Pubdate: Sun, 18 Nov 2001 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2001 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Authors: David Johnston, Todd S. Purdum, New York Times Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/ashcroft.htm (Ashcroft, John) http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) War On Terrorism Shaping The Law CIRCUMSTANCES THRUST ASHCROFT INTO POWERFUL ROLE Top Lawman Came Back From Election Defeat Washington -- "For every crucifixion," John Ashcroft likes to say, "a resurrection is waiting to follow," and, more than most people in Washington, he should know. Just a year ago, Ashcroft's future looked grim. He had lost his Senate seat after a single term -- to a dead man. He was not close to George W. Bush, whose own election was not yet assured. He was not Bush's first choice for attorney general, and when offered the job, he had to endure a bruising confirmation at the hands of his old Senate colleagues. But since Sept. 11, Ashcroft has emerged as perhaps the most powerful attorney general of modern times, rivaling his ideological opposite Robert F. Kennedy, despite a relationship with his president that aides to both say remains more professional than personal. Working seven days a week at the center of the Bush administration's anti-terrorism campaign, Ashcroft has moved swiftly -- and sometimes unilaterally -- to expand the government's powers to wiretap and detain terrorism suspects and monitor their conversations with their lawyers. "We frankly go to bed every night asking ourselves, 'Have we done everything we can to protect the liberty and freedom and security of our citizenry?' " Ashcroft said in a telephone interview on Friday. For weeks, Ashcroft has been in the thick of the war, from the issuance of the order signed by Bush to prosecute foreign citizens accused of terrorism in extraordinary military tribunals, to day-to-day operations of the FBI. He has been an almost constant presence at the bureau's command center and, with the bureau director, Robert Mueller, has personally directed the investigations in the Sept. 11 and anthrax attacks. New Course On Legal Policy And, even while immersed in the two-front war on terrorism, he has set a new course on other legal policy, beginning a crackdown on the distribution of marijuana for medical purposes in California and threatening the licenses of doctors who prescribe drugs to help patients end their lives under the terms of the assisted-suicide law twice approved by the voters of Oregon. In the process Ashcroft, 59, has not only become one of the most activist officials in the history of the Justice Department but also a target for a growing group of critics in both parties who contend that some of the administration's tactics in its war on international terrorism risk threatening civil liberties at home. "I don't know whether there's a panic," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who heads the Judiciary Committee, "but there's such a sense of concern, either at the Justice Department or at the White House, that they feel they've got to start acting arbitrarily, trying things that have never been tried before." Leahy, with his Republican colleague Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, has summoned Ashcroft to a hearing after Thanksgiving to explain some of his recent anti-terrorism moves. "I don't know anybody on the Hill who feels that some of these things have done anything that has increased our security," Leahy added. Ashcroft insists he has acted in accordance with his legal powers and the Constitution to combat new and troubling threats. "As we believe steps are available for us to take that are within the statutory authority," he said, "and within the Constitution and the framework of liberties, which we are all responsible for protecting, we're going to adapt our procedures and processes to maximize the security of the American people and reduce the danger of these kinds of terrorist attacks." The deeply conservative son and grandson of evangelical Christian preachers, a man so punctilious that he likes to bake chocolate chip cookies uniform enough to be stacked in Pringles potato chip cans, Ashcroft has told friends that the terrorist attacks amount to a call he cannot shirk. He certainly cannot avoid the spotlight of as many as 10 televised interviews in a single day. In a public career that began with a failed Republican primary campaign for Congress from his home state of Missouri in 1972 and eventually led to two terms as state attorney general and two terms as governor before his election to the Senate in 1994, Ashcroft has often felt underestimated, friends say. But his family likes to joke that he is the proverbial man who falls into a sewer and comes out with a ham sandwich: always turning his troubles to his advantage. Loyalty Pays Off Two years ago, he explored a run for the White House, hoping to galvanize conservative Republicans. He decided against running to concentrate on his re-election to the Senate, but lost in a strange race. Ashcroft's opponent, Gov. Mel Carnahan, was killed in a plane crash shortly before the election, yet narrowly won after Missouri's governor promised to appoint Carnahan's widow, Jean, to his seat. But the presidential dream dies hard, and Ashcroft's current post could give him a powerful platform for the future if he succeeds. Ashcroft's good friend Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said: "He's a very humble person. I know he may not always come across that way, but he is. He's always very much in control, and somebody who doesn't know him might get the impression from seeing him on TV that he was arrogant, but he isn't." In a city often celebrated for its vices, Ashcroft neither smokes nor drinks. His idea of a good time is a big bowl of ice cream (any flavor), playing the piano or singing baritone on gospel hymns. But aides and friends also attest to his sense of humor and say say he is not above puncturing tense meetings at the Justice Department with his imitation of Montgomery Burns, the misanthropic nuclear power plant owner on "The Simpsons." His critics insist he lacks the temperament to administer the nation's laws impartially. "These last three weeks reflect what John Ashcroft has been about for the past three decades," said Ralph G. Neas, president of People for the American Way, the liberal advocacy group. "It's absolutely chilling to see the person entrusted with enforcing our laws and defending our civil liberties showing so little concern for the Constitution and the Bill of Rights." The events of Sept. 11 began what Ashcroft's associates regard as the beginning of his second term as attorney general, as the hijackings, the possibility of more attacks and the new threat of bioterrorism thrust Ashcroft into a central role in the Bush administration. In the weeks since, Ashcroft has been among the chief proponents of change, asserting that the country's law enforcement and counterterrorism agencies must shift to a wartime footing to prevent further attacks with steps that have enraged civil liberties groups. A senior aide said that Ashcroft regarded himself as a civil libertarian, but one who believes that war forces the government to take aggressive steps to protect civil liberties. Kyl also said Ashcroft had a "strong civil libertarian bent" on issues like Internet privacy and a wariness of government power. "When he establishes something that grants government power, I know that he's thought it through very carefully," Kyl said. "He's very well balanced. He's not going to let the extraordinary pressure of this unbalance him to make him something that he's not" But Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., the only member of the Senate to vote against the administration's broad anti-terrorism bill, said he has been troubled by Ashcroft's failure to provide an explanation of the hundreds of people arrested who have not been identified. Many have been released, but some remain in custody as material witnesses who could be charged with crimes. Ashcroft has also ordered vast overhauls of the FBI, the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the Justice Department itself. Each step has been labeled an effort to combat terrorism, but some, like the reorganization of the immigration service, are long-debated ideas. He permitted authorities to eavesdrop on conversations between lawyers and some people in federal custody who are suspected of terrorism. Justice Department officials said such eavesdropping is being used against only 13 unidentified federal prisoners convicted of terrorist acts. Defying Some In FBI Under Ashcroft's direction, authorities have compiled a list of more than 5, 000 foreign men living in the United States legally on business, tourist or student visas. The men, mainly from Middle Eastern countries, are being sought for voluntary interviews as possible witnesses who might have information about terrorist operations. Ashcroft has issued warnings of new terrorist threats, based on vague but credible intelligence information, overruling some reluctant FBI officials. No new attacks occurred, but associates said that he felt the threats could not be withheld. "The risks have never been at this scale in American history," Ashcroft said. He disagreed with critics, including those in the administration, who have complained that the warnings ratcheted up the fear about attacks without providing specific advice or information about how to respond. "The worst decision we could make is to believe that this could never happen again" he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake