Fresh Air - The Battle For Honest And Accountable Government
Episode Date: October 17, 2024Former Inspector General Glenn Fine oversaw investigations of the mishandling of documents in the Oklahoma bombing case, the treatment of detainees at Guantanamo and corruption in the Navy. He spoke w...ith Dave Davies about his work to uncover abuse, waste, and fraud in the Departments of Justice and Defense. His book is Watchdogs. Also, Maureen Corrigan reviews the book Clean, about a housekeeper who is the primary suspect in the death of a child.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Dave Davies.
Before I began doing interviews on Fresh Air, I spent many
years as a city hall reporter in Philadelphia, and over time I became
fascinated with public corruption. I wondered why public employees would risk
their jobs and pensions to abuse their authority and steal tax dollars, and more
important, what we can do to detect and discourage bad behavior that eventually
becomes criminal.
Our guest today, Glenn Fine, has spent much of his career working inside the federal government
to root out waste, fraud, and abuse and make public servants better serve the public.
He spent 11 years as Inspector General of the Department of Justice in the Clinton,
Bush, and Obama administrations, and later he served as acting Inspector General of the
Department of Defense from 2016 to 2020 when he was dismissed by then President Donald
Trump.
In his career, he oversaw countless investigations into the mishandling of documents in the Oklahoma
bombing case, the treatment of post-911 detainees at Guantanamo, the most troubling spy case
in FBI history, and a massive
corruption scandal in the U.S. Navy.
He tells his story in a new book that explains why he thinks the role of inspectors, general,
and government agencies is important and what changes could make them more effective.
One step he believes is critical is to establish some oversight for the U.S. Supreme Court
and other federal courts. Glenn Fine is now a non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution and an
adjunct professor at the Georgetown Law School. His book is Watch Dogs, Inspectors General
and the Battle for Honest and Accountable Government. Well, Glenn Fine, welcome to Fresh
Air. I'd like you to begin by just telling us in simple terms what an inspector general is.
I mean, it's sort of self-evidence, but how did, what distinguishes it from other government
auditors and watchdogs?
Certainly.
So there is an inspector general, federal inspector general in every cabinet agency.
And in fact, in every federal agency, their role is to detect and deter waste front abuse,
promote the economy efficiency and effectiveness of the agency.
What makes them distinctive is that they are independent.
They report both to the agency head and to Congress, and they expose problems and make
recommendations to improve our government.
They can't be told how to act, what to investigate, what to audit, and what to evaluate, and that's
what makes their role so important. They've been called some of the most important public
servants you've never heard of, and I hope the book exposes more people to
their essential role.
Early in the book you describe a case where this is when you were the acting
inspector general of the Defense Department, that is to say technically
acting because President Trump actually never got around to appointing a
permanent one, but you were the one running the Inspector General's office.
And you did a lot of reviews of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Those are big issues. And in early 2019, I believe it was in a cabinet meeting
that President Trump took issue with you making these reports public. Tell us what happened.
I was what was called the lead Inspector general for overseas contingency operations, fancy
term for wars around the world, including the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
And our role, according to the Inspector General Act, was to issue public reports on the status
and progress of those wars.
And we were doing that for a number of years.
During one televised cabinet meeting, President Trump turned to the acting secretary of defense
and said, you know those IG reports, they should be locked up. They shouldn't be made public.
You know who reads those reports? The enemy reads those reports. The acting
Secretary of Defense, I'm not sure he understood what was at issue, he came
back. I was called into a meeting with the Deputy Secretary of Defense and
other high-level department officials and asked to explain. I explained the Inspector General Act requires us to issue those reports.
We had been issuing those reports for years.
We get the information for those reports from the agencies, including the Defense Department.
We vetted the information in the reports to make sure there was nothing that was too sensitive
for public release.
And then I said, unless and until the Inspector General
Act is changed, I intend to keep issuing those reports in accord with the law. No one contested
those arguments and I continued to issue those reports.
So President Trump, I guess, didn't come back to the issue with you at least, however, you were
in effect dismissed by the president about a year later. Tell us what happened.
About a year later, we all remember where we were
when the COVID pandemic hit around March of 2020.
Congress immediately appropriated trillions of dollars
in COVID relief funds, but they also created
what was called the Pandemic Response Accountability
Committee, a committee of inspectors general
to oversee the use of those funds,
to detect and deter waste and abuse in those funds.
The law also required one inspector general to be named the chair of that committee.
