| | Turley: Spanish courts may be building case against Cheney
According to constitutional law expert Jonathan Turley, the prosecution of Bush's so-called "torture lawyers" might just give Spanish prosecutors the "low lying fruit" needed to bring a case against Vice President Cheney.
Appearing on Monday night's edition of MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann, George Washington University law professor Turley said that although President Obama is "protecting" the former administration from prosecution, the Spanish investigation could serve as a point of leverage.
By targeting attorneys who wrote legal justifications for torture, said Turley, prosecutors are going "for the first line of defendants."
"And then if you have a case, you go for the higher ones," he added.
Referencing Seymor Hersh's allegation that an "executive assassination ring" reported directly to the former Vice President -- and the apparent confirmation of the allegation's veracity by a former Cheney aide -- Olbermann wondered, "Should the Spanish prosecutors be taking notes?""
"It's well known the Obama administration is protecting President Bush and Vice President Cheney from criminal investigation," he concluded. "And if he went after the two of them, the U.S. government could move aggressively to shut down the inquiry."
This video is from MSNBC's Countdown, broadcast Mar. 30, 2009.
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