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Legal Archeology
The Intelligent Man's Guide
to Lying Under Oath
by David Kopel
Sometimes perjury serves a higher
truth.
Is it ever morally permissible to mislead the
government under oath? President Clinton's flagrant lies during the Paula
Jones deposition and his grand-jury testimony have led his defenders to
claim that it's all right to commit perjury, if the perjury is just about
private matters like sex. Are they right?
Presenting misleading testimony under oath may be
the moral thing to do under certain limited circumstances. At least that
was the stance taken by many victims of religious persecution in England
in previous centuries. The decisions they made provide important lessons
for contemporary Americans.
During the late 16th century, Anglican forces won
control of the English government. They made it a crime for England's
small Catholic population to attend Catholic Church, required everyone to
go to Church of England services, outlawed Catholic communion, and forbade
the entry of any Catholic priest into England, Scotland, or Ireland. The
punishment could be as severe as death by public torture.
Despite this totalitarian effort at thought
control, many Catholics continued to practice their faith secretly, and
the Catholic Church continued to send priests into England. The main
smugglers were the Jesuits, and the government's discovery of one of their
training manuals for English priests caused a sensation.
A Treatise of Equivocation instructed
priests going into English territory that, even under oath, they and their
flock need not condemn themselves when interrogated by the English
authorities. The treatise offered four techniques of equivocation:
ambiguity (answering "a priest lyeth not in my house" could mean that the
priest hidden in the home did not tell lies); incomplete answers ("I went
to his house for dinner," omitting that "I also went to attend a secret
mass"); hidden gestures and pronoun references ("I did not see anyone go
that way," while pointing the other way with one's finger hidden in a
pocket); and the most sensational technique: responding to questions both
verbally and mentally. According to that treatise, a Catholic could
"securely in conscience" provide answers with a "secret meaning reserved
in his mind."
If an English government attorney interrogated
someone suspected of being a priest named Peter, the attorney might ask
"Is your name Peter?" A Treatise of Equivocation instructed that
the priest could speak the word "No" in response. The priest could then
continue, speaking in his own mind but not out loud, "so as I am bound to
utter it to you, since you have no lawful jurisdiction over me."
Likewise, if a lay person were asked, "Did you
hear mass today?" she might orally answer "No," while noting to herself
that she "did not hear it at St. Paul's or such like" — even though she
did hear mass in her home.
In late 20th century America, it's easy to see the
natural rightness of religious dissidents misleading (but in a sense, not
lying to) the minions of an unjust and tyrannical government. Hardly
anyone would deny the moral right of a Jew in Nazi Germany (or modern
Iran) to give equivocal answers to questions from a government
interrogator.
Do the equivocations of the Anglo-Catholics have
any lessons for Americans nearly four centuries later? I think they do.
First of all, A Treatise of Equivocation
never aimed to erase the general moral rule against untruth. Equivocation
was for "very limited" circumstances, allowed only in response to
government interrogators. Capitalism depends on trust, and nothing in A
Treatise of Equivocation justifies any type of misleading answers to
the many people with whom one voluntarily associates.
According to the treatise, a speaker must "answer
directly" if the government interrogator meets five conditions:
- He is a lawful agent of the sovereign.
- He has personal jurisdiction over the person
being questioned.
- He limits his questions to topics over which he
has legal authority.
- He is enforcing a just law (since "a judge in
the execution of an unjust law is no judge").
- He has probable cause for his questions.
President Clinton fails every element of the
five-step test: He acknowledges that Judge Starr was lawfully appointed
(under a law supported by the president), that Judge Starr has legal
jurisdiction over the president, and that the judge was investigating an
issue which was specifically authorized by Attorney General Reno.
President Clinton does not claim that the laws against sexual harassment
or against perjury are unjust, and there is no dispute that the questions
put to him were based on probable cause from evidence previously
discovered.
One of the two cases in which A Treatise on
Equivocation achieved its greatest notoriety was the "Gunpowder Plot"
trial, which followed some Catholics' failed attempt on Nov. 5, 1605 (now
known as Guy Fawkes Day), to blow up Parliament and King James I,
following the King's refusal to relax the late Queen Elizabeth's stringent
anti-Catholic laws.
The other sensational equivocation case was the
1613 prosecution of Irish Catholic grand jurors in Dublin. The grand
jurors had refused to indict Catholic defendants accused of being
"recusants" for failure to attend the Anglican Church. When the grand
jurors took their oaths, they made mental reservations about their
conscience and religion. When prosecuted for perjury, one juror insisted
he made his equivocations "to defend my self against the captious and
injurious demands of an unlawful judge." The Irish jurors and the
gunpowder plotters were, of course, convicted, and A Treatise of
Equivocation was introduced as evidence against them by the
prosecution.
Today, many people called to jury service in the
United States face a moral dilemma similar to that faced by the Irish
grand jurors. According to a recent study by the National Law Journal,
76 percent of Americans agree that "whatever a judge says the law is,
jurors should do what they believe is the right thing." Thus, if a juror
feels that a person is being unjustly prosecuted for acting in
self-defense, or for committing a victimless crime, the juror should vote
to acquit the defendant.
As a matter of legal history, the modern American
76 percent, like their Irish predecessors, are plainly correct. The jury
is intended to interpose the conscience of the community between the
government and the defendant. America's first Supreme Court Justice, John
Jay, and America's second president, attorney John Adams, recognized and
applauded the jury's right and duty to vote its conscience.
Unfortunately, for many decades judges who are
unfaithful to America's history of jury rights have been falsely telling
jurors that they are mere fact-finders, and must accept unequivocally the
judge's instructions about the law. As the Fully Informed Jury Association
continues to spread the word about jurors' rights, many judges are working
harder than ever to exclude informed jurors from hearing cases. During the
voir dire process, some judges demand that potential jurors disclose
whether they have ever read anything about jurors' rights; any potential
juror who does know his rights is automatically "excused."
The state of Colorado recently witnessed a type of
prosecution not seen in the United States since 1776. Juror Laura Kriho
was criminally prosecuted because she allegedly voted to acquit a drug
defendant based on her conscience. (Technically, she was prosecuted
because she did not, during voir dire, tell the judge about her own prior
drug conviction, which had been expunged from her record. She says she
didn't disclose it because no one asked. The real reason for her
prosecution was that after she hung the jury, one of her fellow jurors
complained to the prosecutor that she had compared drug laws to witch
hunts.)
Given the data from the National Law Journal,
it appears that many jurors equivocate during voir dire. Asked if they
know about jurors' rights, they answer "No," and mentally add "I know of
no jurors' rights contrary to the Constitution." Asked if they will
rigidly follow the judge's instructions on the law, they answer "Yes," and
mentally add, "insofar as your instructions are consistent with my rights
and duties as a juror."
In contrast to President Clinton, potential jurors
who intend to vote their consciences clearly pass the test of A
Treatise of Equivocation. There is a great moral difference between
lying in a civil rights case involving the liar's abuse of governmental
power, and equivocating as part of jury service in order to protect
someone from abuse of governmental power.
Liberty,
March 1999, © Copyright David B. Kopel
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