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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: laura_bush who wrote (32963)12/18/2003 9:47:10 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 89467
 
December 18, 2003

BUSH JUDICIAL NOMINEE: BOMBING BIRDS BENEFITS BIRDWATCHERS

For all the attention on the president's judicial nominees, one
of his most recent candidates has remained under the radar
screen -- despite a legal record that includes arguing on behalf
of the Bush Administration that bombing birds is good for
birdwatching.

William Haynes II's nomination for a seat on the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals is pending in the Senate. As general
counsel for the Defense Department, Haynes now serves as the
military's top lawyer.

In the bird bombing case, conservationists sued to protect an
important nesting island for migratory birds in the Pacific.
They established that the U.S. military's bombing of the island
during live-fire training exercises violated the Migratory Bird
Treaty Act.[1]

Haynes' team argued in a legal brief that conservationists
actually benefit from the military's killing of birds because it
helps make some species more rare -- and "bird watchers get more
enjoyment spotting a rare bird than they do spotting a common
one." They argued the bombing was good for birds too, as it kept
the island free of other "human intrusion."[2]

A federal judge rejected the argument in 2002, ruling that
"there is absolutely no support in the law for the view that
environmentalists should get enjoyment out of the destruction of
natural resources ... . The Court hopes that the federal
government will refrain from making or adopting such frivolous
arguments in the future."[3]

"In the wake of such a strong court rebuke, one would expect the
Administration to chastise the attorneys making this frivolous
argument and begin complying with the law," said Doug Kendall,
executive director of the Community Rights Counsel.

Instead, President Bush nominated Haynes to a lifetime
appointment on the federal bench. Haynes had his confirmation
hearing Nov. 18 and awaits a Senate Judiciary Committee vote. On
his Senate questionnaire, he listed the bird bombing case as the
second most significant case of his career. (Also significant is
Haynes' role as the architect of the Administration's policy of
holding U.S. citizens as enemy combatants without access to
attorneys.)

"The Pentagon didn't dispute they were killing birds, but argued
that because they were the military they should be allowed to
keep doing it," said Paul Achitoff, an Earthjustice attorney
representing the conseravtionists. "I would think long and hard
about someone up for the federal bench who argues the military
-- or anyone -- is above the law."

As for the military complying with the Migratory Bird Treaty
Act, the Administration got its allies in Congress to exempt the
Defense Department from compliance with the law last year.[4]

###

SOURCES:
[1] Center for Biological Diversity press release,
ga3.org
[2] Center for Biological Diversity v. Pirie, 191 F. Supp. 2d
161 (D.D.C., 2002), ga3.org
[3] Ibid.
[4] National Defense Authorization Act for 2003,
ga3.org

BUSHGREENWATCH
Tracking the Bush Administration's Environmental Misdeeds
bushgreenwatch.org