War Room

In defending Gonzales, Justice officials look to the dictionary

Two senior Department of Justice officials came to the defense of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales yesterday after the Washington Post reported that Gonzales may have misled Congress about his knowledge of civil liberties violations.

On April 27, 2005, Gonzales testified that "There has not been one verified case of civil liberties abuse" in the FBI's surveillance program. But the Post found that Gonzales had been sent reports to the contrary in the weeks and months preceding his testimony.

In a follow-up story today, the Post reports that the DOJ officials said Gonzales' testimony wasn't a lie, however, because the violations he'd been informed of didn't qualify as "abuse."

Assistant Attorney General for National Security Kenneth L. Wainstein told the Post that the definition of the word abuse "in Websters...implies some sort of intentional conduct. And I think that is sort of the common understanding of the word 'abuse.'" Because the violations were not intentional, Wainstein seemed to reason, they were not technically instances of abuse.

But some may beg to differ.

Dictionary.com (which draws its definitions from the Random House Unabridged Dictionary) lists six definitions of the word abuse as a noun, only one of which -- labeled "obsolete" -- includes a reference to intention. Merriam-Webster.com also labels the one definition of abuse that refers to deceit as "obsolete."

The Post also reported that "Justice Department officials said yesterday that they have been unable to determine whether Gonzales actually read any of the FBI reports but that he was informed at various times about the sorts of problems those reports described."

The Obama ad MoveOn didn't pick
More than 1,000 videos were submitted to MoveOn's "Obama in 30 Seconds" contest, only one was rejected -- now it's surfaced on the Internet, and the group is apologizing.
"Hardball": Barack Obama is no Neville Chamberlain
Those who don't learn from history will be humiliated on live television by Chris Matthews.
The California decision and the presidential campaign
There are few signs of a major electoral backlash against the California Supreme Court's decision legalizing gay marriage, but the court's opinion leaves Democrats exposed.
What's next for gay marriage in California?
If conservative organizations get their way, voters will have an opportunity this fall to overturn the state Supreme Court's ruling legalizing gay marriage.

Current Salon Politics Stories

’08 Update

06:00 EDT, May 16, 2008
The Obama ad MoveOn didn't pick More than 1,000 videos were submitted to MoveOn's "Obama in 30 Seconds" contest, only one was rejected -- now it's surfaced on the Internet, and the group is apologizing.
War Room
15
19:46 EDT, May 15, 2008
"Hardball": Barack Obama is no Neville Chamberlain Those who don't learn from history will be humiliated on live television by Chris Matthews.
War Room
35
19:28 EDT, May 15, 2008
The California decision and the presidential campaign There are few signs of a major electoral backlash against the California Supreme Court's decision legalizing gay marriage, but the court's opinion leaves Democrats exposed.
War Room
11
13:33 EDT, May 15, 2008
California Supreme Court legalizes gay marriage The court says a ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional and civil unions are not an acceptable substitute; California becomes only the second state to permit gay marriage.
War Room
155
12:52 EDT, May 15, 2008
In new message, McCain tries on the hope mantle John McCain says that if he's elected president, by the end of his first term the Iraq war will be won and most U.S. troops will have left.
War Room
38

Salon Politics Blogs

Recent Posts

"Hardball": Barack Obama is no Neville Chamberlain
Those who don't learn from history will be humiliated on live television by Chris Matthews.
The California decision and the presidential campaign
There are few signs of a major electoral backlash against the California Supreme Court's decision legalizing gay marriage, but the court's opinion leaves Democrats exposed.
What's next for gay marriage in California?
If conservative organizations get their way, voters will have an opportunity this fall to overturn the state Supreme Court's ruling legalizing gay marriage.
Previous Posts…

War Room RSS Feed

Posts by date

May 2008
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

About War Room

War Room is written and edited by Alex Koppelman, with contributions from Salon reporters around the country.

Daily Newsletter

Get Salon in your mailbox!