JUSTICE DEPARTMENT Administration Withheld E-Mails About Rove By Murray Waas, National Journal
© National Journal Group Inc.
Thursday,
May 10, 2007
The Bush administration has withheld a series of e-mails from Congress showing that
senior White House and Justice Department officials worked together to conceal the role of Karl Rove in installing
Timothy Griffin, a protégé of Rove's, as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
The withheld records
show that D. Kyle Sampson, who was then-chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales,
consulted with White House officials in drafting two letters to Congress that appear to have misrepresented the circumstances
of Griffin's appointment as U.S. attorney and of Rove's role in supporting Griffin.
In one of the letters that Sampson
drafted, dated February 23, 2007, the Justice Department told four Senate Democrats it was not aware of any role played by
senior White House adviser Rove in attempting to name Griffin to the U.S. attorney post. A month later, the Justice Department
apologized in writing to the Senate Democrats for the earlier letter, saying it had been inaccurate in denying that Rove had
played a role.
Brad Berenson, an attorney for Sampson, said in an interview that his client did not
intend to mislead Congress. Sampson, he said, signed off on the February 23 letter based on representations made by the White
House that it was accurate.
The withheld e-mails show that Sampson's draft was forwarded for review to Chris
Oprison, an associate White House counsel, who approved the language saying that Justice was not aware of Rove having
played any role in supporting Griffin. But an earlier e-mail from Sampson to Oprison that has already been made public indicates
that the two men discussed Rove and then-White House Counsel Harriet Miers as being at the forefront of Griffin's
nomination.
| | Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania,
the ranking Republican on the committee, said he was infuriated that he knew nothing of the existence of the order. | |
| |
| |
Several of the e-mails that the Bush administration is withholding
from Congress, as well as papers from the White House counsel's office describing other withheld documents, were made available
to National Journal by a senior executive branch official, who said that the administration has inappropriately kept
many of them from Congress.
The senior official said that Gonzales, in preparing for testimony before Congress, has
personally reviewed the withheld records and has a responsibility to make public any information he has about efforts by his
former chief of staff, other department aides, and White House officials to conceal Rove's role.
"If [Gonzales]
didn't know everything that was going on when it went down, that is one thing," this official said. "But he knows
and understands chapter and verse. If there was an effort within Justice and the White House to mislead Congress, it is his
duty to disclose that to Congress. As the country's chief law enforcement official, he has a higher duty to disclose than
to protect himself or the administration."
White House spokesman Tony Fratto denied that the
White House was withholding records in the Justice Department's possession, and he said that Gonzales could make many of them
public at any time. "The White House is neither guiding nor directing the Justice Department's decisions on privileged
documents," Fratto said. "They make those decisions on their own."
Two senior administration officials
told National Journal they were frustrated with decisions by Gonzales not to release some of the documents held by
the Justice Department. One of the officials charged that "Gonzales is doing this to save his own neck," at the
expense of the administration. The same official said that senior aides to Gonzales have been refusing to turn over many relevant
documents to Congress, and that the attorney general's top aides have been selectively leaking portions of them to the media
to portray themselves in a favorable light.
Last week, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt., subpoenaed the Justice Department, demanding all e-mails between department officials and Rove and others at the White
House regarding the firings of eight U.S. attorneys.
In a May 2 letter to Gonzales, Leahy said that the committee was
subpoenaing the records because "the department's production of documents has been selective and incomplete.... In addition,
to date, the department has yet to provide the committee with... any assurance that a preservation order was issued to prevent
the loss or destruction of documents."
Separately, six senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee -- three Democrats
and three Republicans -- complained to Gonzales last week that they had not been told anything about a confidential order he signed in March 2006, which delegated the authority to hire and fire many of the department's most senior political appointees
to Sampson and to Monica Goodling, who at the time was the Justice Department's liaison to the White House.
Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the committee, said he was infuriated
that he knew nothing of the existence of the order until it was disclosed by National Journal.
"Pardon
me if I raise my voice," Specter said.
Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd denied that the
department was withholding any records from Congress to conceal wrongdoing by administration officials. "The Justice
Department has already turned over 6,000 pages of documents and e-mails to House and Senate committees and voluntarily provided
for interviews of numerous senior DOJ officials," Boyd said.
In earlier correspondence with Congress, the department
said it had not turned over many documents that Congress had requested because of "confidentiality and privacy"
concerns; it also said it would not turn over documents related to answering queries from Congress and the press about the
U.S. attorney firings.
