Department of Justice Funding of Representation of Victims in Connection with a West German Prosecution ( 1988 )


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  •     Department of Justice Funding of Representation of Victims in
    Connection with a West German Prosecution
    The D epartm ent o f Justice m ay use its funds to pay for the representation o f non-m ilitary A m erican
    victim s o f the hijacking of TW A F light 847, in connection with a W est G erm an prosecution, if it
    is determ ined that such representation would be in the interest o f the U nited States.
    June 8, 1988
    M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e A c t in g A s s o c ia t e A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l
    The Criminal Division has asked this Office to render an opinion concerning
    the availability of Department of Justice funds to represent non-military Ameri­
    can victims of the hijacking of TWA R ight 847, in connection with the West
    German government’s prosecution of accused terrorist Mohammod Hamadei.
    Under West German law, victims of a crime can become co-complainants
    (“Nebenklaeger”) with the public prosecutor, and as such are given access to the
    prosecutor’s files and allowed to file pleadings, make arguments, and examine
    witnesses. As explained more fully below, we believe Department of Justice funds
    may be made available to pay for Nebenklaeger participation in the Hamadei
    prosecution, if such participation is determined to be the interests of the United
    States. Under the circumstances of this case, we believe that you are the appro­
    priate departmental official to make this determination.'
    I. Background
    Mohammod Hamadei is one of several Lebanese terrorists, who in June 1985,
    hijacked TWA Flight 847, held its passengers and crew hostage, and killed U.S.
    Navy diver Robert Stethem. In January 1987, Hamadei was arrested in Frank­
    furt, West Germany. The West German government denied the United States’
    request for his immediate extradition on grounds that it intended itself to prose­
    1     The determination in this case involves important issues o f first impression, which have wide ramifications
    for our litigating activity in foreign courts. We therefore strongly recommend that it be made at least at the level o f
    the Associate Attorney General. This seems to us particularly necessary here in light o f the apparent position pre­
    viously taken by your predecessor on the general question o f the D epartment's authority to fund Nebenklaeger par­
    ticipation in this case. See infra note 3 In making your determmation, you may wish to consult with the Civil Di­
    vision, which, through its Office of Foreign Litigation, has been chiefly responsible for representing the
    government’s interests in foreign courts. W e understand that the Criminal Division has already been in touch with
    the Department o f State respecting the subject matter o f this memorandum.
    105
    cute him for offenses connected with the hijacking. The Attorney General has
    stated publicly on numerous occasions that the Department of Justice is com­
    mitted to doing everything possible to ensure that Hamadei is convicted on all
    charges and receives the maximum sentence possible. We understand that his
    trial has now been scheduled to begin on July 5.
    The question of this Department’s ability to participate in or support the West
    German government’s prosecution of Hamadei first arose last summer. In a let­
    ter dated August 17,1987 Associate Attorney General Stephen S. Trott informed
    the General Counsel of the Department of Defense that under West German court
    procedure the United States government itself would not be permitted to inter­
    vene directly in the West German criminal case.2 Moreover, he stated that the
    Department of Justice did not appear to be authorized to fund individual victims’
    Nebenklaeger participation.3 M r. Trott’s letter also stated that the Department
    believed the Secretary of Defense had authority to fund such participation by the
    military victims of the hijacking under 
    10 U.S.C. § 1037
    ,4 and recommended that
    this be done. We understand that the Department of Defense has agreed to pro­
    vide $300,000 for Nebenklaeger participation by the military personnel who were
    passengers on TWA Flight 847, as well as the parents of Mr. Stethem. A Ger­
    man attorney, Dr. Rainer Hamm, has been retained for this purpose.5
    The question of this Department’s ability to contribute to the funding of Neben­
    klaeger participation in this case has arisen again because the Criminal Division
    has apparently determined that Dr. Hamm’s ability effectively to assist the
    Hamadei prosecution would be enhanced if he were able to represent at least some
    of the non-military American victims of the hijacking as well. Because the De­
    partment of Defense has authority to fund only the representation of military per­
    sonnel, alternative sources would have to be found to pay the additional expense
    of extending Dr. H am m ’s representational role.
