The decision of a Russian “court” to keep Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in jail suggests a few reflections. I put “court” in scare quotes for reasons to be explained below. Political economists are interested in such issues because they widely consider an impartial justice system as one of the essential institutions of a free and free-market society.
The Wall Street Journal writes (“Russian Court Upholds WSJ Reporter Evan Gershkovich’s Detention,” April 18, 2022):
The hearing was held behind closed doors, as is typical for most hearings connected with espionage charges. It is also exceedingly rare for defendants to win appeals or be acquitted in such cases in Russia, where espionage laws are increasingly wielded for political purposes, according to Western officials, activists and Russian lawyers. …
Russia’s Federal Security Service, the successor to the KGB, said the journalist “acting on the instructions of the American side, collected information constituting a state secret about the activities of one of the enterprises of the Russian military-industrial complex.”
That’s what journalists from free countries do, isn’t it, even without “instructions of the American side”?
In my review of Volume 2 of Friedrich Hayek’s Law, Legislation and Liberty, I emphasize why the Nobel economist considered a socialist (or fascist) judge as “a contradiction in terms” (see also his The Constitution of Liberty):
Hayek wages a frontal attack against the doctrine of legal positivism, represented by Hans Kelsen, John Austin, and other legal theorists. The doctrine claims that law is simply what is decreed by the sovereign. As Thomas Hobbes put it, “no Law can be Unjust.” In the same vein, Soviet legal theorist Evgeny Pashukanis, wrote that under socialism laws are “converted into administration, all fixed rules into discretion and utility.” Not protected by law, Pashukanis was later eliminated by Stalin. Contrary to state decrees, Hayek argues, law can only be made of general rules that meet general agreement among the public.
Quoting Hayek directly Volume 1 of the same work:
[A judge’s] task is indeed one which has meaning only within a spontaneous and abstract order of actions such as the market produces. … A judge cannot be concerned with the needs of particular persons or groups, or with ‘reasons of state’ or ‘the will of government’, or with any particular purposes which an order of actions may be expected to serve. Within any organization in which the individual actions must be judged by their serviceability to the particular ends at which it aims, there is no room for the judge. In an order like that of socialism in which whatever rules may govern individual actions are not independent of particular results, such rules will not be ‘justiciable’ because they will require a balancing of the particular interests affected in the light of their importance. Socialism is indeed largely a revolt against the impartial justice which considers only the conformity of individual actions to end-independent rules and which is not concerned with the effects of their application in particular instances. Thus a socialist judge would really be a contradiction in terms.
In my review, I wrote:
I would add that this crucial point would also apply to a fascist judge, and Hayek would certainly agree.
This is why Russian “courts” are courts in name only. They are instruments of government policy. For the same reason, what the apparatchiks call “law” is synonymous with government commands, it’s not law in the classical sense. When Vladimir Putin is said to be a “trained lawyer,” the second term also cries for scare quotes. When Putin said that he wanted a “dictatorship of the law,” he meant nothing more than a dictatorship of the dictator (and perhaps of the majority). In Russia, this is not new. Their plagiarism of Western law is a Potemkin village.
Was Gershkovich a spy for the American government? I don’t know, but I know two reasons why it is very unlikely. First, the Wall Street Journal has a reputation and a brand-name value to maintain, which serving as a CIA cover would destroy. After all, the WSJ is not Fox News even if, alas, the two publications have shared a common ownership since late 2007. To sell information, as opposed to entertainment or confirmation bias, a financial newspaper needs to be, and perceived to be, independent. The second reason is that we cannot count on the unrestricted liars in the Russian government nor on their judicial minions to tell us anything useful about journalistic activities.
It is true that, over the last 100 years or so in history of the “free world,” the law has not moved in the right direction, as Hayek detected long ago, even crying wolf too early in the opinions of some. Like virtually everything, the liberal rule of law is a matter of degree, at least up to a point. But there is no doubt that Western countries are still freer than Russia, which is why you read this blog. Like many economists who have studied the question (including James Buchanan and, yes, Anthony de Jasay too), we should continue to defend the endangered ideal of (classical) liberalism.
