P.I.R.S. within the RCMP.
|
|
|
|
My investigation has developed leads linking Earl Brian's Hadron,
|
|
Inc. of Fairfax, Virginia, and two Canadian computer services
|
|
companies in the unauthorized distribution of INSLAW's PROMIS
|
|
software into Canada in approximately 1983. The two Canadian
|
|
companies are I.P. Sharp of Toronto and SystemHouse of Ottawa.
|
|
Ironically, I.P. Sharp brought its first application software
|
|
product to market in approximately 1983, a tracking system for
|
|
factory floor automation, and called the product PROMIS.
|
|
Eventually, I.P. Sharp created the PROMIS Systems Corporation as
|
|
a wholly-owned subsidiary. I.P. Sharp is no longer in business
|
|
but the PROMIS Systems Corporation is still in operation.
|
|
|
|
On 1 April 1992, for example, Mr. William Stamey, a computer
|
|
services executive in Virginia, told me, in the course of a
|
|
telephone interview, about a conversation he had had in
|
|
approximately 1984 with a former colleague of his by the name of
|
|
Mr. D. George Davis. Davis had been marketing or sales vice
|
|
president of Hadron in 1983, and left Hadron, according to his
|
|
statements to Stamey, after he had been deprived by Hadron's
|
|
Chairman, Dominick Laiti, of a very substantial commission on the
|
|
sale of a computer software product to the Government of Canada.
|
|
The following are excerpts from Stamey's comments to me:
|
|
|
|
"SystemHouse and Hadron had a bunch of source codes..."
|
|
|
|
"SystemHouse Canadian operation ...had a member of ...
|
|
the Privy Council in pocket."
|
|
|
|
" ... I.P. Sharp , SystemHouse, I.P. Sharp and Hadron
|
|
were all linked together in someway."
|
|
|
|
" ... Hadron had done some software modifications for
|
|
SystemHouse and I.P. Sharp."
|
|
|
|
On 6 April 1992, I had a telephone interview with Mr. Paul
|
|
Wormeli, who was an officer of Hadron's law enforcement software
|
|
subsidiary in 1982 and 1983. Wormeli told me that he "vividly"
|
|
recalled the fact that Davis had been deprived of the software
|
|
sales commission and that "his commission beef" related to a
|
|
transaction in Canada involving both I.P. Sharp and SystemHouse.
|
|
|
|
On 18 May 1993, Wormeli said as follows to me in a telephone
|
|
interview:
|
|
|
|
"Well I know for a fact that Hadron was messing around
|
|
with I.P. Sharp, because I was asked to evaluate
|
|
putting together a joint marketing deal with them at
|
|
one point. So that the connection was there..."
|
|
|
|
When I interviewed D. George Davis by telephone on 2 April 1992,
|
|
he denied the loss of software sales commission, but acknowledged
|
|
knowing about both SystemHouse and I.P. Sharp. Although he denied
|
|
any personal involvement with these two companies, in 1983, he
|
|
carefully refrained from exculpating Hadron itself:
|
|
|
|
"I know who they are." "The had no contracts with me."
|
|
"I don't know about Hadron."
|
|
|
|
Davis also appeared to be suggesting that the matter I was
|
|
questioning him about also involved Earl Brian and Edwin Meese:
|
|
|
|
"Though Brian and Meese, who I don't think much of,
|
|
were involved, I was not party to that unfortunately."
|
|
|
|
On 16 December 1992, Canadian reporter Charles Greenwell was
|
|
interviewing Mr. Roderick M. Bryden, the founder and former
|
|
Chairman of SystemHouse, on a different subject when he suddenly
|
|
turned the questions to INSLAW and PROMIS. Mr. Greenwell
|
|
subsequently informed me that Mr. Bryden responded as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Oh yeah, we got INSLAW from I.P. Sharp. Clark handled
|
|
that whole matter."
|
|
|
|
On 23 March 1993, one of my associates asked a current employee
|
|
of SystemHouse about INSLAW's PROMIS software and received the
|
|
following reply:
|
|
|
|
"Oh yeah, we have it." "But we bought it legally."
|
|
|
|
As noted earlier, William Stamey had recalled that the
|
|
unauthorized introduction of the PROMIS software into Canada had
|
|
come about in part as the result of a relationship between
|
|
SystemHouse and a member of the Privy Council. Reporter Charles
|
|
Greenwell independently told me that a trusted source informed
|
|
him that INSLAW's PROMIS software was introduced into Canada
|
|
through the Privy Council Office and that a Mr. LeCours of the
|
|
Privy Council staff has knowledge of the facts but is fearful of
|
|
the reprisal. There is a J.A. LeCours of the Privy Council staff
|
|
who is a senior specialist on intelligence and security issues.
