Comment Of Sen.
Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.),
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
On DOJ Inspector General Glenn Fine’s Letter
Reporting That His Inquiry Will Examine
Attorney General Gonzales’ Testimony
August 30, 2007
“I am pleased that Department of
Justice Inspector General Glenn Fine will look into my concerns
about potentially false, misleading or inappropriate testimony by
the Attorney General. I look forward to the Inspector General’s
findings on the unprecedented firings of nine United States
Attorneys, the improper political hiring of career officials within
the Justice Department, the misuse of National Security Letters, and
the efforts to bypass the Department’s finding that a warrantless
surveillance program was without legal basis. These actions have
eroded the public’s trust and undermined morale within our justice
system, from the top ranks to the cop on the beat. The current
Attorney General is leaving, but these questions remain. It is
appropriate that the Inspector General will examine whether the
Attorney General was honest with this and other Congressional
committees about these crucial issues. His investigations can help
restore independence and accountability, which have been sorely
lacking at the Justice Department.”
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A copy of
Inspector General Fine’s letter, delivered today,
is available
as a pdf.
The text of
Chairman Leahy’s earlier letter (of
Aug. 16) to Inspector General Fine is below.
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August 16, 2007
Honorable Glenn A. Fine
Inspector General
The Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20530-0001
Dear Inspector General
Fine:
I am writing to ask that
you investigate and evaluate potential misleading, evasive, or
dishonest testimony by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales before the
Senate Judiciary Committee on July 24, 2007, and in previous
hearings before this and other congressional Committees. I have
identified numerous instances in which the Attorney General appears
to have contradicted his own previous testimony or the statements or
testimony of other senior officials, or where he appears to have
engaged in efforts to mislead. I have given him an opportunity to
clarify and revise his testimony, but he has not meaningfully
addressed our significant concerns.
I ask that you review
the Attorney General’s testimony and compare it with other testimony
and evidence to determine whether his testimony was in any instances
intentionally false, misleading, or inappropriate. Consistent with
your jurisdiction, please do not limit your inquiry to whether or
not the Attorney General has committed any criminal violations.
Rather, I ask that you look into whether the Attorney General, in
the course of his testimony, engaged in any misconduct, engaged in
conduct inappropriate for a cabinet officer and the nation’s chief
law enforcement officer, or violated any duty – including the duty
set out in federal regulations for government officials to avoid any
conduct which gives the appearance of a violation of law or of
ethical standard, regardless of whether there is an actual violation
of law.
Potential misleading
statements that you may wish to examine include, but are not limited
to the following instances:
1.
Attorney General Gonzales testified on July 24, 2007, that the “Gang
of Eight,” consisting of members of Congress, told him that “despite
the recommendation of the Deputy Attorney General,” who as Acting
Attorney General had found a warrantless surveillance program to be
without legal basis, the government should “go forward with these
very important intelligence activities.” According to press
accounts, at least three members of Congress who were present for
the described meeting dispute the testimony that they recommended
proceeding with the program over the Acting Attorney General’s
objections.
2.
Attorney General Gonzales testified before the Senate Judiciary
Committee on February 6, 2006, that neither former Deputy Attorney
General James Comey nor other officials had concerns about the
Terrorist Surveillance Program (TSP) that was confirmed by the
President. In a June 5, 2007, press conference, Attorney General
Gonzales stated that a dispute with Mr. Comey concerned this very
program, though he later retracted that statement. At his July 24
hearing, Attorney General Gonzales said that there was no dissent
about the TSP, and that the disagreement concerned “other
intelligence activities.” Numerous officials, including members of
the “Gang of Eight” and FBI Director Robert Mueller have indicated
that the disputes did concern the TSP, and that there was only one
program. Attorney General Gonzales in an August 1, 2007, letter to
me set out a legalistic explanation stating that the disputed
activities and the TSP were separate components of a single program.
3.
Attorney General Gonzales said in April 27, 2005, testimony before
the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence with regard to National
Security Letters (NSLs) and other information-gathering techniques
that statutory civil liberties safeguards had been effective and
that “[t]here has not been one verified case of civil liberties
abuse.” Similarly, his responses to written questions following his
April 19, 2007, Senate Judiciary Committee hearing indicated that he
had not learned of problems with NSLs prior to your March 2007
report on the issue. Documents obtained in a Freedom of Information
Act lawsuit indicated that the Attorney General had in fact received
numerous reports in 2005 and 2006 of violations in connection with
NSLs and other surveillance tools. The Attorney General in his July
24 testimony suggested that his prior testimony and answers were
premised on the fact that he was not aware of any “intentional”
violations. The Washington Post
has reported that at least one intentional violation was reported in
the relevant time period.
4.
In
March press appearances, Attorney General Gonzales said that he had
not been involved in deliberations as to which United States
Attorneys should be fired. Documents and testimony obtained by the
Senate Judiciary Committee showed that the Attorney General attended
a November 27, 2006, meeting at which the firings were approved. In
subsequent testimony, Attorney General Gonzales has taken
responsibility for the firings and said that he attended this
meeting, but he has maintained that he does not know who was
responsible for selecting the names of U.S. Attorneys to be fired
and does not remember what was said at the November 27 meeting. He
has at times placed primary responsibility for which U.S. Attorneys
were selected to be fired on his former Chief of Staff Kyle Sampson
and former Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty, each of whom denies
making the determinations.
5.
In his
April 19, 2007, testimony, Attorney General Gonzales said, “I
haven’t talked to witnesses because of the fact that I haven’t
wanted to interfere with this investigation.” In May 23, 2007,
testimony to the House Judiciary Committee, former White House
liaison Monica Goodling testified that the Attorney General had a
discussion with her that made her “uncomfortable” in which he set
out his version of events regarding the process of firing U.S.
Attorneys and asked for her reaction. In his July 24 testimony,
Attorney General Gonzales said he had a conversation with Goodling
“to console and reassure an emotionally distraught woman” and to
“reassure her that as far as I knew, no one had done anything
intentionally wrong here.”
These and other examples
suggest a possible pattern of misleading answers and an effort to
avoid disclosing the full truth. I look forward to your review and
report as to the propriety of the Attorney General’s testimony.
Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
PATRICK
LEAHY
Chairman
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