Leahy Urges White House To Work With
Congress
To Accommodate For Testimony, Documents
About U.S. Attorney Firings And Politicization Of The Department Of
Justice
MONTPELIER, Vt. (August 14, 2007) – Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) Tuesday sent a letter
to President Bush urging him to work with Committee members to reach a
final agreement for the testimony of key officials in the ongoing
investigation into the mass firings of federal prosecutors and the
politicization of hiring and firing within the Department of Justice.
The Leahy letter requests a meeting with President
Bush to discuss the firings, in which evidence indicates White House
political operatives were involved. The White House has prevented key
officials, including Karl Rove, from appearing before congressional
oversight committees, and has limited the testimony of others with
claims of executive privilege.
The text of the letter is below. It
is also available as a PDF document.
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August 14, 2007
The Honorable George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Mr. President:
For the last several
months, I have been seeking the voluntary cooperation of the White House
with the efforts of the Senate Judiciary Committee to get to the bottom
of the scandal surrounding the firing of so many of the United States
Attorneys you had appointed. If, as the testimony has indicated, this
is about extending improper political influence into our justice system
and then misleading Congress and the American people about that
political corruption of law enforcement, I hope you would agree this is
a grave matter.
The accumulated evidence
shows that the list of those to be fired was compiled based on input
from the political ranks in the White House and that the reasons
publicly given for these firings were contrived as part of a cover up.
Recently during his sworn testimony, Attorney General Gonzales himself
contrasted these politically-motivated firings with the replacement of
other United States Attorneys for “legitimate cause.”
I have sent numerous
letters to your White House counsel to no avail. For example, in a May
16 letter to Fred Fielding I outlined some of the indications of Karl
Rove’s involvement. Yet, all of my good faith efforts have been
rebuffed. The stonewalling leaves me and the Senate Judiciary Committee
with few options other than considering citations for contempt of
Congress against those who have refused to provide relevant testimony
and documents to the Congress.
Senator Specter has
urged me to write to you directly and suggest that we sit down together
to work out our differences with respect to this matter. That is the
purpose of this letter.
Respectfully,
PATRICK LEAHY
Chairman
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