    2 This conclusion was apparently based upon inquiries made in West Germany by the Civil Division
    3 His tentative conclusion appears to have been based upon informal advice received from the Chief o f the Crim­
    inal D ivision’s General Litigation and Legal A dvice Section, based on a construction o f 
    28 U.S.C. § 516
    . See rout­
    ing and transmittal slip from Lawrence Lippe to Deputy Assistant Attorney General Toensing and Associate At­
    torney General Trott, dated August 3, 1987 M r. Lippe addressed the question of the Department’s authonty more
    formally in M arch o f this year, and concluded again that the Attorney General had no authonty under 28 U.S C. §§
    516-519 to fund Nebenklaeger participation in the Hamadei prosecution. See M r Lippe’s Memorandum of March
    16, 1988 to Ms. Toensing. In a memorandum sent the same day to the General Counsel of the Justice Management
    Division, Ms Toensing inquired whether Department funds were available to fund Nebenklaeger participation.
    JM D ’s response, dated A pnl 20, 1988, was that funds could be expended under authonty of 
    28 U.S.C. § 516
     if it
    could be determined that “representing pnvate citizens in a foreign tnbunal is the type o f interest encompassed un­
    der [section 516].” JM D disclaim ed an ability to make such a determination in this case because of its unfamihar-
    ity with the facts, and advised that the matter should be sent to this Office for construction Ms. Toensing forwarded
    the matter here on M ay 4.
    4 Section 1037 authorizes the Secretary o f Defense to employ counsel and pay any expenses incident to the rep­
    resentation o f military personnel before foreign judicial tnbunals and administrative agencies.
    5 The relationship between a NebenkJaeger participant and his or her attorney under West German law is not
    clear to us In particular, we do not understand their respective roles in making litigation decisions We do not know
    whether there are in this case any specific arrangements between Dr. Hamm and the Department o f Defense in this
    regard (or, indeed, w hether under applicable W est German law any such arrangements could be made in deroga­
    tion o f the Nebenklaeger client’s wishes)
    106
    II. Department of Justice Authority to Fund Nebenklaeger Participation
    in the Hamadei Prosecution
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 516
    , the Department of Justice has general authority to “con­
    duct” litigation in which the United States is a party “or is interested.”6 Along
    with the several provisions immediately following it in the Code, section 516 has
    been regarded as providing authority for.the Attorney General to attend to the in­
    terests of the United States in any court-, including foreign tribunals. See Litiga­
    tion Responsibility of the Attorney General in Cases in the International Court
    of Justice, 
    4 Op. O.L.C. 233
     (1980). Moreover, using his general authority to con­
    tract for services that are necessary to the performance of his statutory functions,
    the Attorney General may hire private lawyers to do indirectly what it would be
    awkward or inappropriate for the United States to do directly through depart­
    mental lawyers. See Memorandum for Edward C. Schmults, Deputy Attorney
    General, from Theodore B. Olson, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal
    Counsel, Re: Civil Division’s Recommendations Concerning Reimbursement of
    Legal Expenses (June 24, 1981); Memorandum for Glen E. Pommerening, As­
    sistant Attorney General for Administration, from Antonin Scalia, Assistant At­
    torney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Re: Authority for Employment of Out­
    side Legal Counsel (Mar. 4, 1976). The Attorney General’s authority to hire
    foreign counsel to represent the interests of the United States in the courts of a
    foreign country is explicitly recognized in 
    28 U.S.C. § 515
    (b).7
    Applying the above principles to this case, we believe that the Department may
    use its funds to pay Dr. Hamm to represent victims of the hijacking, if it is de­
    termined that such representation would be “in the interests” of the United States.8
    Such a determination necessarily involves an analysis of the facts and circum­
    stances involved in this case, and we can therefore give you only general guid­
    ance as to factors that might properly be considered. One thing seems clear to us,
    however: the existence vel non of a governmental interest in this case should not
    depend on the fact that the counsel we retain will technically be representing a
    private party, as opposed to the United States government itself. Particular pro­
    cedural rules imposed by a foreign court will perforce dictate the manner in which
    the United States expresses its interest in a particular case, and the Department’s
    ability to represent that interest cannot be made dependent upon the restrictions
    imposed upon our appearance by particular foreign courts. Here the United States
    apparently is precluded by West German court rules from expressing its interest
    directly in a criminal prosecution, so that we can support the prosecution only
    6 Section 516 provides in full as follows’
    Except as otherwise authorized by law, the conduct o f litigation in which the United States, an
    agency, or officer thereof is a party, or is interested, and securing evidence therefor, is reserved to of­
    ficers of the Department o f Justice, under the direction o f the Attorney General.