I drew the short straw. My fellow IG selected me as the chair of the pandemic response accountability committee.
It was announced on a Monday. Within a week, President Trump, who had famously said, we don't need the oversight, I will
be the oversight, he replaced me as the acting Inspector General of the Department of Defense,
meaning that I could not be on the committee or chair the committee.
It wasn't illegal what he did.
It was also part of a series of firings around that time where he replaced or tried to replace
five Inspectors general
Me the inspector general for the intelligence community who had brought the Ukraine whistleblower matter to Congress
the State Department inspector general the Transportation Department inspector general and the health and human services inspector general in what one article according to
Washington Post called the slow-motion Friday night massacre of inspectors general because they were normally announced on Friday nights.
Was there a public or media reaction to your dismissing?
There was a significant reaction. Some people speculated that
President Trump did not want independent and aggressive oversight. I had developed
a reputation for that and that he did not want the Pandemic Response
Accountability Committee to conduct that sort of oversight. I was never told why I was replaced. I had to inquire about whether it was
actually true and I saw the document with his signature on it replacing me as the Inspector
General. And so that closed the door for me. And now, as you mentioned, I am a fellow at the
Brookings Institution. I teach law and I had time to write this book.
So, you weren't called in and told you were being dismissed?
I mean, you didn't learn in a tweet.
How did you learn?
I learned it as we were on a conference call trying to organize the Pandemic Response Accountability
Committee with other inspectors general.
And Michael Horowitz, who was the head of the Council of Inspectors General, the umbrella
group of inspectors general, had heard about it. He told me, please stay on
the line at the end of the call. I did. And then he told me that he had heard
that I was replaced as the acting Inspector General. He had heard it.
And he told me, nobody ever contacted me directly. I was never given a reason why.
And that was the end of my career as the acting inspector general of the Department of Defense
Well, I want to come back to the beginning of your career. I mean pre career in fact
I mean you got your undergraduate degree at Harvard you went to law school at Harvard
But when you were finishing your undergraduate studies you were in your senior year co-captain of the Harvard
basketball team you were apparently pretty good ball handler and
You had an early encounter
with corruption when you played a big game against Boston College. Tell us what happened.
Yes, it's an ironic story. So the biggest game of the season, my senior year when I
was the co-captain of the Harvard basketball season, was against Boston College in the
Boston Garden. The only problem was it was the same day that there was a final interview
for the
Rhodes Scholarship and I had applied and I had an interview to be a Rhodes Scholar and
that interview was in Baltimore. The game was in Boston so I had a dilemma. What was
I going to do? I wanted to compete for the scholarship but I also wanted to play in the
game. A Harvard alum said he had a solution. He said he would send down a private plane
to pick me up at the Baltimore airport after the interview was over
But before the selection was made get me to the Boston Garden in time and so I could do both and that's what happened
I was whisked
From the Boston Airport to the Boston Garden made it just in time for the game
Boston College was favored by 12 is a very good, and I had my best game ever in my entire
college basketball career. I had 19 points, 14 assists, 8 steals. They were favored by
12, but it was a nip and tuck game the whole way. The last minute, they won by 3.
Pete Slauson Right. So, this is interesting. So, great game.
And then you learn. Well, yeah. Then I remembered, oh, the Rhodes Scholarship. So in my uniform, I went to a
payphone on the concourse of the Boston Guard and called back to the Baltimore Committee
and asked the results. They said, congratulations, Mr. Fine, you're a Rhodes Scholar. What a
day. The best game of my college career, and I'd won a Rhodes Scholarship. But there was only one problem.
The game was fixed.
Mafia mobsters had bribed Boston College players
to shave points, meaning to win but by less than the point
spread so that the mobsters could vote,
could bet on the other team, in this case Harvard,
and win big payoffs.
And the first game that they had bribed the players was my game against Boston
College. Sports Illustrated broke the story a year later when I was Oxford, and
a friend of mine sent me the article, and he wrote on the top,
hey Glenn, I guess you played your best game when the other team was in the tank.
And you know, in fact, it wasn't any old mobsters.
It was, if you've seen the movie Goodfellas,
it was the two main characters in Goodfellas.
Henry Hill, played by Ray Liotta,
and Jimmy Burke, played by Robert DeNiro.
They were the mobsters who bribed the Boston College players.
And in the movie, there's a scene, they're in a bar,
there's a basketball game, we're on the TV,
one of the mobsters says, hey, is that one of the games we're shaving points up in
Boston? And the other mobster said, don't worry about that game, it's a lock. And then I think
the next scene they strangled another mob colleague. So that was my connection to Goodfellas.