Fratto, the White House spokesperson, said, "No White House documents are available except
under the conditions offered by White House counsel Fred Fielding to the Judiciary committees." Fielding
has offered to allow Congress to interview Rove and other White House officials on the condition that they wouldn't be required
to provide formal testimony under oath and that no transcript would be made of what they said. Fratto said that if Congress
agreed to those conditions, the White House "would make available the relevant documents at that time."
In the interim, Fratto said, "the White House retains its rights and privileges over those documents."
A
senior Justice Department official said in an interview that it was the discovery of a December 19, 2006, e-mail from Sampson
to Oprison -- in which Sampson wrote that "getting [Griffin] appointed was important" to Rove and to then-White
House Counsel Harriet Miers -- that prompted the Justice Department to repudiate the February 23 letter to four Senate Democrats.
The February 23 letter, signed by acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Hertling, stated, "The
department is not aware of Karl Rove playing any role in the decision to appoint Mr. Griffin," and added that the department
"is not aware of anyone lobbying, either inside or outside of the administration, for Mr. Griffin's appointment."
Sampson testified before Congress that he drafted the February 23 letter even though he had conferred with the White
House about appointing Griffin. Sampson testified that he included the language about Rove not being involved because he didn't
know for a fact that Rove was pushing for his former aide's appointment.
"I knew that [Rove deputies] Sara
Taylor and Scott Jennings had expressed interest in promoting Mr. Griffin for appointment to be
U.S. attorney, and I assumed, because they reported to Karl Rove, that he was interested in that," Sampson said in testimony
to the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 29. "But later in February, when I participated in the drafting of that [February
23] letter, I did not remember then ever having talked to Mr. Rove about it. I don't remember now ever having talked to Mr.
Rove about it. I'm not sure whether Mr. Rove was supportive of Mr. Griffin's appointment."
Berenson, Sampson's
attorney, says that Sampson consulted with the White House before including the language in the February 23 letter to Congress
that the Justice Department was "not aware of Karl Rove playing a role in the decision to appoint Mr. Griffin."
Berenson said, "Kyle didn't want to traffic in assumptions, so he circulated the letter to the White House for confirmation
whether what he believed to be true was accurate or not. He drafted the letter according to his understanding of the facts,
and he circulated it beforehand to other people for clearance to assure that it accorded with their understanding of the facts."
The withheld e-mails obtained by National Journal show that on February 23, as he was working on a final
draft of the letter, Sampson consulted with Oprison. "Chris, please review this version," Sampson asked in one e-mail
regarding the draft.
Fratto, the White House spokesman, said in an interview that Oprison "had no reason to believe"
that the reference to Rove was inaccurate and cleared the letter. Asked about the December 19 e-mail in which Sampson told
Oprison that Griffin's appointment was important to Rove and Miers, Fratto said: "Chris did not recall Karl's interest
when he reviewed the letter."
A congressional investigator questioned whether the White House counsel's office
would sign off on the letter without asking Rove himself whether it was accurate. The investigator also noted that publicly
released Justice Department records show that Taylor and Jennings, both top aides to Rove, worked closely with Griffin to
have him installed as U.S. attorney. In response Fratto said: "We have no record of that letter ever leaving the White
House counsel's office."
Oprison, in turn, consulted with White House Counsel Fred Fielding and Deputy White
House Counsel Bill Kelley in approving the draft of the letter, according to White House records.
Sampson
also played a central role in the drafting of a January 31, 2007, letter from acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Hertling
to Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., implying that the White House had never contemplated using an obscure provision
in the USA PATRIOT Act that would allow it to install Griffin as a U.S. attorney without having Griffin undergo Senate confirmation. Gonzales and
Sampson have since testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that they did indeed consider using the PATRIOT Act to install
Griffin as a federal prosecutor.
The withheld records show that Oprison assisted Sampson in drafting the January 31
letter. Previously disclosed Justice Department records show that Sampson and Oprison had worked closely together in devising
the original plan to install Griffin as U.S. attorney under the PATRIOT Act provisions.
Bud Cummins,
who was fired as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas to make room for Griffin, has told the House Judiciary
Committee that he personally contacted senior Justice Department officials on January 19, 2007, the day after Gonzales testified
to Congress on the firing of Cummins and seven other U.S. attorneys.
Cummins said he warned department officials of
very serious "misleading statements" about the U.S. attorney firings. Foremost among his concerns was that Gonzales
had said that the Justice Department would never utilize the PATRIOT Act to install new U.S. attorneys by circumventing the
Senate confirmation process. Cummins wrote the House Judiciary Committee that he believed that Gonzales's testimony was incorrect
because both Griffin and a senior Justice Department official had told him that consideration had indeed been given to using
the PATRIOT Act.
A senior Justice Department official told him, Cummins said, that using the PATRIOT Act to install
Griffin "might have been the White House plan," but the White House had "never read DOJ into that plan."
Cummins said he replied, "If that was the case, then we had better gag Tim Griffin, because Griffin was telling too many
people … that he could stay as [U.S. attorney] whether he was ever appointed or not."
Gonzales had testified
at the January 18 hearing: "Let me publicly sort of pre-empt perhaps a question you're going to ask me, and that is,
I am fully committed, as the administration's fully committed, to ensure that, with respect to every United States attorney
position in this country, we will have a presidentially appointed, Senate confirmed United States attorney.... I think a United
States attorney,... as the law enforcement leader, my representative in the community;... has greater imprimatur of authority,
if in fact that person's been confirmed by the Senate."
A senior Justice Department official said that the statement
was truthful because by then Gonzales had abandoned the idea of using the PATRIOT Act to permanently install Griffin, and
he was speaking about future appointments.
But despite Cummins's warning, Gonzales's testimony, and department officials'
own knowledge that the PATRIOT Act had been discussed as a way to install Griffin, senior Justice Department officials continued
to make claims to Congress that the Bush administration had never contemplated using the PATRIOT Act to bypass the confirmation
process.
On January 31, 2007, Hertling wrote Pryor to say that "not once" had the Bush "administration
sought to avoid the Senate confirmation process" by exploiting the PATRIOT Act. "As the Attorney General has stated
to you," Hertling wrote, "the Administration is committed to having a Senate confirmed United States Attorney for
all 94 districts. At no time has the Administration sought to avoid the Senate confirmation process by appointing an interim
United States Attorney and then refusing to move forward... on the selection, nomination and confirmation of a new United
States Attorney. Not once."
In drafting the letter, Sampson consulted with Sara Taylor, the White House political
director and an aide to Rove. Taylor had been aware of considerations that the PATRIOT Act might be invoked to permanently
install Griffin, according to withheld administration papers. In an e-mail -- among those that the Justice Department has
withheld from Congress -- Taylor wrote: "I'm concerned we imply that we'll pull down Griffin's nomination should Pryor
object."
The senior executive branch official who read the e-mail said it was significant because Taylor signed
off on the letter despite the fact that Taylor, Oprison, and other White House officials knew that the administration had
indeed considered using the PATRIOT Act to make Griffin a U.S. attorney.
Fratto said he believed that the e-mail showed
that Taylor wanted to use the Senate confirmation process to have Griffin made U.S. attorney without using the PATRIOT Act.
"We battle with the Senate with nominations every day," Fratto said. "It is very important to us.... That's
what Sara was saying: 'We shouldn't imply we're willing to walk away from the nomination.'"
Berenson said that
the letter was technically accurate because Sampson and Oprison never ultimately implemented the plan to install Griffin as
U.S. attorney through the PATRIOT Act provision. "The principals never adopted it, and it was never done," Berenson
said. "The statement in the letter is accurate."
Griffin faced an uphill battle to win Senate confirmation
because, in addition to having served as an aide to Rove, he had served as the research director of the Republican National
Committee in 2004, when he had been in charge of opposition research efforts against Democratic presidential nominee John
Kerry. He had been involved in similar efforts against Al Gore four years earlier as the RNC's deputy
research director.
Griffin's supporters have said that he was highly qualified to be a U.S. attorney because he had
served in the Judge Advocate General Corps in the U.S. Army Reserve, and briefly was a special assistant U.S. attorney.
Pryor
first raised questions about Cummins's departure as U.S. attorney. The senator had heard that, contrary to claims that Cummins
had resigned voluntarily, the prosecutor had been pushed out to make room for Griffin, Pryor's chief of staff Bob
Russell said in an interview.
Pryor later became suspicious that the Bush administration was attempting to
bypass the Senate confirmation process by invoking the PATRIOT Act. The special authority, granted to the president, allowed
interim U.S. attorneys to continue in their job indefinitely without Senate confirmation to help prosecute the war on terrorism.