READER COMMENTS
steve
Apr 19 2023 at 11:04am
” A judge cannot be concerned with the needs of particular persons or groups, or with ‘reasons of state’ or ‘the will of government’, or with any particular purposes which an order of actions may be expected to serve. Within any organization in which the individual actions must be judged by their serviceability to the particular ends at which it aims, there is no room for the judge. ”
“From each according to his ability. To each according to his needs.”
Both of these are fantasies. Real people dont behave that way. (Is it odd that the people who believe in public choice theory think it possible for judges to be the perfect paradigms of the law?)
Steve
Jon Murphy
Apr 19 2023 at 11:15am
I think you misunderstand the part you quote. Pierre (and Hayek) are not saying judges act that way. Rather, it is an ideal type. A baseline from which to judge.
Mactoul
Apr 19 2023 at 10:04pm
American judges are commonly classed either conservative judges or liberal judges and their decisions are generally held to be predictable from knowing by whom they were appointed.
Richard W Fulmer
Apr 19 2023 at 11:35am
Jon,
I think that you’re also misunderstanding what Hayek was saying. Under the rule of law, a judge’s role is not to decide cases to serve a particular end or interest. His role is to interpret and apply the law regardless of the end that is served. (Unless, of course, I’m also misunderstanding his point.)
Steve,
While interpreting and applying the law is a difficult task and one that requires integrity, it is possible to do, and it has on occasion been done. It’s not a fantasy.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 11:59am
Steve: This is an interesting question. A few reflections: Hayek was not a public-choice theorist. He would have argued that the rule of nominating judges for life evolved precisely to align their incentives with the need to preserve the spontaneous order of a free and efficient society, free of political pressures. He would say that judges have diverged from the ideal of the rule of law because of the rise of legal positivism and statute law (the miracle of the multiplication of laws, as Georges Ripert thought). Public choice theory is more about democratic-government failure, of which the multiplication of laws is one aspect. Finally, Jon is right that individual liberty and the rule of law are ideals that we try and hope to achieve in an imperfect world, because we care about human floruishing. Hayek strongly argued that a regime of common law (with careful legislative corrections when necessary–see my review) is the best regime to approach that ideal.
steve
Apr 19 2023 at 11:37pm
Somewhat simplified but i have always thought that one of the key lessons in public choice is that govt (employees) have their own incentives. Those may not align with the public good. Judges are public employees. They have their own incentives. It makes no sense to think that they uniquely among govt employees will not have their own incentives to which they are going to respond. Sometimes that can lead to balanced decisions but often it doesnt. On any SCOTUS decision on which there are clear tribal battle lines its easy to predict outcomes. Then you have venue shopping where people go looking for specific judges at oder court levels since they know how they will rule. Then look at the history of the courts and all of the times judges have been on the payroll of monied interests.
Steve
Richard W Fulmer
Apr 19 2023 at 11:24am
This seems to me to be self-contradictory. If “actions must be judged” by whatever criteria, then someone must do the judging and that person is, by definition, a judge.
In a dictatorship, only the dictator “judges” whether action A or action B best serves the state (or, more likely, himself), therefore, only the dictator is a judge.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 12:16pm
Richard: Not in terms of Hayek’s theory. A judge is very different from the executive of an organization, and an organization is very different from a spontaneously order. Hayek’s sentence would have been clearer if he had used a comma before “in which”–the relative proposition explaining what an organization is. But what an organization is is clear in the argument of Volume 1 of Law, Legislation, and Liberty.
Craig
Apr 19 2023 at 12:13pm
The Russians caught this guy spying. Russia spies, US spies, France spies, in fact according to the most recent leak from a 21 year old guardsmen who inexplicably has access to highly secret information, the US also spies on its allies. Maybe this guy is also a journalist, I personally find that credible, but even if that were 100% true and this guy was not actually engaged .