You know, I have to ask you, you know, to ask you, since you didn't learn about the fact that it was fixed until
what, a year later, when you look back at that game, when you got eight steals where
you were picking off passes or picking someone's dribbling, did it occur to you, hey, those
guys weren't quite as quick as I expected?
No, not at the time.
And they were favored by 12, but it was a close game all the way.
So I don't know how much they were trying to go easy on us.
And in fact, the prosecutor of the case, a member of the organized crime strike force,
told me later when I met him that they were considering subpoenaing me
to see if I could say that it looked like the Boston College players were going easy on us.
I told him I don't think I could have said that but in retrospect eight steals is a lot of steals more than any I've
ever had in any other game so who knows what was happening during that game.
Yeah, your kid picked this ball up. Yeah exactly here here's the ball and handed it over to me.
I don't remember that but who knows. I'm sure you played well. So you went to law
school, studied at Oxford, you got into private practice then were eventually
recruited to work for the Inspector General's
office of the Department of Justice, which would lead you to a career in that
profession. And when you actually became the lead person, the Inspector General of
the Department of Justice, one of the early cases that you got involved in
involved you being picked up on a street corner by US Marshals in a van and driven to an undisclosed
location, led to a small room, where they bring in a guy
in an orange jumpsuit.
What was this about?
This was Robert Hanson, the most damaging spy in FBI history.
He was an FBI counterintelligence agent
who spied for the Soviets and the Russians from within the FBI for over two decades.
He compromised some of our most important intelligence assets, nuclear secrets,
the names and identities of assets who were spying for us, who were
executed as a result, and he did this right under the nose of the FBI for over 20 years. When he was eventually caught in
under the nose of the FBI for over 20 years. When he was eventually caught in 2001, the FBI said,
well, the reason he evaded detection for so long
was because he was a master spy, he was clever and crafty,
and he used his tradecraft to evade detection.
We were asked, I was asked, to investigate
whether that was true by the United States Senate
and the Attorney General.
And what we learned through our investigation
was that nothing could have been further from
the truth.
He was a reckless agent.
He exhibited all sorts of red flags that should have aroused suspicion, but that did not.
The FBI had a very weak internal security program.
It did not give a polygraph exam to him.
It did not do a background investigation as required every five years.
It did not require financial disclosures. Its internal security strategy was based on
trust. They trusted that FBI agents would not commit espionage, and that is a bad internal
security strategy.
When you actually sat down with him face to face and were expecting this brilliant master
of counterintelligence, What was he like?
So he had pled guilty and was given a life sentence without parole and had to cooperate
with federal investigators, including our investigators. When we were brought to that
undisclosed location, he was brought in in an orange jumpsuit with handcuffs. He was,
in my view, a twisted individual who minimized his espionage,
who tried to mitigate the damage that he had caused. He often didn't look at us and stare
at the wall. He said, though, that if there was a better internal security strategy, if
he thought that it was more likely that he would have been caught, he said he would not
have spied for so long.
I don't know if I believe that, but I do know that their internal security strategy was extremely weak and needed improvement.
Yeah, so he wasn't like a charismatic guy who actually like fooled people.
What were some of the red flags that should have been noticed about what he was up to, and why was the FBI so
vulnerable to this kind of activity?
He was viewed as an odd and strange individual. He did things that should have
aroused suspicion like depositing large sums of money in a bank account, a block
from the FBI. He used FBI phones to contact the Russians and the Soviets. He
hacked into the FBI computer system to read classified information and when
he was found out he said the reason I did it was to show how weak the system
was and the FBI blithely accepted that. Instead of dealing with these red flags
this derogatory information they decided to send him off on a detail to the state
department where nobody supervised him basically get rid of their headache.
And so he was able to continue that espionage unsupervised for many years.
Right, so you did all this information, reviewed, you know, you and your staff reviewed thousands
of documents and you produced a classified report, an unclassified report, and then I
guess an unclassified summary of the classified report.
What did you recommend?
What did they change?
We made a series of recommendations to upgrade its internal security practices, including
polygraphs, financial disclosures, and also to create a unit to look at derogatory information
about FBI agents, to accumulate in one place so that they could see patterns, and that
that unit had to assume that there had been spies in the FBI before
and there likely would be spies in the future.
The FBI accepted some of the recommendations, but not all of them.
