Posted on 01/13/2017 12:09:08 PM PST by Red Steel
The Justice Departments inspector general has announced that his office will conduct a review that will focus principally on FBI director James Comeys public statements regarding the Clinton e-mails investigation during the 2016 campaign.
These were the three highly unusual announcements describing the status of the investigation in which no charges were filed: (1) the detailed presentation on July 5 of: the evidence uncovered against Hillary Clinton, a legal analysis of the applicable criminal statute, Comeys determination that an indictment was not warranted, and his opinion that no reasonable prosecutor could disagree with his assessment; (2) the October 28 letter to Congress indicating that the Clinton e-mails case was being reopened owing to newly discovered evidence (derived from the separate investigation of disgraced former representative Anthony Weiner [D., N.Y.], and specifically from a computer shared by Weiner and his estranged wife, Clinton aide Huma Abedin); and, finally, (3) the announcement on November 6 virtually the eve of the election reaffirming Comeys decision (announced July 5) not to seek an indictment.
It is undoubtedly appropriate for Michael Horowitz, DOJs inspector general, to consider whether these actions departed from law-enforcement protocols as I have previously explained. But it is worth noting what the IG will not be reviewing: the Justice Departments conduct.
The IGs press release makes no mention of the Justice Departments decision not to open a grand-jury investigation, despite significant concrete evidence of criminal wrongdoing the decision that deprived the FBI of the use of subpoenas to compel the production of evidence. Neither will the IG be reviewing the multiple irregular immunity agreements granted by the Justice Department in a case in which no criminal charges were filed, including agreements that reportedly called for the destruction of evidence (laptop computers of top Clinton aides) after a strangely limited examination of their potentially incriminating contents.
There will similarly be no inquiry into why the Justice Department allowed subjects of the investigation (who had been granted immunity from prosecution) to appear as lawyers for the main subject of the investigation despite ethical and statutory prohibitions on such conduct. Nor, evidently, will the IG be probing why the attorney general furtively met with the spouse of the main subject of the investigation the spouse who just happens to be the president who launched the attorney general to national prominence by appointing her as a district U.S. attorney in the Nineties on an airport tarmac just days before Mrs. Clinton submitted to a perfunctory FBI interview, after which came Comeys announcement that charges would not be filed.
According to the press release, the IG will be looking at other matters related to the Clinton investigation. These include: whether the FBIs deputy director should have been recused because his wife had been sponsored in a run for public office by Clinton insider Terry McAuliffe; whether FBI and DOJ officials improperly disclosed non-public information; and whether the FBIs response to a Freedom of Information Act request which included information about President Clintons infamous Marc Rich pardon was timed (the week before the election) to damage Mrs. Clintons campaign.
It appears that the decisions that actually tanked the Clinton investigation will not be scrutinized.
Nevertheless, it appears that the decisions that actually tanked the Clinton investigation will not be scrutinized. The IG would likely say that those matters are related to the exercise of prosecutorial authority, and are thus best left to Justices Office of Professional Responsibility. But of course, OPR reports directly to the attorney general. Only the IG has authority to investigate independent of DOJ supervision.
Horowitz, a very fine lawyer and prosecutor who (like Jim Comey and yours truly) was an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York for several years, was appointed Justices IG by President Obama in 2012. I suspect the Trump administration will want its own appointee. In a show of bipartisanship in 2001, President Bush retained Glenn Fine, the IG President Clinton had appointed shortly before leaving office; thereafter, Fine aggressively investigated Bushs Justice Department . . . and was retained by Obama until retiring in late 2010 ultimately to be replaced by Horowitz.
It is unlikely that Trump will want to repeat that history. Look for the Justice Department to have its first Republican-appointed IG in decades. Assuming that happens, we will have to see whether the review announced today proceeds as planned and whether, if it does, its scope is altered.
What we do know is that there has been a stark difference between the Obama Justice Departments kid-gloves treatment of FBI investigations touching on the Democratic presidential nominee, and the aggressive approach (including FISA warrants, as I discussed in Wednesdays column) that DOJ took on investigations touching on the Republican presidential nominee. Ill have more to say about that over the weekend.
And the FBI should investigate the CIA.
Is this IG going to be in office after Jan. 20th? At what point is Sessions going to be in charge?
So the focus of the investigation is Comey, not Hillary?
I really hate these Obamaite a-holes.
Draining the swamp requires....well....you know....draining.
[Is this IG going to be in office after Jan. 20th? At what point is Sessions going to be in charge?]
To replace the IG Trump would appoint a new IG who must be confirmed by the Senate.
FROM USDOJ/OIG
The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) in the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is a statutorily created independent entity whose mission is to detect and deter waste, fraud, abuse, and misconduct in DOJ programs and personnel, and to promote economy and efficiency in those programs. The OIG investigates alleged violations of criminal and civil laws by DOJ employees and also audits and inspects DOJ programs. The Inspector General, who is appointed by the President subject to Senate confirmation, reports to the Attorney General and Congress.
https://oig.justice.gov/about/
If they take Comey down, I hope he drags a lot of people with him,especially Lynch.
My thoughts exactly. Then have the new guy just go after ALL of them.
What deception. DOJ is a huge part of the problem. They did not uphold USConstitutional law. They have become a dangerous gang of hired oppressors of truth and justice.
Not this week, anyway.
That’s until President Trump decides the whole thing is too much of a jumble and appoints a special prosecutor.....
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