They found him out in Yekaterinburg — where? — where is Yekaterinburg? I don’t know, I don’t want to know, but google knows and google tells me its 881 miles east of Moscow and it’ll even give you driving directions advising it will take 25 hours to drive from Moscow to Yekaterinburg.
“I want to go to Yekaterinburg” – said no American EVER. And I might add particularly now. Even non-Siberian Russians aren’t stupid enough to go to Siberia in March.
Ostensibly his cover story, and make no doubt about it, its a CIA-supplied cover story, is that he went there to gauge the sentiments of the Russian people regarding the war in the Ukraine. He could’ve done that anywhere of course, but naturally he chose to gauge the sentiments of the workers at the tank factory there. If you believe that he went there solely to gauge worker sentiment I have some bridges on sale crossing the East River in Manhattan for you.
The CIA wants to know how many tanks were coming out of that factory because they want to gauge the impact of sanctions on the Russian ability to continue to wage the war. The CIA will do this and other things, like checking on the price of eggs, or vodka or black market dollars, etc to gauge how much the sanctions are stinging the sanctioned economy.
At this juncture consider a recent BBC article:
“According to the document, dated 23 March, the UK has the largest contingent of special forces in Ukraine (50), followed by fellow Nato states Latvia (17), France (15), the US (14) and the Netherlands (1).” https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-65245065
14 isn’t that many but that does mean US special forces are in Ukraine actively participating in the conflict in some fashion. the article does not say that they are shooting directly at Russian forces of course, I wouldn’t know one way or the other.
We also know that the US is providing actionable targeting intelligence to the Ukrainian military. Satellite/drone information.
Many also believe the US destroyed Nordstream? True / not true? The Russians believe that to be true at this juncture.
At what point does it rise to the level of being a co-belligerent?
The Professor asks: “That’s what journalists from free countries do, isn’t it, even without “instructions of the American side”?”
So when he flashed them his (WSJ?) creds, I’m sure the Russians should just take his word on it because the CIA are an honorable bunch, they always identify themselves in foreign countries and would NEVER think about using a cover story, right? The US and Russia are in a proxy war and awfully close to being in a de jure state of armed conflict. So, Americans in Russia, take notice because at this juncture Americans in Russia are inches away from being considered ‘enemy aliens’
“The decision of a Russian “court” to keep Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in jail suggests a few reflections.”
Here’s another: he’s a flight risk. Just spitballin’
Sorry in my mind from what I have read this guy is a spy, now he might be a journalist AND a spy, but he’s at best ALSO a spy, and they caught him.
Jon Murphy
Apr 19 2023 at 12:18pm
With respect, you have a very strong opinion (“he was caught spying”) for someone who says they don’t know what’s going on.
Yekaterinburg is a major city in Russia. It’s a major industrial center in Russia. It’s make sense for a reporter in an industrial newspaper to be there.
Craig
Apr 19 2023 at 1:00pm
Y’burg is one of those places that prior to this story I would have identified as generally ‘Russian’ and I would’ve correctly guessed that it was ‘one of those cold cities out in Siberia somewhere’ but if you said to pinpoint it on the map, I would’ve been east of the Urals but I could have been off by 1000 miles in any direction. Looking it up it is the 4th largest city and the cities east of the Urals aren’t of much interest to me. I’m just curious, how many countries can you name the FOURTH largest city in? I don’t want this reply to turn into an impromptu Jeopardy match.