    7 Under section 515(b), “foreign counsel’*retained by the Attorney General in “special cases” are not required
    to take an oath o f office.
    8 The Criminal Division’s request to us did not extend to which particular sources o f departmental funds might
    be available to pay for Nebenklaeger participation, and we express no views on this issue.
    107
    through representation of a victim. Despite the vehicle through which we are con­
    strained to express it, however, the relevant interest remains that of the United
    States.9
    That said, there remains the question whether the Department’s funding of
    Nebenklaeger participation by non-military victims in this particular case would
    in fact serve the interests of the United States. While a court would almost cer­
    tainly defer to an executive decision maker in this context,10 there are at the same
    time no clear legal standards to guide that decision maker. At bottom, the exis­
    tence of a governmental interest adequate to support Department of Justice fund­
    ing in this case depends upon two things: the strength of our government’s de­
    sire to combat international terrorism and to ensure the safety of American
    citizens overseas by any means available to it (and by this means in particular);
    and the extent to which further support by this Department for the Hamadei pros­
    ecution is likely to serve these goals.
    As to the first of these considerations, we express no views.11 As to the sec­
    ond, we would offer the following observations. The Department of Defense’s
    decision to provide governmental funding to support the Hamadei prosecution
    may or may not have been based on a determination that this would be in the in­
    terests of the United States, as opposed to the personal interests of the military
    victims and their families.12 If, upon inquiry, it develops that the representation
    presently being funded by Defense is perceived as serving the interests of the
    United States, and does in fact do so, the question would then arise whether fur­
    ther funding of the prosecution by this Department would serve some additional
    interest of the United States. In this regard, it would be relevant whether and to
    what extent Dr. Hamm’s proposed representation of the non-military victims is
    9 In a similar situation last year, the U nited States was permitted to intervene directly, as a partie civile, in the
    French governm ent’s prosecution of Lebanese terrorist Georges Ibrahaim Abdallah for the murder of Lt. Col Charles
    Ray, an Assistant Military Attache at the U .S. Embassy in Paris. The Department paid a French attorney to repre­
    sent its interests in connection with this prosecution, as well as those of the U.S. Consul General m Strasbourg, who
    had survived the terrorist attack. The Department o f Defense paid this same attorney to represent the interests of
    Lt. Col. R ay’s widow, under authonty of 
    10 U.S.C. § 1037
    . See Memorandum for Stephen S. Trott, Associate At­
    torney General, from Victoria Toensing, D eputy Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division (July 2, 1987).
    10 W e do not believe that such cases in U nited States v City o f Philadelphia, 644 F 2d 187 (3d Cir. 1980) (en
    banc), and U nited States v. Solomon, 563 F .2d 1121 (4th Cir. 1977) are relevant in this situation. These cases ad­
    dressed the governm ent’s standing to sue as a jurisdictional m atter and did not purport to limit the government’s
    discretion under 
    28 U.S.C. § 516
     Both cases involved the federal government’s authority to initiate legal action in
    federal court to vindicate the rights of individuals, in areas that have traditionally been reserved to the States. The
    “ public interest” asserted by the Executive as justification for the exercise o f federal power in those cases was thus
    subject not only to the recognized limits on the jurisdiction o f federal courts, but also to the powerful counterweight
    o f federalism. No sim ilar countervailing considerations are present in this case.
    11 W e do not believe the federal government’s participation in a foreign criminal justice system which expressly
    provides for participation o f private prosecutors, in furtherance o f its interest in combating international terrorism
    and protecting its citizens abroad, suggests anything about the appropriateness of allowing pnvate prosecutors to
    control o r participate in criminal prosecutions in our own federal courts. C f B nef for the United States as Amicus
    C unae in M orrison v. Olson, 487 U S. 654 (1988) at 37 and n 31.
    12 
    10 U.S.C. § 1037
     appears on its face to authonze representation of military personnel in foreign tnbunals
    without regard to w hether such representation would serve any interest o f the United States We do not know gen­
    erally how the Department o f Defense has interpreted its authonty under this provision, or what specific factors
    w ere considered in making the decision to provide funding in this particular case.
    108
    in fact likely to enhance his ability to support the prosecution through his exist­
    ing representation of the military victims.13 You may also wish to consider the
    degree of control the Department can expect to exercise over the proposed rep­
    resentation.14 The fact that the individuals whose representation we would be
    funding are American citizens, and the apparent impossibility of their recover­
    ing damages or receiving any other personal benefit from their participation as
    Nebenklaeger, would tend to support amargument that the representation would
    serve the interests of the United States.rf0 n the other hand, especially in light of
    the fact that our funds are not unlimited, you may deem it more cost effective to
    pursue other means of combatting terrorism in this case (such as eventual further
    pursuit of our extradition efforts).
    To assist you in making your determination, you may wish to ask the Crimi­
    nal Division to provide you with further information relating to the efficacy of
    the additional representational activity for which funding is being sought, and on
    the extent to which the Department will be able to control Dr. Hamm’s actions.
    J o h n O. M c G i n n i s
    Deputy Assistant Attorney General
    Office o f Legal Counsel
    13 We are aware o f only one specific way in which representation o f the non-military victims will add to what
    Dr. Hamm can accomplish under the existing arrangement with the Department o f Defense, he will be able to in­
    terview and prepare those non-military victims who he represents prior to their being called as witnesses. See Toens­
    ing Memorandum to JMD, supra note 3 The Criminal Division has also suggested more generally that Dr. H am m ’s
    role in the case would be made more “prominent” if he could represent more victims. We are not entirely sure what
    connection there might be between the prominence of Dr Hamm’s role in the case and his ability effectively to rep­
    resent the interests o f the United States.
    14 For example, we do not know to what extent Dr Hamm’s responsibility to his Nebenklaeger clients would
    preclude his taking direction from officials o f the U.S. government that is paying his fees, in the event there were
    some difference o f opinion as to the best way to proceed. Nor do we know whether the U S. government could con­
    trol or countermand a decision by some or even all o f the Nebenklaeger complainants to discontinue their partici­
    pation in the prosecution The decision to fund representation in this case is thus quite different from that involved
    in the Abdullah prosecution in France, see supra note 4, in which the United States itself was a party and could thus
    ensure that the pnvate counsel it had retained represented its interests in the proceeding. As noted above, see supra
    note 5, we do not know what if any arrangements the Department o f Defense has made or could make with Dr.
    Hamm to ensure his carrying out the interests of the United States, if it differed from the interests o f his individual
    Nebenklaeger clients. While the Defense Department may have some greater degree of control over some of the
    Nebenklaeger clients now being represented by virtue o f their current military status, not all of these individuals
    are now subject to military discipline.
    109
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 6/8/1988

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017