|
|
|
|
/s John A. Belton
|
|
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Exhibit B
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A Synopsis of Specific Claims About U.S. Department of Justice
|
|
(DOJ) Malfeasance
|
|
Against INSLAW Made by Credible Individuals Who Are Fearful of
|
|
Reprisal
|
|
|
|
The characterization of each witness is intended to be
|
|
sufficient to enable the reader to assess the witness's
|
|
credibility but not detailed enough to permit actual
|
|
identification of the witness.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #1. This individual is a computer systems specialist
|
|
who worked at the World Bank Headquarters in Washington, DC
|
|
for a number of years in the 1980's and who has been
|
|
reluctant to come forward publicly because of fear of
|
|
reprisal.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims to have first hand technical
|
|
knowledge, supplemented by contemporaneous, handwritten
|
|
notes, of the implementation at the World Bank Headquarters
|
|
in 1983 of INSLAW's PROMIS computer software product, on a
|
|
VAX mid-range computer from Digital Equipment Corporation.
|
|
According to this individual, the World Bank acquired a VAX
|
|
mid-range computer in its computer data processing center in
|
|
1983 and, thereafter, in June 1983, acquired from a source
|
|
unknown to this individual, INSLAW's PROMIS software for
|
|
implementation on the VAX computer. According to this
|
|
individual, the World Bank's implementation of PROMIS was
|
|
not in support of the traditional PROMIS application domain
|
|
of legal office case management. Instead, the World Bank
|
|
implemented PROMIS to track its own "international message
|
|
flow," as well as the international message flow of its
|
|
sister institution, the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #2. This individual is a current mid-level U.S.
|
|
Government employee with extensive experience in
|
|
intelligence/national security activities, who is fearful of
|
|
reprisal.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims to have knowledge, obtained
|
|
contemporaneously with the actual event in June 1983, of a
|
|
meeting at the World Bank Headquarters in June 1983
|
|
concerning DOJ's conveyance to the World Bank of the
|
|
"proprietary VAX" version of INSLAW's PROMIS software.
|
|
According to this individual (who also claims to have
|
|
contemporaneous handwritten notes), the DOJ was represented
|
|
at the meeting by D. Lowell Jensen, then Assistant Attorney
|
|
General for the Criminal Division. Among others who this
|
|
individual claims attended the meeting was Stanley Sporkin,
|
|
then General Counsel of the Central Intelligence Agency
|
|
(CIA). According to this individual, the initiative to
|
|
implement PROMIS at the World Bank came from the Bank
|
|
Operations Division of the CIA.1
|
|
|
|
Upon information and belief, the objective of the
|
|
PROMIS implementation at the World Bank was to provide an
|
|
early warning system to the U.S. intelligence community of
|
|
signs of planned defaults on international loans. During the
|
|
first few years of the Reagan Administration, a number of
|
|
the so-called less developed countries actively considered
|
|
defaulting on their international debts.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #3. This individual is a current mid-level DOJ
|
|
career employee who has been in a position to know a good
|
|
deal about the INSLAW Affair for the relevant period of the
|
|
1980's, and who, INSLAW has been told by others, has first-
|
|
hand knowledge of DOJ's dissemination to the World Bank in
|
|
1983 of the PROMIS software, and of the concealment or
|
|
destruction by DOJ of contemporaneous, written documentation
|
|
of the conveyance.
|
|
|
|
This individual, during the course of a recent meeting
|
|
with attorneys for INSLAW, emphasized repeatedly that anyone
|
|
who provides information to INSLAW will get into significant
|
|
trouble, and that there would be swift retribution against
|
|
anyone in DOJ who even talks about the INSLAW matter. This
|
|
individual claims that all of the people at DOJ who are
|
|
responsible for "getting" INSLAW have been promoted and
|
|
awarded bonuses. This individual expresses sorrow and
|
|
perhaps even shame for what DOJ has done to INSLAW, but
|
|
declines to acknowledge the validity of any particular claim
|
|
except through sworn testimony before an independent
|
|
counsel. This individual states that no one would cooperate
|
|
with any investigation unless it is truly independent of
|
|
DOJ, and unless assured of no retaliation. Finally, this
|
|
individual says that the exodus from DOJ of the Republican
|
|
Party political appointees will be of some help on the
|
|
INSLAW matter but that it will not of itself be enough
|
|
because "too many career people have either been part of
|
|
destroying INSLAW or have 'winked' at it."
