Judge OKs Probe
of Torture Complaint Against Bush Officials
Story Highlights:
Prosecutors
will review Gitmo complaint to determine if crime committed
Former Attorney
General Alberto R. Gonzales and five others accused
Judge says case can be
pursued in Spain because of Spanish detainees
(CNN) -- A senior Spanish judge has ordered
prosecutors to investigate whether key Bush aides should be charged with crimes
over the Guantanamo Bay detention center, a lawyer said Sunday.
Investigating magistrate Baltasar Garzon has passed
a 98-page complaint to prosecutors that accuses former Attorney General Alberto
R. Gonzales and five others of being the legal architects of system that allowed
torture in violation of international law, human rights lawyer Gonzalo Boye told
CNN.
Prosecutors will review the document to determine
if a crime has been committed.
The prosecutor's office will make a decision within
five days, said Boye, one of the report's authors. Garzon accepted the complaint
under Spanish law because there were several Spaniards at Guantanamo who
allegedly suffered torture.
The complaint was filed in March 2008 by Boye and
the Association for the Rights of Prisoners.
It names Gonzales -- who was President George W.
Bush's counsel when the Guantanamo Bay detention center was established -- and
other top Bush administration officials John C. Yoo, Douglas J. Feith, William
J. Hayes II, Jay S. Bybee and David S. Addington.
A former top aide to Colin Powell, who was
secretary of state in the early days of the Bush administration's "war on
terror," testified before Congress last summer that the six officials "colluded"
to develop a legal rationale for allowing detainees to be subjected to harsh
treatment.
Lawrence Wilkerson was Powell's chief of staff in
President Bush's first term.
Yoo, the author of a memo which critics say
authorized torture, also testified before Congress last year.
The former deputy assistant attorney general said
that his role in the administration had simply been to provide legal
advice.
"We were functioning as lawyers. We don't make
policy. Policy choices in these matters were up to the National Security Council
or the White House or the Department of Defense," he said.
Gonzales was Bush's legal counsel at the time and
later became attorney general. Yoo and Bybee were at the Department of Justice,
Haynes and Feith worked for the Department of Defense, and Addington was Vice
President Dick Cheney's legal counsel.
Addington proved difficult to pin down when he
testified under subpoena before a House of Representatives subcommittee June 26
with Yoo, who testified voluntarily but repeatedly refused to answer
questions.
Addington, by then Cheney's chief of staff,
delivered a flat "No" in answer to a question from New York Democrat Rep.
Jerrold Nadler about whether Addington "contributed to the analysis or assisted
in the drafting of the August 1, 2002, interrogation memo."
But when Nadler followed up with: "You had nothing
to do with that," Addington again replied: "No. I didn't say I had nothing to do
with it."
Addington never clarified what, if any, his role
was.
Garzon, Spain's best-known investigating
magistrate, issued the precedent-setting arrest warrant for former Chilean
dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1998.
The judge has investigated human rights abuses in
former military governments in Chile and Argentina, Islamic terrorists operating
in Spain, the armed Basque separatist group ETA, as well as major drug
traffickers.