Perjury Nation
By Arianna Huffington
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
          The dirty little secret of our justice system is that perjury has 
become epidemic, yet only 1 percent of all criminal prosecutions are 
perjury cases. Other than tax evasion, perjury is, in fact, the least 
prosecuted crime in the country. The main excuse given is that 
prosecuting perjury on a consistent basis would overwhelm the courts. 
But the rule of law will not long survive if the perjury epidemic 
continues unchecked. Which is why it is so critical that the nation's 
two highest-profile alleged perjury cases -- those of O.J. Simpson and 
Bill Clinton -- are pursued to their respective ends. 
          Last [summer] Simpson's former sister-in-law Denise Brown asked a 
Los Angeles County grand jury to investigate whether Simpson committed 
perjury during his civil trial when he denied under oath ever beating 
his wife. Gloria Allred, Brown's attorney, said, "It is extremely 
important to many victims of domestic violence that this matter not be 
forgotten or ignored." 
          It is also extremely important for the rest of us that perjury not 
only be punished but also be seen to be punished. In spite of the 
photographs of a bruised and battered Nicole Brown Simpson, the vivid 
details in her diaries and the phone calls to 911, Simpson denied 
under oath ever striking his wife. That he has not since been charged 
with perjury sends a terrible signal to all Americans who know about 
it and who are themselves tempted to lie under oath. 
          In any federal civil or criminal proceeding, perjury is a felony 
punishable by up to five years in prison. Yet prosecutors I have 
talked to have all admitted that neither their offices nor the police 
have time to deal with perjury cases. This is why it is all the more 
urgent to procure some high-profile convictions and shatter the 
dangerous assumption that perjury is no big deal. As Voltaire dryly 
remarked, "It is good to kill an admiral from time to time, to 
encourage the others." 
          The devastating reality is that it is hard to imagine anything 
more destructive to the truth-seeking function of the justice system 
than turning a blind eye to perjury. As Todd Gaziano, former legal 
advisor in the Justice Department, put it, "If prosecutors, judges, 
and jurists cannot consistently rely on the penalty of perjury to make 
witnesses testify truthfully, both the civil and criminal justice 
systems will rot at the core." 
          Of course, the most divisive perjury case our nation is grappling 
with involves President Clinton. The conventional wisdom was 
succinctly summed up by U.S. News Senior Editor Matt Miller: "Perjury 
about adultery," he said, "should not be a crime." But this is to 
confuse the shifting sands of public ethics with what should be the 
bedrock of the rule of law: the centuries-long prohibition against 
lying under oath. 
          Perjury was once an offense punishable by death under common law. 
And another great deterrent against the temptation to lie under oath 
was the fear of committing the mortal sin of bearing false witness in 
the name of God and suffering eternal damnation. Now that for millions 
of Americans bearing false witness is no longer a fearful prospect 
spiritually, "the only real bite behind an oath," as Michael Paulsen 
put it in the University of Chicago Law Review, "is the specter of a 
perjury prosecution." 
          The decades-old modern federal perjury statute makes absolutely no 
differentiation among various kinds of material lies -- whether about 
sex, power or money. And in 1994 the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals 
categorically rejected "any suggestion, implicit or otherwise, that 
perjury is somehow less serious when made in a civil proceeding" -- 
as were both Simpson's and Clinton's alleged perjuries. 
          In the president's case, if there is a new but deep-seated 
national consensus that perjury about sex is not perjury, then let's 
change the law. We would be better off amending the statute than 
emasculating it by drawing distinctions that reflect social attitudes 
and public moods but contradict the laws of the land. In Simpson's 
case, by brushing under the rug the overwhelming evidence that points 
to perjury, we are conspicuously turning the perjury laws into a 
toothless symbol of a decaying justice system. 
          Nothing would more dramatically stem the rising tide of perjury 
and the growing tolerance for it than prosecutions in the two cases 
that -- definitely for worse -- have consumed so much of our national 
energy and attention. 
Arianna Huffington is a popular columnist, occasional talk show host, 
and a person we disagree with more often than not. This column was 
filed on July 20, 1998, but it still contains ideas of interest. 
Those who would like to discuss it with her may do so at ARIANNA 
ONLINE, 1158 26th Street, Suite #428, Santa Monica, CA 90403, 
[email protected], 
or at A HREF="http://www.ariannaonline.com">http://www.ariannaonline.com