Then Congress got involved, which is important.
They also pushed the FBI.
There was a hearing at which I testified.
And eventually, the FBI agreed to implement those recommendations and to upgrade their
internal security practices.
You know, you were also involved in several other investigations into practices in the FBI.
There were deficiencies in their forensic labs, which could affect court testimony in big cases,
like the Oklahoma bombing case. You did a big investigation there. You did an audit of their
management of computers and weapons and found that hundreds
had been lost or stolen, some of them subsequently used in crimes.
And then also there was the FBI's failure to provide documents to defense attorneys
in the Oklahoma bombing case.
This cannot have made you popular in the FBI building.
That's true.
As an inspector general, I was sure I was not the most
popular person in the Department of Justice halls or the cafeteria or when I
was at the Department of Defense, the Pentagon Food Court. Sometimes an IG is
likened to a skunk at the picnic. IGs are called too hard or too soft, engaging in
a witch hunt or a whitewash, you're a junkyard dog or a lap dog, sometimes all
in the same case. IGs are not going to be popular. We're not there to be liked. I hope
we're tough but fair. I hope our work is respected. But most important, I hope we improve the
operations of the agency, which is what we tried to do.
I mean, you mentioned, you know, what it's like being in the cafeteria in the building
with people you are investigating. Did you get confronted? Were there arguments?
Yes, there were arguments. I would say professional arguments. I would have
arguments with, for example, Robert Mueller, who's the director of the FBI, who
was a strong leader. I had a lot of respect for him, but he would argue back
at some of our reports and say, I want more context in the reports. In fact, one
time, it was a pretty heated argument and it was over the phone, and then after
the phone call was over
I walked outside my office and one of my assistants said who are you just yelling at in there?
And I said well the director of the FBI and she was aghast probably wasn't my finest moment
But I think the inspector general is the only person who can yell at the FBI director and keep his job
You know your investigators. I mean you when you were the Department of Defense I said what 1700 employees in your office? Do I
have that right? Yes over 1700 employees in the Department of Defense Office of
the Inspector General. But you know I mean investigating can mean a lot of
different things. I mean could you just walk into any office and flash a badge
and start rummaging through files? Could you compel people to talk to you? Could
you compel people to talk under oath? Could your representatives execute search warrants? What kinds of powers and limitations
did they work under?
Yes, we had law enforcement authority, both the Department of Justice and the Department
of Defense. We had a criminal investigative side where they were gun carrying law enforcement
agents that investigated crimes both within the agency and against the agency. They had the ability to execute search warrants, make arrests, take testimony under oath.
We also had an administrative investigative side to look at ethical misconduct.
All agency employees had to cooperate with us.
We had the authority to subpoena documents anywhere, and at the Department of Defense,
we had the ability to subpoena testimony from anyone.
We were law enforcement agents. Not everyone realized that we were law enforcement agents.
In fact, my wife sometimes forgot that. One time she was, when I was the Justice
Department Inspector General, she was called to jury duty and the judge was interviewing the
potential panelists and asked the question, is anyone in here a member of a law enforcement organization or has a family member who's a member of a law enforcement
organization?
One woman raised her hand and the judge said yes.
And the woman said, well, my son works for the Department of Justice Inspector General.
And then my wife looked around and sheepishly raised her hand and the judge said yes.
And she said, my husband is the Department of Justice
Inspector General. So people don't always recognize that but they have an important role to play and
that's what we did. We need to take another break here. Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking
with Glenn Fine. His new book is Watch Dogs, Inspectors General and the Battle for Honest and
Accountable Government. He'll be back to talk more after this short break.
I'm Dave Davies, and this is Fresh Air.
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Dave Davies.
We're speaking with Glenn Fine,
who has spent much of his career investigating waste,
fraud and abuse in the federal government.
He served as Inspector General of the Justice Department
and the Department of Defense,
where he oversaw investigations ranging from
the treatment of detainees at Guantanamo Prison
to spending in the war in Afghanistan.
His new memoir is Watch Dogs,
Inspector's General and the Battle for Honest and Accountable Government. While
you were the acting Inspector General of the Defense Department, in effect the
real Inspector General for four years, there was this huge sprawling
scandal involving a contractor for the US Navy. The guy at the center of this
was a Malaysian contractor who was a very large man who was known within the Navy as Fat Leonard. His name
is Leonard Glenn Francis. You want to just briefly tell us about him and explain
what he was doing? Sure, this was the worst corruption scandal in Navy history. He
ran a ship servicing company in the pacific that would supply ships in port with food water fuel sewage treatment tugboat services
bribed
many many navy officers to give him contracts
to overlook his
exorbitant charges to give information about his competitors even a change
where the ships would go into port so that he could get the contract he did
this almost like an intelligence agent.
