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Wise Words on the Importance of Neutral Ethics Advice

Update: December 14, 2010 (see below):

One thing I learned at the COGEL conference last week is that Darleen Druyun, the infamous Air Force procurement officer who favored Boeing before taking a job with it, had been given ethics advice on six occasions and ignored it.

In trying to find something online that said this (I did not), I came across an excellent 2004 Project on Government Oversight (POGO) report, "The Politics of Contracting." The report contains a hard-hitting excerpt from the conclusion of a 2004 report by the Interior Department's (DOI) Inspector General, which I want to share with you.

The Mr. Griles referred to in the excerpt below was the Deputy Secretary of the Interior under Gale Norton. He had formerly been a lobbyist for natural resource interests and had worked for a natural resource company before that. When accepting the job, he signed an agreement stating he would recuse himself from "any particular matter involving specific parties in which any of [his] former clients is or represents a party." But an IG investigation showed that he had met with former clients anyway, and he resigned.

I have italicized the passages that I think are most important.

    Framed in the context of a train wreck waiting to happen, the Department of the Interior was presented with its most complex set of ethical issues with Mr. J. Steven Griles' appointment, at a time that, following years of neglect, demise, and compartmentalization, the ethics program was wholly incapable of addressing them.

    As with most political appointees, Mr. J. Steven Griles likely viewed himself as an honest advocate of his administration's agenda. Since political appointees tend to believe that they are good people doing good things for the American public, they sometimes characterize any reasonable review or critique of their ethical behavior as prompted by partisan politics. The federal ethics rules are designed, when properly executed, to both guide and protect the well-intentioned political appointees. Fortunately, the threshold for the criminal ethics statutes is high enough to prevent most appointees from ever reaching it. The most difficult area, however, is the expansive gray area in between, that of "appearances."

    Time and time again, the Office of Inspector General has heard from those charged with providing political appointees at the Department with ethical advice that appearance concerns are left to the appointee, reasoning that the appointee is in the best position to make those determinations. This myopic view presumes that the neophyte political appointee fully understands not only the federal government's byzantine ethical standards but also fully appreciates and understands the "fishbowl" mentality of Washington, D.C.

    By answering ethics questions from a purely legal perspective, the provider of such advice builds in an inherent defense, should such advice subsequently fail to protect. The resulting disservice to a political appointee is profound. After all, it is not the career of the ethics official or advising SOL [Office of the Solicitor] attorney that is on the line.

    Between the Ethics Office and SOL, the combined failure of the ethics "team" in the Department to provide rigorous ethics advice to the political leadership – leaving them, instead, to assess appearance concerns from their own, subjective perspective, rather than that of the "reasonable person" – is, at once, both cowardly and disingenuous. Unfortunately for the appointee, the "reasonable person" standard is a much harsher judge of their conduct than is their well-intentioned subjective perspective. And thus, Mr. Griles and others now find themselves in a highly defensive posture against a cacophony of charges – even if no actual conflicts are found, the cries against the appearance of conflicts of interest drown out any acquittal – when solid, courageous, thorough advice at the outset might well have prevented these appearance problems altogether.

    The wholesale failure of the ethics program at the Department emanates from a fundamentally flawed design crafted over time by a cast of negligent architects. Unfortunately, it also threatens to leave a trail of fallen political appointees in its wake.

Update: December 14, 2010
Now able to view the IG's report, I found the following recommendations, which are also very direct and laudable. It should be noted that the text of the report, which is already redacted, does not appear when you click the link (it's called Report of Investigation, J. Steven Griles). I came across the PDF of the report accidentally, and found that the PDF is "Secured," which means that its text cannot be copied and pasted. Someone doesn't want this report getting around too easily, I suppose.

1. . There needs to be a singular voice of authority on ethics in the Department. We believe the Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) should be the head of the Office of Ethics for the Department.
    a. The DAEO should be a full-time, experienced ethics professional, but need not be an attorney.
    b. The DOI regulation referring employees to either the Ethics Office or the Office of the Solicitor (SOL) should be clarified.
    c. The SOL Division of General Law should no longer be in the business of rendering ethics advice. If attorneys are designated to give ethics advice, they should be assigned to the Ethics Office.
2. Political appointees should only obtain ethics advice from the DAEO or the designated assistant DAEO.

3. Ethics advice must be proactive.
    a. Ethics advisers should ask all questions necessary to answer both the "can I" as well as the "should I" questions.
    b. Ethics advisers must be willing to say the word "NO!" — even to high-level political appointees.
4. The Secretary and senior DOI leadership should be visibly supportive of this new ethics structure.
    a. The Secretary and other appropriate senior staff should be briefed regularly on ethics issues confronting the Department.
5. The Office of Ethics needs to be bolstered by:
    a. More funding.
    b. Additional staff, including a leader with a breadth and depth of ethics expertise. Staffing should be evaluated in terms of other federal agencies with like size and complexity of responsibilities.
    c. The Office of Ethics should have greater input and control over the Bureau ethics counselors, who should all be full-time ethics professionals as opposed to providing ethics advice as a collateral duty.
    d. A well-maintained system of record-keeping.
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics

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