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #4. This individual is a former very high ranking
|
|
DOJ official who told an intermediary in May 1993 that his
|
|
disclosure of information about DOJ's misconduct against
|
|
INSLAW would lead to economic reprisals against him by the
|
|
Republican Party.
|
|
|
|
According to the intermediary, this individual claims
|
|
to have the following specific knowledge regarding DOJ's
|
|
malfeasance against INSLAW:
|
|
|
|
o It was orchestrated by Lowell Jensen who, in turn,
|
|
relied principally on the Criminal Division's
|
|
Executive Officer Miles Matthews;
|
|
|
|
o The Justice Command Center is linked to the INSLAW
|
|
scandal;
|
|
|
|
o DOJ procurement executive Elizabeth "Pat" Rudd
|
|
played a very important role in the INSLAW
|
|
scandal; and
|
|
|
|
o Other current or former DOJ officials who were
|
|
personally involved in the misconduct against
|
|
INSLAW are as follows:
|
|
|
|
o Harry Flickinger
|
|
o Anthony Moscotto
|
|
o Anthony Liotta
|
|
o Carol Dinkens
|
|
o Thomas Stanton
|
|
o Charles Neal
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #5. This individual is a senior DOJ career official
|
|
with extensive knowledge of DOJ information systems.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims that John Otto, while serving as
|
|
one of the highest ranking FBI officials in the late 1980's,
|
|
disclosed directly to this individual in a private meeting
|
|
at the FBI that the FBI was about to implement the PROMIS
|
|
software under the FOIMS (Field Office Information
|
|
Management System) name, and that the adoption of the tried
|
|
and proven PROMIS software was expected to cure the poor
|
|
reputation of FOIMS among FBI employees.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #6. This individual is a mid-level DOJ career
|
|
employee who fears retaliation unless there is an
|
|
independent counsel.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims to have witnessed an admission,
|
|
contemporaneously with the referenced activity, by Marilyn
|
|
Jacobs, then DOJ secretary to D. Lowell Jensen, to the
|
|
effect that Jensen, Jacobs' immediate supervisor, was the
|
|
person behind all of INSLAW's problems at DOJ.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #7. This individual is a high level career official
|
|
of the U.S. Government, who currently holds a position of
|
|
considerable responsibility and who was unwilling to be
|
|
identified by INSLAW to Special Counsel Nicholas J. Bua.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims to have witnessed admissions by
|
|
former DOJ Security Officer Garnett Taylor concerning the
|
|
deliberate destruction of documentary evidence in the INSLAW
|
|
case by DOJ security officials, and concerning the alleged
|
|
role of Anthony Moscotto, currently Director of DOJ's
|
|
Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys (EOUSA), in an
|
|
"affirmative decision" by DOJ to remove Judge George F.
|
|
Bason, Jr. as sole federal bankruptcy judge for the District
|
|
of Columbia.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #8. This individual is currently a relatively senior
|
|
career employee of the United States Government who had been
|
|
employed during relevant years of the 1980's in DOJ's
|
|
Justice Management Division, and who is prepared to answer
|
|
questions truthfully if compelled to do so by subpoena from
|
|
a duly constituted government inquiry into the INSLAW
|
|
Affair.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims, based on a conversation with an
|
|
intermediary, that everyone from "the director level on up"
|
|
within DOJ's Justice Management Division knew that the
|
|
INSLAW case was caught up in a covert U.S. Government
|
|
intelligence operation and that this is why there were
|
|
classified intelligence/national security documents on
|
|
INSLAW and the PROMIS software stored in the security vault
|
|
of DOJ's Office of Security and Emergency Planning. This
|
|
individual also claims to know about a connection between
|
|
the Justice Command Center and the malfeasance against
|
|
INSLAW, and about the award of promotions and bonuses to
|
|
certain DOJ career officials for their participation in the
|
|
wrongdoing against INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #9. This individual is a trusted friend of Mr.
|
|
and Ms. Hamilton who, in turn, has a close relationship with
|
|
one or more persons currently holding senior level positions
|
|
in the Central Intelligence Agency. This individual has been
|
|
unwilling to submit to interviews by anyone officially
|
|
associated with the U.S. Government, whether in Congress or
|
|
in the DOJ. This individual has served as a conduit of
|
|
information that certain senior level CIA officials wish to
|
|
have conveyed to Mr. and Ms. Hamilton.
|
|
|
|
This individual has conveyed the following information
|
|
to Mr. and Ms. Hamilton:
|
|
|
|
o The CIA secretly obtained a copy of the
|
|
proprietary version of PROMIS from DOJ in order to
|
|
determine whether PROMIS could be used to solve a
|
|
longstanding, unmet need in the U.S. intelligence
|
|
community for compatible data base management
|
|
software.