He knew what your weakness was.
He'd start by dangling the bait.
He would give you small gifts and dinners, then tickets, then trips, then cash,
and then sometimes prostitutes.
And once he had you on the hook, he demanded something in return.
And people were afraid of that that and therefore they did commit
fraud and misconduct by
Going along with his fraudulent schemes
Several of them were convicted of crimes others were found to have committed administrative misconduct and their careers ended It was the most damaging corruption scandal in Navy history
Yeah
I should note for listeners of this program this may sound familiar because in May
we had Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post who had written a book about Fat Leonard.
He investigated this case for ten years. The name of the book is Fat Leonard.
So yeah, I mean these he would throw these wild lavish parties for
admirals and procurement officers aboard ships and fleets. Do we know how long he did this?
He did this for over 10 years, at least before 2003.
He was eventually caught in 2013 when our law enforcement agents, along with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service and the US Attorney's Office in San Diego,
brought enough evidence to have an indictment of him, and then we lured him into San Diego and arrested him there
he then started cooperating and
Implicated many many Navy officers. So it went on for over a decade, right? Which raises the question
I mean, how did this go undetected for so long? So he
Compromised a naval criminal investigative service investigator who fed him information
And so the NCIS Naval Criminal Investigative Service
Opened several investigation, but they were closed down and squashed because he had people who were doing his bidding within the Naval Criminal Investigative Service
Eventually partly through whistleblowers partly because of the San Diego US Attorney's office got involved
They brought our air office in the Defense Criminal Investigative Service and then we started a widespread investigation
Investigators started before my time, but there was a widespread investigation and eventually brought him to justice
You know when whenever a large institution has some some mess exposed some corruption exposed within its ranks
I mean, there's usually two reactions one is gosh. This is terrible
Let's stop the conduct and hold people accountable. And then the second
reaction is, oh my heavens, if this becomes public it's gonna harm all of
our reputations, let's handle this quietly. Did the Navy try to do that in this case?
I think there was partly that. The Navy didn't want to expose it
publicly, but eventually they did. In some sense that's the importance of an
inspector general. An inspector general is generals outside the organization that's one of
our fundamental precepts that we bring transparency to government operations
and we don't cover anything up we don't sweep anything under the rug and while
it may be painful in the short run and makes it better in the long run I mean I
also want to say to this too, most, the vast, vast majority of people in Department
of Justice and the Department of Defense are honest, effective, hardworking public servants.
And so I don't want the listeners to get the wrong impression that it is so widespread
and that everybody works for the government is corrupt.
No, no, no.
But any organization that large will have its problems.
There will be some bad apples, which is why you need an effective, aggressive, independent Inspector General's office to expose
it. And it reminds me a little bit of what Harry Truman said. He said, no government is perfect,
but one of the chief virtues of a democracy, however, is that its defects are visible and
under democratic processes can be pointed out and corrected.
That in essence is what an inspector general does.
I want to come back to this issue of accountability and transparency.
I mean, in this case, there were a few dozen prosecutions.
I think more than 30 senior Navy officers were either convicted or pled guilty.
Some of those cases were undermined by some mistakes by prosecutors. It got messy.
But apart from the criminal prosecutions, there were hundreds of senior officers who
were investigated for improper conduct that placed administrative sanction, potentially.
Craig Whitlock, who wrote about this for the Washington Post, said that a thousand people
were interviewed. You write in the book that more than 400 were referred to the Navy to determine if administrative sanctions were warranted and there was a special panel established
for that. I want to play a clip from my interview with Craig Whitlock again. This was made.
This is Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post who wrote this book. Spent 10 years investigating
the case of this corrupt contractor. And here's what he said about the Navy's posture on providing
any information about the outcome of those investigations into these officers, which would
be some measure of how widespread this misconduct was. Here's what he said.
Pete I had a very sobering conversation with the four-star admiral at the Pentagon several years ago when I was
working on this book and pushing to get documentation on senior officers who had
been found guilty of misconduct and the Navy was digging in its heels and this four-star admiral
told me, you know, what metric exists that says this will benefit the Navy if I give you that
information? And I was pretty appalled.
