Undue Process a Story of How Political Differences Are Turned into Crimes
A conservative political figure criticizes the "criminalization" of his role in the overturning of Nicaragua's government
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Undue Process is a gripping personal account of a man caught in one of the most disturbing developments in recent American politics - the criminalization of political differences - and pursued for five years by a new legal process bent on making criminals out of loyal public servants.In 1985 Secretary of State George Shultz asked Elliott Abrams to serve as his Assistant Secretary for Inter-American Affairs. Abrams moved into a world of secrets, spies, and covert armies aiming to topple the Sandinista government of Nicaragua. But Nicaragua is only the background of this book. This is the story of how Abrams' service to his administration and its foreign policy was later turned into a criminal offense in our nation's capital. It is the story of how this man and his young family coped with a prosecution where the rules had been changed to create a special new class of political "criminals."Abrams left the State Department when the Reagan administration ended, and for three years - 1988 to 1990 - he heard not a word from the office of Lawrence Walsh, the Iran-Contra "Independent Counsel." But as the summer of 1991 ended, Abrams' nightmare began, and the following months were lived under the threat of indictment, trial, and imprisonment. As Abrams shows, the "Office of the Independent Counsel" had created a separate legal system, with special rules and special prosecutors whose only job was to pursue Reagan administration officials, and whose careers were tied not to doing justice but to finding victims.How did a family with three young children weather this storm? How did a man and his wife choose between risking bankruptcy, by spending two years fighting the weight of the entire U.S. government, or accepting a plea bargain that would make years of service into a criminal offense? It is, in its way, reminiscent of the tragic Soviet political accusations and "confessions" depicted in Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon, replayed in America sixty years later, but this time as bitter farce.This book is the story of a man at ground zero, a new place in American political and governmental life, where, for the first time, political differences are turned into crimes. His experience raises some urgent questions for public servants - and for the American public - in the years ahead.
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