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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Barr Can't Whitewash the Mueller Report
OpinionWhy Barr Cant Whitewash the Mueller Report
We have a system in place for our government to uncover evidence against a sitting president. And its working.
By Neal K. Katyal
May 1, 2019
Mr. Katyal drafted the special counsel regulations under which Robert Mueller was appointed.
Many who watched Attorney General William Barrs testimony on Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which followed the revelation that the special counsel Robert Mueller had expressed misgivings about Mr. Barrs characterization of his report, are despairing about the rule of law. I am not among them. I think the system is working, and inching, however slowly, toward justice.
When it comes to investigating a president, the special counsel regulations I had the privilege of drafting in 1998-99 say that such inquiries have one ultimate destination: Congress. That is where this process is going, and has to go. We are in the fifth inning, and we should celebrate a system in which our own government can uncover so much evidence against a sitting president.
Some commentators have attacked the special counsel regulations as giving the attorney general the power to close a case against the president, as Mr. Barr did with the obstruction of justice investigation into Donald Trump. But the critics complaint here is not with the regulations but with the Constitution itself. Article II gives the executive branch control over prosecutions, so there isnt an easy way to remove the attorney general from the process.
Instead, the idea behind the regulations was to say, We recognize the constitutional reality that the attorney general controls the prosecution power, so what else can we do? My colleagues and I (which included many career officials at the Justice Department as well as bipartisan leaders in the House and Senate) settled on two things. First, provide a mechanism to enable an independent investigation, and thereby generate public confidence in the outcome of that investigation. Second, design that mechanism so that if the attorney general interferes with the special counsels inquiry, that interference would be reported to Congress and ultimately become public.
More: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/01/opinion/barr-mueller-letter.html
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Why Barr Can't Whitewash the Mueller Report (Original Post)
canetoad
May 2019
OP
uponit7771
(90,378 posts)1. Mueller didn't report Barr's interference with decimation of the report with his letters why in the
... world would I expect anything else but silence if Barr interfered during the investigation?
CousinIT
(9,279 posts)2. Proper link:
watoos
(7,142 posts)3. Katyal didn't plan for ignoring subpoenas,
and refusing to turn over documents. He didn't think about who would enforce contempt of Congress charges or who would collect fines that would be levied. He didn't think about the tactic of stalling, the tactic of fighting a losing battle but dragging it out for years until the outcome becomes meaningless.
Katyal's best suggestion is for the House yo defund the AG's office and anyone else who is obstructing justice.
Democrats need to start impeachment hearings yesterday, those hearings carry more clout and Democrats can argue that the courts expedite decisions because of the upcoming election.