I was like, well, you know, it's the right thing to do
and your own regulations state
that this information should be made public,
that the Navy is supposed to be transparent
about misconduct by senior officers,
that its own regulations state you should make that public.
And he was unmoved.
He said, well, why should I throw our people under a bus?
This is so embarrassing.
It's going to embarrass our people and it's going to damage our reputation. So,
clearly a decision had been made at the highest levels of the Navy that they were going to bury
this story and hope the storm blew over. Again, that's Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post.
So, Glenn Fine, who, and we should note
that this corruption scandal both predated and post-dated
the four years you were in this job.
But, I mean, and I talked to Craig Whitlock recently
for an update, he says, yeah, the Navy has not provided
any information about these cases where, you know,
there's supposed to be administrative action
against people that were caught up in this thing,
hundreds of officers. Is he right? They're not following their own rules
Well, I don't know if he's right with regard to the specific case
But he's right with regard to the the principle and that is
This should be transparent and often organizations look at it in the short term not the long term in the short term
It might be embarrassing in the long term. It's better to expose it And I've been on panels with Craig Whitlock. He has said he's
relied on our work, which is important. But I think it's also important to have a free
and robust press to use Freedom of Information Act to push the Navy to get this information
out there. And I do agree with Craig and that this information, the has a right to know it and that's one of our principles
The Department of Defense inspector general's office. We would issue our reports publicly
We would not wait for a freedom of information act a request because we thought the public had a right to know when there was misconduct
Particularly against high-level people and that it was substantiated and that there was somebody who was watching over this.
I think that benefited people in the long term.
I would often get the same thing that Craig heard, that is, senior leaders saying, well,
why do you have to issue your reports publicly?
Well, because it is important to be transparent and it makes the organization better, even
if it is embarrassing in the short term.
Okay, but has the Inspector General's Office of the Department of Defense, the agency that you headed, has it issued a report on this?
It has an issue report on this because there are criminal cases ongoing and the
Consolidated Disposition Authority was a Navy operation.
I'm sorry, what is the Consolidated Disposition Authority?
I'm sorry, that was the organization that the Navy set up to determine the
administrative sanctions against the Navy officer. So they're the ones with the information. So we don't have that information as to the
ultimate disposition, but it should be issued, particularly when there are substantiated
cases.
We need to take a break here. Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Glenn Fine. His
new book is Watch Dogs, Inspectors General and the Battle for Honest and Accountable Government.
We'll continue our conversation in just a moment. This is Fresh Air.
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This is Fresh Air and we're speaking with Glenn Fine, who has spent much of his career
investigating waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government as an inspector general
of two major departments. His new book is Watch Dogs, Inspector's General and the
Battle for Honest and Accountable Government. You know, in the book, after
you describe the scandal, you list some advice that you gave at a training
session for officers on how senior commanders should avoid situations like
this. There were five specific things you mentioned, and I have to say when I read
them they struck me as things that they should already know like stay in the
ethical midfield, consult with experts, don't investigate or retaliate against
whistleblowers. I mean it seems like those are kind of things that they
really ought to already know but what might really make an impact is if you
know people see that when hundreds of people commit this kind of
misconduct, there are consequences and we haven't seen that yet, right? Well we
have seen consequences. There were 30 people who were convicted of crimes and
others lost their careers as a result. So when I would give that talk to all the
one-star admirals and generals, they all knew about the Fatt Leonard case and they
knew that it had hung up many of their colleagues
Who couldn't be promoted who ended their careers?
So it was a very well-known thing in the Navy
But you're right they have to be reminded of that and one of the things I talked about is why this
Misconduct happens why people think that they will get away with it
One of the things is they think they're out in the Pacific and no one will find out. Others think, well, other people are doing it, so maybe it's okay to do. What I would
tell them to do is also consider the Washington Post test. How would your actions look if
they were on the front page of the Washington Post? Would you feel comfortable with that?
Would you be able to support it? So while, yes, they seem basic, a lot of times people
forget that and they need to be reminded people forget that and they need to be reminded
of it and they need to be reminded of the consequences of it.
So I think that's one of the values of both an inspector general and also public reports
to let people know that there are consequences.
It's not a good strategy to hope that you won't ever get caught.
And many of them did get caught and their careers were ended.
You know, we didn't talk about it earlier, but inspectors general, they are created by
an act of Congress in, was it 1978? Do I have that right? Yes, 1978.
Post Watergate and it's been amended a few times. You at the end of the book
kind of ruminate a bit on how this system can be improved and one of the
things that you note is that inspectors general themselves ought to
be evaluated by some independent body because
they aren't all great, right? I mean some don't do such a great job.
Without naming names, you can if you want,
you've seen some inspectors general that I assume
you thought weren't up to the task. In what ways did they fall short? Some of them are unwilling to take on the hard
cases. They think that if they don't take on those hard cases they won't make
waves and they won't upset high-level officials. I would say that's not
typically the case but there are a few that are like that. Some of them just
don't have the management skills to do the job
Others of them have just been there too long and want to remain in the job and not make waves I remember a story that secretary Mattis told when he he said that when he was selected to be the Secretary of Defense in
2016
He was a Marine so he was at the time teaching at Stanford as he put it
Happily corrupting the youth of America
He said he went to the senior Marine on campus to ask for advice the senior Marine on campus at the time was George
Schultz the former Secretary of State and he
Reported advice that George Schultz gave him which is you can't want this job too much
Meaning you have to do it so that even if it's taken away even if you alienate
certain people you're okay with that and that's the same thing with an inspector
general you need to you know be aggressive and speak truth to power even
if that is going to upset people not all of them are willing to do that most are
but not everyone one of the other recommendations you make is that we need
an inspector general for the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary. Explain that a bit.
Yes. My view is that all organizations need oversight, most resist it. Even in the Department of Justice, for example, when the IG Act was passed in 1978, they said we don't need an inspector general, we're lawyers here. I don't think that argument aged that well and eventually
opposition was overcome and inspector general of the Department of Justice was implemented
by an amendment. Same with the FBI. The FBI said, well, inspector general would compromise
our independence. That too argument didn't age well and the benefits of an inspector
general in those organizations are manifest now.
I believe that the judiciary and the Supreme Court also needs an inspector general for a variety of reasons. One, the Supreme Court and
the judiciary has a huge operation. The federal judiciary, for example, has an
eight billion dollar budget, has over a thousand judges, has 30,000 employees.
There is going to be waste and misconduct and abuse, and we need an
inspector general to improve the operations of the federal
judiciary.
With regard to the Supreme Court, trust in the Supreme Court is at an all-time low.
In my view, part of the reason is controversy about the decisions.
People may disagree with the decisions, but another part of the reason is unaddressed
ethical allegations against the justices who decide themselves how the ethics
rules apply to them and it violates the principle that no person should be a
judge of their own case. I believe that an inspector general to establish the
facts when there are serious allegations of ethical misconduct while
recognizing the independence of the judiciary not getting involved with
judicial decision-making but at least investigating serious allegations of misconduct would improve trust in the court
and would be good for the court. So I make that recommendation and I hope that it's implemented
at some point. Yeah, you know, state supreme courts, at least the ones that I know of,
there is a process. I mean, there's a judicial inquiry review panel of some kind at which citizens or lawyers
or parties to cases can file complaints.
And if it's serious, it can be investigated and there can be sanctions imposed even on
the highest state courts.
Is there anybody that can impose a sanction against a punishment against a justice of
the Supreme Court?
Well, I guess they can be impeached.
They can be impeached.
And if there's a...
I guess if there's a criminal allegation, perhaps.
But ultimately, with regard to ethical allegations, it's the justices themselves to decide whether
there's anything to see here or whether there's any misconduct.
And they, in the recent past, have put forward their views, sometimes in statements, sometimes
in selected media outlets, sometimes not at all.
I think it would benefit them and the public to at least establish the facts through an
independent inspector general.
And others have proposed that there should be a judicial panel of lower level judges
to determine what should happen when those facts are established.
It shouldn't be the IG and even in federal agencies.
The IG does not impose discipline or make management decisions, but at least
they determine what the facts are and make transparent what the facts are so that we
are not riveted with partisan differences about what happened. We can at least establish
the facts and hopefully that would improve trust in the court.
Nat. So is it up to Congress to do this, to make an inspector general for the courts?
John. So there's two ways it could happen. In my view, Congress could legislate, although there's some controversy about that. Some
believe that it would violate the separations of power if Congress
legislated both an enforceable code of conduct and a method to investigate
these allegations. I disagree. I think Congress already legislates with regard
to the court, both its jurisdictions, financial disclosure,
other aspects dealing with the court.
I think this would be upheld as constitutional, at least it should be.
But the problem is who would determine that, the Supreme Court itself?
I think a better solution for the court itself to implement an enforceable code of conduct.
It recently implemented a code of conduct, but there's no enforcement mechanism.