The glib apathy about Y’burg is a commentary about US foreign policy, not to promote actual geographic ignorance. US foreign policy has introduced the American people to all kinds of places that frankly they wouldn’t actually know about but for the aggressive US foreign posture and perpetual armed conflict. Kandahar, Fallujah, Najaf, Danang, Y’burg, Bhakmut, Mariupol, Mogadishu andd one of our newer enemies to join the club, the Houthi people of Yemen, who have done me no personal harm. But kill them dead! Derka Derka
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 1:22pm
Craig: With a bit of exaggeration to compensate for yours, if I may, let me quote Montaigne:
Jon Murphy
Apr 19 2023 at 1:31pm
My point is that it’s an important city and it makes sense for a reporter to be there. Him being there is hardly unusual.
nobody.really
Apr 19 2023 at 2:07pm
The US engages in foreign wars for covert reasons–especially to promote the study of geology among Americans.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 2:22pm
Nobody: There are many (covert) schools of thought on that. One claims it is to promote the knowledge of geography. Still another one, the knowledge of haute cuisine.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 1:11pm
Craig: It is however certain that at least one bureaucrat at the CIA, not to mention executives, read the Wall Street Journal, and especially Gershkovich’s reports. Putin, if he still has any sense of reality, must also. In fact, it was another of Putin’s mistake to have ordered or approved Gershkovich’s arrest: he would have learned from the latter’s reports from his trip to Yekaterinburg what his minions are scared to tell him.
Craig
Apr 19 2023 at 1:25pm
I’m pretty sure he saw ARGO too, right? The CIA is evil, not stupid. They’re known for creating elaborate and credible cover stories. Its their specialty.
“read the Wall Street Journal, and especially Gershkovich’s reports. Putin, if he still has any sense of reality, must also”
I agree, yes, but here’s the thing. Everything in that paper he has to assume is something that the other side wants you to read or is willing to let you read. Right now everything you read at that war at this particular juncture, you have to give it that suspicious look because anything on BBC, CNN, RT, you name it, they know it can be read and digested by the other side.
That instantly stains the weight of any of it actually.
Jon Murphy
Apr 19 2023 at 1:32pm
You’ve seen way too many soy thrillers. In real life, spies don’t flaunt about like James Bond.
Craig
Apr 19 2023 at 1:43pm
I’m not claiming that. Indeed spies actually don’t want to stick out which is why it would strain credulity for Griner to have been a spy. Sending a tall African-American woman to Russia to spy? That wouldn’t make sense (and they obviously didn’t accuse her of that).
Evan though is a Russian-emigre to NJ and he spoke Russian fluently, so he can pass as native. He’s not James Bond winning large sums at the Y’Burg casino and going home with Svetlana. Unassuming, speaks the language, he might be in position to gain the confidence of the tank factory workers.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 2:16pm
Craig: Skepticism is necessary in any intellectual inquiry. And whom to believe is often a matter of degree. One must thus inquire about incentives and the likelihood that a false statement can be debunked. But certainly, if one can’t believe anything, he may as well commit suicide–if he knows that the cartriges contain real gunpowder.
Craig
Apr 20 2023 at 12:10pm
“he may as well commit suicide”
Well, that escalated quickly! Here’s the thing, the issue of the credibility of the Russian or US governments does not materially impact my day to day purpose. Naturally a nuclear war would impact that, right? Further to which I see ghouls like Milley clamoring to make sure the MIC can lay claim to my son to stand and die for Ukrainian territorial integrity while standing for the exact opposite principle in Taiwan. Fortunately he is still only 12 so tey can’t get their claws into him yet. Stoicism suggests I focus on things I can control and I can control whether or not I fulfill my purpose and my duties to my family.
You may have heard a saying which goes something along the lines of, “If I told you what I did for a living I’d have to kill you” but while there would be consequences to me if I divulged confidences, the fact of the matter is that if I told you what I did for a living, I wouldn’t need to kill you because you’d die from boredom. That’s the nature of the deluge of inconsequential corporate nonsense I have to deal with on a daily basis. And yes, I’m a landlord and yes, I engage in ecommerce, but I can assure you Glamor is not my middle name.
Who else can I discuss the long term consequences on the propensity of Rome to industrialize after the Antonine Plague or discuss whether or not Evan is a journalist or a spy? As a juror solely in the marketplace of ideas, I do suspect Evan was spying, but I digress, we’ll likely find out on some Military History Channel special 15 years from now, as long as this conflict doesn’t escalate into a nuclear confrontation.
