TRUMP CONSIDERED NAMING NEW AG TO PUSH VOTER FRAUD CLAIMS

                 …Trump looking guilty about his lies about his stolen election


The DOJ told former Trump officials they can answer questions from the U.S. Congress


The current Department of Justice has told several former Trump administration officials that they can answer questions from Congress about former efforts of the former president to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

The letters are being sent to former officials who were asked to testify or answer further questions from the House Oversight and Senate Judiciary committees.  This is according to the new Justice Department.

The Senate committee, for example, has notified witnesses that it is looking into reports of “an alleged plot between then-President Donald Trump and then-acting Assistant Attorney General of the Civil Division, Jeffrey Bossert Clark, to use the Department of Justice to further Trump’s efforts to subvert the results of the 2020 presidential election.”

The Justice Department is informing the former officials that while it typically resists such congressional inquiries and even asserts executive privilege, this one is different.  This is according to one of the letters sent to Jeffrey Rosen, who was acting attorney general after William Barr stepped down in late December.

The extraordinary events in this matter constitute exceptional circumstances warranting an accommodation to Congress in this case,” the letter to Rosen said. It added that the current White House agrees, and that “President Biden has decided that it would not be appropriate to assert executive privilege” on this issue.

Similar letters from the Justice Department were sent to Richard Donoghue, who was acting deputy attorney general after Barr stepped down.  Also, at least four other department officials, including Clark and Patrick Hovakimian, who was Jeffrey Rosen's chief of staff, and former U.S. attorneys Byung Jin Pak and Bobby Christine.

Former officials have said Hovakimian tried to block efforts to remove Rosen for not launching investigations based on Trump's claims of election fraud.  Pak was the U.S. attorney in Atlanta who resigned after Trump condemned authorities in Georgia for not investigating his election fraud claims.  Christine was U.S. attorney in southern Georgia and was named by Trump to replace Pak in an acting capacity after he resigned.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin, D-Ill., welcomed the department's approval letters.

“The Committee has been pushing DOJ for this waiver for months. Now that we have it, we’ll proceed to interview relevant witnesses ASAP so we can get to the bottom of this plot to enlist DOJ in Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election,” he said in a Tweet.

The chairwoman of the House Oversight Committee, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said the letters will help speed up the committee’s work.

“I expect prompt cooperation from these witnesses, and I am committed to getting to the bottom of the previous administration’s attempts to subvert the Justice Department and reverse a free and fair election,” she said.

What is very interesting, the letter was sent by Bradley Weinsheimer, who is a senior career Justice Department official who was elevated to his position by Jeff Sessions, President Donald Trump's first attorney general.

Many of these former officials were earlier given approval to testify about the Justice Department’s planning for and response to the Capitol riot. “That authorization remains in effect,” the letter said.

This could get very interesting as these people will all be under the threat of being tried for not telling the truth if they lied during Congressional questioning.

Copyright G. Ater 2021

 

 

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