I think the court should establish both an inspector
general and perhaps a mechanism to enforce the code
through perhaps lower level panel of judges.
So that would avoid the issue of whether it's constitutional
or not and would improve trust in the court.
I think that would benefit everyone,
including the court itself.
Well, Glenn Fine, thanks so much for speaking with us.
Thank you for having me.
Glenn Fine's new book is Watch Dogs, Inspectors General and the Battle for Honest and Accountable Government.
Coming up, Maureen Corrigan reviews Clean, the new novel by Chilean author Alia Tribuco-Zeran about a woman
suspected in the death of the seven-year-old daughter of a wealthy
couple she works for. This is Fresh Air.
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This is Fresh Air. Chilean author Aliyo Tribuco-Zeron's 2015 debut novel, The Remainder, was a finalist
for the International Booker Prize. Her nonfiction book, When Women Kill, was a finalist for
the 2023 National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism. Her latest novel is called Clean. Our book critic Maureen Corrigan says
the world it depicts is anything but. Here's her review.
A woman named Estella Garcia sits alone in an interrogation cell and begins talking to
the police she assumes are listening in from another room. She's 40 years old, born to a single mother in the Chilean
countryside. Seven years earlier, she traveled to the city of Santiago in
search of work and was hired by a wealthy couple to be their housemaid
and nanny to their soon-to-be-born daughter, Julia. That daughter, now seven,
has just been found dead in the family swimming pool.
Whether the cause of her death will be deemed an accident, suicide, or foul play, we don't know.
But if it's the latter, Estella is the chief suspect. We readers learn almost all of this information in the first pages of Clean,
a slim, extraordinary novel by Chilean author Alia Tribuco-Zarán, translated
into English by Sophie Hughes. But here's something we never learn. What Estella
looks like. I've sat still in Estella's company for hours,
rapidly reading her story and hearing her voice.
Yet it wasn't until I began describing the premise of this novel that I realized I have no idea of
Estella's appearance beyond the general categories of gender and age.
Through the brilliance of her writing, Zeran lulls
readers into the same haughty blindness as Estella's employers. To the senior, a
doctor, and the senora who works for some kind of corporation, invisible Estella
simply is what she does for them. Making the bed, airing the rooms,
scrubbing the vomit out of the rug,
cooking and serving their meals,
bleaching the sweat and dirt out of their clothes,
and attending to their surly child,
who even as a baby had to be coaxed to eat.
In its narrative structure,
Clean may sound like a suspense story,
but it's really a memoir in miniature narrated by Estella, a sharp woman who's had to funnel her life
into the rooms of her employer's house. Clustrophobia would have been a good alternative title for this novel, which is set almost exclusively
in interior spaces.
Why stay inside with Estella, you may ask?
The answer is her voice.
Listen to this passage, where Estella, in her cell, answers the question she assumes
is on the minds of her unseen inquisitors, as well as us readers.
By now, Estella says,
you're probably wondering why I stayed.
My answer is the following.
Why do you stay in your jobs, in your pokey offices,
in the factories and the shops on the other side
of this wall?
I never stopped believing I would leave that house, but
routine is treacherous. The repetition of the same rituals. Open your eyes, close
them, chew, swallow, brush your hair, brush your teeth. Each one an attempt to gain
mastery over time. A month, a week, the length and breadth of a life. There are so many
sentences in this closely observed novel where an image or comment suddenly
swerves matters from the mundane to the revelatory. For instance, when Estella in
an answer to an ad first shows up at her employer's address. The senora, then pregnant, looks her up and down,
while the senora doesn't even make eye contact. He was texting on his phone, as Stella recalls,
and without even glancing up, pointed at the kitchen door. When Julia, as a two-year-old,
begins to bite her nails so compulsively, her cuticles bleed,
Estella comments, I kept thinking about the girl, about her chubby, idle hands, always ready to
pop those nails into her mouth. I never bit my nails. My mama didn't either. I suppose for that,
you'd need to have your hands free." Through the years,
tensions within and beyond the house escalate as protests against income
inequality rock the city. Even Estella's own behavior becomes less tamped down.
For instance, she illicitly cares for a street dog in the laundry room of the house,
an assertion of autonomy that, in a roundabout way, leads to that prison cell. Clean is an
intense novel about class and power and the kind of deep down rot that lingers despite the most vigorous scrubbing.
Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University.
She reviewed Clean by Aliyah Traboukhoz-Iran.
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