|
|
|
|
o The initial unauthorized use of PROMIS in the U.S.
|
|
intelligence community was for an intelligence
|
|
application aboard nuclear submarines. PROMIS is
|
|
currently installed on every nuclear submarine of
|
|
the United States and Great Britain, and the
|
|
application domain for this use of PROMIS is
|
|
extremely sensitive.2
|
|
|
|
o The CIA implemented PROMIS internally after
|
|
integrating PROMIS with another piece of computer
|
|
software. The CIA uses its version of PROMIS to
|
|
keep track of the covert intelligence operations
|
|
of U.S. and foreign governments.
|
|
|
|
o PROMIS is being used as an inventory tracking
|
|
system for long range missiles and nuclear
|
|
warheads, in the United States as well as in
|
|
several other nations that possess nuclear
|
|
weapons.
|
|
|
|
o The U.S. Government appointed someone by the name
|
|
of Lindsey to package a reduced-functionality
|
|
derivative of the CIA's version of PROMIS for Earl
|
|
W. Brian to sell to the intelligence agencies of
|
|
foreign governments.
|
|
|
|
o One of Earl Brian's sales of PROMIS was to the
|
|
military intelligence agency of the Government of
|
|
Egypt, through "what appears to be a CIA holding
|
|
company."
|
|
|
|
o There is one use of PROMIS by the United States
|
|
Government that is considerably more sensitive
|
|
than any that have been identified to the
|
|
Hamiltons by this individual, and so sensitive
|
|
that decisions on disclosure are restricted to the
|
|
four statutory members of the National Security
|
|
Council, i.e., the President, the Vice President,
|
|
the Secretary of State and the Secretary of
|
|
Defense.
|
|
|
|
o One of the places where the proprietary version of
|
|
PROMIS is being used without license from INSLAW
|
|
is the Office of the Attorney General of the
|
|
United States.
|
|
|
|
o As a condition of his nomination as Attorney
|
|
General, William Barr was required to give
|
|
assurances to President Bush that he would be able
|
|
to maintain the coverup in the INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
o In early 1993, elements of the CIA intercepted a
|
|
person or persons in the vicinity of the
|
|
Hamilton's family residence who were apparently
|
|
planning to carry out some act of physical
|
|
violence. On at least one other occasion, elements
|
|
within the CIA have intercepted or nullified plans
|
|
by others to kill Mr. and Ms. Hamilton.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #10. This individual is a computer programmer aboard
|
|
a U.S. nuclear submarine. The individual would evidently
|
|
face the loss of his security clearance and possibly
|
|
criminal prosecution by DOJ if he were to provide testimony
|
|
in the INSLAW case.
|
|
|
|
Through an intermediary, a member of the Hamilton
|
|
family was told that this individual has first hand
|
|
knowledge about the fact that INSLAW's PROMIS software has
|
|
been implemented aboard the U.S. nuclear submarine on which
|
|
he serves, and that this individual is deeply sorry for what
|
|
the U.S. Government has done to INSLAW and to the Hamilton
|
|
family.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS #11. This individual is a current career employee of
|
|
DOJ who lacks confidence in the ability of DOJ to fairly and
|
|
thoroughly investigate the misconduct against INSLAW.
|
|
|
|
This individual claims to have witnessed DOJ officials,
|
|
Garnett Taylor and James Walker, remove classified
|
|
intelligence/national security documents from DOJ's Civil
|
|
Division for relocation or destruction.
|
|
|
|
_______________________________
|
|
1 This kind of high technology penetration of the
|
|
international banking system by U.S. intelligence is cited as one
|
|
of the important accomplishments claimed by William Casey for his
|
|
tenure as Director of Central Intelligence, in Bob Woodward's
|
|
book, VEIL: The Secret Wars of the CIA 1981-1987, page 386,
|
|
"There was penetration of the international banking system,
|
|
allowing a steady flow of data from the real, secret sets of
|
|
books kept by many foreign banks that showed some hidden
|
|
investing by the Soviet Union."
|
|
|
|
2 In his book, VEIL: The Secret Wars of the CIA 1981-1987,
|
|
Bob Woodward attributes to William Casey the claim that one of
|
|
Casey's principal achievements as Director of Central
|
|
Intelligence was in devising "better techniques to monitor its
|
|
[i.e., the Soviet Union's] ballistic-missile submarines." (p.
|
|
386)
|
|
|
|
|
|
[Electronic Edition of 29July93
|
|
from
|
|
pinknoiz@well.sf.ca.us]
|