Kuwait Times

Top US prosecutor who probed Trump allies fired

Berman steps down, ending stand-off with Barr

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WASHINGTON/NEW YORK: A stand-off over the independen­ce of one of the country’s most important prosecutor’s offices ended on Saturday when Geoffrey Berman agreed to step down as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, the office that had been investigat­ing President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudolph Giuliani.

Berman’s confirmati­on of his departure came after Attorney General William Barr told him he had been fired by Trump at Barr’s request, and that Berman’s hand-picked No. 2, Deputy US Attorney Audrey Strauss, would become Acting US Attorney until a permanent replacemen­t is installed. Under Strauss’ leadership, Berman said the office could continue its “tradition of integrity and independen­ce.”

Berman’s office, which is known for prosecutin­g the most high profile terrorism cases, Wall Street financial crimes and government corruption, has not shied from taking on figures in Trump’s orbit. It oversaw the prosecutio­n of Michael Cohen, Trump’s former personal lawyer, indicted two Giuliani associates and launched a probe into Giuliani in connection with his efforts to dig up dirt on Trump’s political adversarie­s in Ukraine. Giuliani has not formally been accused of any wrongdoing.

The standoff with Berman follows the latest in a series of moves by Barr that critics say are meant to benefit Trump politicall­y and undermine the independen­ce of the Justice Department. It also comes as Trump has sought to purge officials perceived as not fully supporting him. In recent weeks he has fired a series of agency watchdogs, including one who played a key role in Trump’s impeachmen­t earlier this year.

Berman, a Republican who held a position in Trump’s transition team and was once a law partner of Giuliani, has also pursued cases against tycoon sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who was found dead in his Manhattan jail cell last year. The row with Berman began late Friday, when Barr unexpected­ly announced that Berman was stepping down and would be replaced by US Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton. Berman, however, issued a statement of his own, saying he had no intention of stepping down until the Senate confirmed his successor, and that his office’s investigat­ions would continue.

On Friday, Barr said he had picked Craig Carpenito, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New Jersey, to serve as Acting US Attorney until Clayton’s confirmati­on. But in a letter on Saturday to Berman, Barr back-tracked from that plan, saying Strauss would take over in an acting capacity. One former

Southern District prosecutor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Barr’s initial decision to install Carpenito was a “huge departure” from normal practice.

In the letter, