Senate Judiciary Committee Authorizes
Chairman Leahy
To Issue Subpoenas As Part Of Panel’s Ongoing Investigation
Into Mass Firings Of
Prosecutors
Panel
Approves Authorization To
Compel White House And
Justice
Dept.
Documents, Officials
WASHINGTON (Thursday, April 12) -- The Senate
Judiciary Committee on Thursday authorized Chairman Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt.), in consultation with Ranking Member Arlen Specter
(R-Pa.), to issue subpoenas for documents from the White House and the
Department of Justice relating to the panel’s ongoing investigation into the
mass firings and
replacements of eight prosecutors last year.
“We continue to seek cooperation from the
Administration as we try to get to the bottom of an apparent abuse of power
that has allowed politics to corrupt federal law enforcement,” said Leahy.
“There remain several obstacles to the ability of the investigating
committees
to learn the truth about what occurred with these firings and why. The
selectivity and incompleteness of the highly redacted set of documents we
have received so far from the Department of Justice present one set of
obstacles.”
Leahy continued:
“The refusal of the White House to provide relevant documents
and access to White House staff who played a role in these firings and
replacements are other
obstacles.
The announcement by the White House last night that they and
the Republican National Committee have lost an undisclosed number of
relevant emails that political operatives were using on RNC accounts
presents yet another obstacle. I am beginning to wonder whether the White
House has any interest in the American people learning the truth about these
matters.”
The authorization approved Thursday covers all
documents in the possession, control or custody of the Department of Justice
and the White House related to the committee’s ongoing investigation.
Another authorization for subpoenas was approved by the committee for J.
Scott Jennings, Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Director of
Political Affairs; and William E. Moschella, Principal Associate Deputy
Attorney General.
The Committee is expected to vote on a similar
authorization next week for Sara M. Taylor, Deputy Assistant to the
President and Director of Political Affairs.
Below is Chairman Leahy’s statement from the
Committee’s Executive Business Meeting earlier today.
Statement Of Senator
Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Committee On The Judiciary
Executive Business Meeting
April 12, 2007


Today, the Committee proceeds to consider
authorizations for subpoenas in connection with our investigations into the
mass firings of U.S. Attorneys around the country. The Committee is seeking
a more thorough production of relevant documents from the Department of
Justice, documents from the White House and testimony of William Moschella,
who is currently at the Department of Justice, and Scott Jennings, who
remains a deputy of Karl Rove at the White House.
We continue to seek cooperation from the
Administration as we try to get to the bottom of an apparent abuse of power
that has allowed politics to corrupt federal law enforcement. There remain
several obstacles to the ability of the investigating Committees to learn
the truth about what occurred with these firings and why. The selectivity
and incompleteness of the highly redacted set of documents we have received
so far from the Department of Justice present one set of obstacles. The
refusal of the White House to provide relevant documents and access to White
House staff who played a role in these firings and replacements are others.
The announcement by the White House last night that they and the Republican
National Committee have lost an undisclosed number of relevant e-mails that
political operatives were using on RNC accounts presents yet another
obstacle. I am beginning to wonder whether the White House has any interest
in the American people learning the truth about these matters.
By authorizing subpoenas for documents and for
two more individuals shown to be involved through testimony and documents
obtained in the course of the investigation, the Committee maintains its
flexibility so that we can do a thorough investigation not only into the
firing of the U.S. attorneys, but also into the politicization of the entire
process for hiring and firing them.
Next week we are scheduled to hold another
oversight hearing with Attorney General Gonzales. Since his last testimony
before the Committee, we have heard sworn testimony from former United
States Attorneys forced from office and from D. Kyle Sampson, until last
month the Attorney General’s chief of staff. That testimony sharply
contradicted the accounts of the plan to replace U.S. Attorneys testified to
by the Attorney General on January 18, 2007 and by Deputy Attorney General
McNulty on February 6, 2007, as well as the denials of involvement from the
White House and from the Attorney General’s March 13, 2007 press
conference.
A growing number of Senators, both Republican
and Democratic, have called for the Attorney General’s resignation. Likewise
Members of the House of Representatives and other current and former public
officials, both Republican and Democratic, have called for his resignation.
The President determines the standard of conduct, candor, competence and
effectiveness for his Administration. President Bush and his spokespeople
continue to tell the American people that the Attorney General enjoys his
confidence and support, so the Attorney General must represent the standards
this President expects.
I want the American people to have a Justice
Department and United States Attorneys offices that enforce the law without
regard to political influence and partisanship. I want the American people
to have confidence in federal law enforcement and I want our federal law
enforcement officers to have the independence they need to be effective and
merit the trust of the American people.
What we have heard from the Administration has
been a series of shifting explanations and excuses and a lack of
accountability or acknowledgement of the seriousness of this matter. The
answers to our questions from the Attorney General and the Deputy Attorney
General at their hearings earlier this year, as well as statements from
White House spokespeople and other Justice Department officials have been
contradicted by the testimony of the former U. S. Attorneys and the limited
emails and other documents we have obtained from the Department of Justice.
Despite the initial denials of White House involvement, it is now apparent
that White House officials were involved in the planning and execution of
the firings, the consideration of replacements, and the subsequent
misleading explanations from Justice officials.
Our investigation is an important one and we
should not limit its scope or prejudge its outcome. We need to follow the
facts and get to the truth.
We have still received no response from White
House Counsel Fred Fielding to three letters we have sent him since his
unacceptable “take it or leave it” offer of March 20. That proposal would
unacceptably constrain our ability to investigate and deny the American
people what they want and deserve, namely the public testimony of the White
House staff who were involved in this affair.
On March 22, 10 Members of this Committee
responded to Mr. Fielding’s March 20 letter and invited the White House to
agree to provide the investigating Committees of the Congress, both House
and Senate, with access to witnesses, information and relevant documents.
On March 28, House Judiciary Chairman Conyers and I sent a letter to Mr.
Fielding asking him to reconsider his “all or nothing” approach with respect
to documents. He had identified documents that the White House was willing
to provide, and we urged him to provide those documents to us without delay
so as to narrow our dispute and further the investigation.
Last Thursday, I sent Mr. Fielding another
letter, asking him to provide us the materials and information about
“reviews by the White House staff” that have led the President to conclude
publicly that there was no wrongdoing and nothing inappropriate. The White
House cannot have it both ways. If they wanted to remain silent, they
should have. They have not. Instead, they proclaim their conclusion that
based on their internal reviews nothing bad happened but then withhold from
Congress the information, facts, documents and witnesses we need to make
evaluations of the matter.
There has been no response to these three
letters. To date, we have received no documents from the White House and no
testimony of any White House personnel.
The Washington Post column
earlier this week was correct to note: “Fielding
couched his March 20 offer in take-it-or-leave-it terms -- and then promptly
left.”
The President acknowledged at his press
conference on March 20 that Congress is examining these questions and “the
role the White House played in the resignations of these U.S. attorneys.”
He said that he recognized the importance of our “understanding how and why
this decision was made.” He indicated that the White House would be making
the relevant White House staff available and providing relevant documents.
Despite his indicating that we would be provided with information from the
White House, that has not happened.
Despite this lack of cooperation, the
President and White House surrogates assert publicly that there was no
wrongdoing. With all due respect to President Bush, we need to know who was
involved in conducting “the reviews by the White House staff,” what did they
examine, who did they interview, and what documents did they review in
coming to the conclusion that no one did anything “improper.” What other
investigations and reviews has the Administration undertaken into this
matter? Who was involved in conducting those investigations and reviews,
what did they examine, who did they interview, and what documents did they
review in coming to the conclusion that there is no evidence of wrongdoing?
What evidence of wrongdoing has the Administration rejected as “not
credible” in the course of its investigations and reviews into these
matters?
The dismissed U.S. attorneys have testified
under oath and said in public that they believe political influence was
applied. They have given chapter and verse and specific examples. If they
are right, that mixing of partisan political goals into federal law
enforcement is highly improper. What has led the Administration to discount
that testimony?
What has led it to discount the March 29
testimony of D. Kyle Sampson, former Chief of Staff to the Attorney General,
that the Attorney General and White House officials including Karl Rove and
former White House Counsel Harriet Miers were deeply involved in the
decision to fire and replace certain U.S. Attorneys, who, according to
internal evaluations and performance reviews, had been doing their jobs
well? The testimony of Mr. Sampson, corroborated by documents released by
the Department, demonstrated that, contrary to the Attorney General’s
statements, Attorney General Gonzales had talked to Mr. Sampson about the
plan to fire prosecutors many times dating back at least two years,
beginning after the 2004 election when he was still the White House counsel.
What has led it to discount Mr. Sampson’s
testimony that Karl Rove complained to the Attorney General about U.S.
Attorneys not being aggressive enough against “voter fraud” in three
jurisdictions and that those three names were added to the list of U.S.
Attorneys targeted for removal? Documents and the testimony of Mr. Sampson
have shown that Mr. Iglesias was held in high regard and even mentioned for
possible promotion to the highest levels of the Department in 2004 and 2005,
until late in 2006. At that time, Administration officials received calls
from New Mexico Republican lawmakers upset that Mr. Iglesias would not hurry
an investigation in order to indict Democrats before the 2006 elections.
Then Mr. Rove apparently spoke to the Attorney General and David Iglesias
was added to the list for replacement.
What has led the Administration to
discount Mr. Sampson’s testimony that he had suggested to the White
House that Patrick Fitzgerald be fired and replaced in the middle of the
investigation and prosecution in connection with the leaking of Valerie
Plame’s identity as an undercover CIA agent? This investigation led to the
conviction of I. Lewis Libby, the former Chief of Staff to the Vice
President, for perjury, lying and obstruction of justice.
What has led the Administration to discount
documents showing that discussions began at the highest levels of the
Justice Department about the “real problem with Carol Lam,” former U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of California, immediately following
notice of the expansion of the public corruption probe Ms. Lam was leading
into the activities of Republican Rep. Randy (“Duke”) Cunningham and other
Republican officials? What about documents and testimony showing that John
McKay, former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Washington, was
highly praised by Mr. Sampson and others in the Administration and supported
by them for a judgeship as late as the summer of 2006, but was included in
the list of people to fire later in 2006? Documents and Mr. McKay’s
testimony suggest that Republicans were upset with Mr. McKay for his
decision not to intervene in connection with the close 2004 gubernatorial
election in Washington.
What about the testimony of Deputy Attorney
General Paul McNulty that former Eastern District of Arkansas U.S. Attorney
H.E. “Bud” Cummins, III was removed to make room for Tim Griffin, a former
operative for Karl Rove? Or the documents that demonstrate this was done
over the objection of home state Senators and with an intent to circumvent
Senate confirmation?
Those who seek to justify the firings in order
to more vigorously investigate “voter fraud” have yet to counter the recent
testimony of FBI Director Mueller to the Senate Judiciary Committee that he
was not aware of any voter fraud cases that should have been brought but
were not, nor had any FBI agents or officials brought such complaints to his
attention.
This investigation stems from this Committee’s
jurisdiction and responsibilities to the Senate and the American people.
Under the Senate’s Organizing Resolution and Standing Rules, the Judiciary
Committee has the authority to conduct oversight and investigations related
to the Department of Justice and U.S. attorneys’ offices. We have the
authority to examine whether inaccurate or incomplete testimony was provided
to the Committee, to consider legislation within our jurisdiction, and to
protect our role in evaluating nominations pursuant to the Senate’s
constitutional responsibility to provide advice and consent. Indeed, it was
in light of this jurisdiction, the confirmation power vested in the Senate,
and the jurisdiction of this Committee over the review of U.S. attorney
nominations, our Ranking Member observed early on that we have “primary”
responsibility to investigate this matter.
I hope that Republicans and Democrats on the
Committee will support these authorizations so that the Committee can
maintain the flexibility to obtain access to the documents and witnesses it
needs to continue with this important investigation and get answers to
important questions.
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