Darf
Apr 19 2023 at 4:23pm
A search of Econlog shows that the only curry Econlog blogger to have mentioned Julian Assange is David Henderson. David does some pretty good work.
David Henderson
Apr 20 2023 at 11:57am
Thanks, Darf.
Jose Pablo
Apr 19 2023 at 7:25pm
This is why Russian “courts” are courts in name only. They are instruments of government policy.
From the news:
“In Texas, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk issued a nationwide injunction pausing the FDA’s approval, which is set to take effect in seven days.”
Who nonimated Judge Kacsmaryk? Senator Ted Cruz
From the news:
“Within hours of that decision, U.S. District Judge Thomas O. Rice issued a ruling in a separate case in Washington state, to block the FDA from pulling the drug from the market.”
Who nominated Judge Thomas O. Rice? President Barack Obama
Right, Russia seems to be the only place in the planet where courts are the “instruments of policy”
“they widely consider an impartial justice system as one of the essential institutions of a free and free-market society.”
I wonder why brilliant minds keep thinking that such a thing as an “impartial judge” is even possible. That animal, an “impartial judge”, belongs to the same category that “benevolent rulers” and “tasty English food”
If they are a “essential” institution for a free and free market society the corolary is that we are pretty much in a hopeless situation (which seems to be very much the case when empirical observations are taken into account).
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 19 2023 at 10:00pm
José: I tend to share your pessimism (or at least I used to). But even in a perfectly free society–imagine de Jasay’s “capitalist state”–lower judges would often temporarily disagree in their search to find out if such or such a government policy violates the basic rules necessary for the maintenance of the spontaneous order.
Jose Pablo
Apr 20 2023 at 9:53am
Well, when the disagreement is totally predictable with very little information (namely the political affiliation of the person nominating the judge) is difficult to sustain that they are “random disagreements” helping a reliable “truth seeking process”
It doesn’t seem that this “predictability of disagreements” is confined to “lower judges”, either. I bet you I can predict the position of most (if not all) judges of SCOTUS in any, even slightly, politically charged issue.
Same way that “we” developed a political system that was not based on the idea of a “benevolent ruler”, we need a system that does not require “impartial judges”. The “impartial justice” idea is as flawed as the Enlightened Despotism.
Theories based on the idea of “angels” playing a significant role in humans affairs are destined to fail
Jose Pablo
Apr 20 2023 at 10:03am
Imprisoning a journalist following a flawed, to say the least, judicial process is far from optimal.
But so it is threatening a random citizen with imprisonment if he/she refuses to pay an arbitrarily stablished amount of money to the same government that yields the threat.
Government thugs throwing you into jail following an arbitrary accusation are very close to government thugs threatening you to pay an arbitrary amount of money or else …
That happened to me just this week in the US
Craig
Apr 20 2023 at 12:24pm
“Imprisoning a journalist following a flawed, to say the least, judicial process is far from optimal.”
There’s things we don’t know about this situation of course, but let’s assume for a second that he is unequivocally a journalist, but let’s say that he also knows that the Russians can’t sustain tank production and will have to give up the ship in 3 months, but the Ukrainians don’t know this so, at least in theory, might negotiate on the basis that the Russians can sustain the conflict longer.
He might know something the Russians don’t want the Ukrainians to know. He’s effectively a POW of a conflict between the US and Russia that isn’t quite a de jure state of war.
At this juncture the Russians should operate on the presumption that any American dumb enough to be in Russia has a strong possibility of being associated with espionage. It’d be frankly foolish for them to actually take the chance otherwise. If I were Russian and I thought that there was a scintilla of a chance he was a spy, I’d lock him up right now. This honestly should not be looked at through the ordinary course of civil law, it should be seen through the lens of armed conflict and this is shockingly close to being a straight up conflict between NATO and Russia.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 20 2023 at 3:17pm
Craig: One may evaluate, make a judgement on, a situation by taking the current rules as given: “He must have known that jumping the Berlin Wall was risky. R.I.P.” Or, as Buchanan (if nobody else) has taught us to do, make a judgement on the rules of the game themselves: “These operating rules are tyrannical.”
