The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wheels of justice turning a bit too slowly these days

- Leonard Pitts Jr. He writes for the Miami Herald.

Dear Attorney General Merrick Garland:

You are doubtless familiar with the adage, “The wheels of justice may grind slow, but they grind exceedingl­y fine.” As we watch your Justice Department’s ongoing investigat­ion of the criminal conspiracy that was the Trump White House, many of us can readily vouch for the first half of the axiom. Justice has, indeed, proved slow. Whether the result will be “exceedingl­y fine” is the thing we have trouble with.

Eighteen months after Trump’s army stormed the U.S. Capitol in a deadly riot, many of those who served as foot soldiers and cannon fodder have had their day in court. But the leader of the pack and his henchmen are still walking around free. Many observers are eager to see that rectified — and have not been reticent in saying so.

In a news conference, you seemed fed up with carping about the perceived timidity and inertia of your department and you. “A central tenet of the rule of law,” you said,

“is that we do not do our investigat­ions in public.” You added that, “We have to hold accountabl­e every person who is criminally responsibl­e for trying to overturn a legitimate election ... in a way filled with integrity and profession­alism.”

In other words: Back off and let us do our jobs. Your pique is arguably understand­able. But there is something here you may not be grasping.

People are impatient, yes. They demand accountabi­lity, yes. But the other factor at play is simply that it’s been a very tough time for the aforementi­oned rule of law.

One is reminded of an old trope from Western movies: The angry mob descends on the jailhouse with torches and rope, ready to drag out some prisoner and do street justice. But the sheriff stands them off, tells them to leave the prisoner’s fate to

the law.

Clichéd as that scene is, it captures an import

ant truth. Fealty to the rule of law is not a native instinct. To the contrary, the native instinct is to demand instant satisfacti­on if somebody has done you wrong. But the rule of law asks us to exchange torches and rope for a set of rules to be administer­ed on our behalf by the government. Thus do human beings carve civil societies from wilderness­es of social primitivis­m.

But what if some of us begin to feel like we’re the only suckers still following those rules while others are running roughshod over them, profiting in the process and paying no price for their transgress­ions? That, sir, is the story of the last seven years, a story told in Robert Mueller’s refusal to refer a criminal president for criminal prosecutio­n, told in obstructio­n and witness tampering, in incitement­s of violence and actual violence, in acts of extortion, treason and insurrecti­on unparal

leled in American history, most of it done openly and, in fact, brazenly.

The rule of law has seldom seemed more impotent or ineffectua­l, nor made its believers look more like chumps.

That is the unspoken, but no less urgent, need of the moment, Mr. Attorney General, the reason your investigat­ion cannot be thorough — or fast — enough. What you are hearing in your critics is not just impatience or a

demand for accountabi­lity, but a need to see one of the foundation principles of society vindicated before it’s too late to matter.

The rule of law could use a win.

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