Pryor, who had voted for the authority, was upset that the original purpose was now being abused to circumvent the
Senate and avoid a confirmation vote on politically contentious nominees such as Griffin. He was especially upset because
he had been one of only six Democratic senators to vote for Gonzales's confirmation-a vote that sparked criticism from liberal
interest groups. As he saw it, he had stuck his neck out for Gonzales with his vote.
On December 15, 2006, Pryor spoke
to then-White House Counsel Miers and Gonzales about the issue, Russell said. The discussion left Pryor with the impression
that if Griffin was named U.S. attorney, his name would be formally sent to the Senate for confirmation.
But White
House and Justice Department officials, afraid that Griffin would not be confirmed, asked Cummins to resign more quickly so
that they could name Griffin as an interim U.S. attorney, which under the PATRIOT Act would allow him to forego a confirmation
vote in the Senate.
On December 19, 2006, four days after Pryor and Gonzales spoke, Sampson e-mailed Oprison with a
strategy to have Griffin stay permanently as U.S. attorney: "I think we should gum this to death," Sampson wrote
in an e-mail turned over to Congress, "ask the Senators to give Tim a chance. meet with him. give him some time in office
to see how he performs, etc. they ultimately say, 'no never' (and the longer they forestall the better). Then we can tell
them we'll look for other candidates, and otherwise run out the clock. All of this should be done in 'good faith' of course."
By that time, Griffin would be able to serve out the remainder of the Bush administration because of his appointment
as interim U.S. attorney under the emergency provisional authority of the PATRIOT Act.
Sampson added in his e-mail:
"The only thing really at work here is a repeal of the AG's appointment authority. There is some risk that we'll lose
that authority, but if we don't ever exercise it then what's the point of having it."
Sampson concluded in the
e-mail: "I'm not 100 percent sure that Tim was the guy on which to test drive this authority, but know that getting him
appointed was important to Harriet, Karl, etc.," referring to Miers and Rove.
The next day, on December 20, Cummins
formally resigned as U.S. attorney and Griffin was named as his interim replacement. Cummins said in an interview that officials
at Justice sped up the timetable on his departure, going so far as to call him on a cellphone when he was on a hunting trip
with his son to say he must leave on December 20.
A spokesman for the Justice Department said: "To the extent
Kyle Sampson in his e-mail suggested there was an attempt to circumvent the process, this was dismissed by the Attorney General
and does not represent the views or final actions of the Department as our record demonstrates."
Gonzales, during
his recent testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, was asked whether he would have invoked the PATRIOT Act to permanently
install Griffin as U.S. attorney. He replied: "I never liked this idea. I wouldn't consider it and didn't consider it."
But later in his testimony, Gonzales said he dropped the idea only after he had spoken to Pryor and determined that it was
politically untenable to move forward.
In one of the e-mails that the White House has withheld from Congress, and
obtained by National Journal, Sampson wrote to six other senior Justice Department officials and derided Pryor's
letter: "The PDF below is an outrageous letter we got from Sen. Pryor; we don't think it has hit the press yet."
Sampson said that the Justice Department had been asked to "respond to the allegation that we troglodytes discrimatorialy
[sic] passed over the FASU [First Assistant U.S. Attorney] because she is apparently a mother out on maternity leave."
In fact, a Justice Department spokesperson had told the press, and senior Justice officials had told Pryor in a private
meeting, that although it was the common practice when a U.S. attorney resigned to name the first assistant U.S. attorney
in the office as the interim, they had not done so in the case of Cummins's departure because his first assistant, Jane
Duke, was about to go on maternity leave.
But other Justice Department records show that Sampson and the
White House had decided to name Griffin as a U.S. attorney in June 2006 even before Duke knew she was pregnant. And the records
show that they attempted to name Griffin as an interim U.S. attorney to either enhance the possibility that he would be confirmed
by the Senate or to circumvent Senate confirmation completely.
Cummins said in a letter to Congress that after he heard
the claims that Duke had not been named as his interim successor because of her pregnancy, he immediately called a senior
Justice Department official to complain that the assertion was untrue:
"I told [the senior official] that most
people in our relatively small legal community had instantly mocked that statement because it was obvious Tim Griffin had
been here for months for the purpose of taking over on my departure [and] because no person was aware of any conversations
or communications that might demonstrate that appointing the First Assistant was EVER a consideration."
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Click here for more coverage of the Justice Department from Murray Waas.