Jose Pablo
Apr 20 2023 at 7:55pm
That’s precisely the point, Pierre.
You basically have two options:
a) Accept a “rule-based” system as far as the rules has been properly defined following the formalities contemplated in that particular system of enacting rules (in which case Craig is basically right and the existing Russian rule-based system has every right to judge Mr Gershkovich in its own “legal”terms)
or
b) Make a judgment on the rules of the game, which lead us to decide not what is “legal” but what is “just”. As Huemer puts it in “Justice before the Law”: “prosecutors, judges, lawyers and jury members ought to place justice before the law – for example, by refusing to enforce unjust laws or impose unjust sentences”
But if we follow this second path:
a) Then there is lots of things to criticized in the US system too (that was my point in the initial comment) and
b) it defeats the whole purpose of the “rule of law” which is providing an ex-ante predictable framework on the “legal” results of your actions
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 20 2023 at 10:01pm
Jose: Interesting contribution. If I read correctly your “second path” (b), I once thought like you–but I do not anymore on that crucial point. I take the rule of law as Hayek, that is, not meaning the rule of government commands (Putin’s “dictatorship of the law” and Pashukanis’s equivalent), but the rule of just laws, that is, impersonal and abstract laws in a sponaneous order. But then perhaps your “rule of law” in scare quotes amounts to the same as what I am saying.
Craig
Apr 21 2023 at 9:29am
Are we questioning the ‘rule’ or is this really just a question of fact. Assuming arguendo Evan is a spy, ie we know that as a GIVEN, would Russia have the power to police espionage in its borders? I would think so, most nations do and frankly at this juncture the Russian court is simply remanding him because he’d be an obvious flight risk.
Honestly it just seems to me that you don’t think he’s a spy and that you suspect Russia actually knows he’s not a spy and clearly I would agree that if he’s not a spy and the Russians know it they would be detaining Evan under false pretenses.
Pierre Lemieux
Apr 22 2023 at 12:03pm
Craig: First, let’s get rid of the useless “Russia”; we are talking about the Russian state, which is made of individuals responding to their own incentives given the institutional structure. I think we can then see that, to answer your opening question, the issue is a matter of fact resulting from the rules not allowing the search of the truth about facts. The Russian state is incapable of finding wheter Gershkovich is guilty of breaking Russian law or not because there is no law in Russia, just a power structure where the most powerful or ruthless wins and imposes what it wants to be “true.”
Assuming instead a situation where the law equally constrains the state, we could inquire about the rules that govern spying and counter-spying. Hayek is quite willing to grant much latitude to the state in its function of protecting the free society–perhapls too much; see my forthcoming Econlib review of the third volume of Law, Legislation, and Liberty.
Craig
Apr 20 2023 at 12:33pm
This even reminds me a bit of Star Trek movie where they had to go back in time to save a humpback whale and bring it to the future since somehow the humpback whales are able to communicate at interstellar distances and after their extinct whatever they were communicating with came back to Earth to find out why the whales weren’t communicating with them. In one scene Kirk, forgetting about the Cold War, sends the heavily Russian-accented English speaker Pavel Chekhov to do something which required him to find a USN nuclear powered vessel and of course it aroused instant suspicion when he was walking around and asking people in his Russian accented English, “I’m looking for the nuclear {w}essels” and of course he was instantly detained and brought to the brig for interrogation.
KevinT
Apr 21 2023 at 2:58pm
For those interested in delving a bit deeper into the workings of the Russian “legal” system, I recommend “Red Notice” by Bill Browder. It’s several years old, but is a terrifying and timeless story nonetheless.
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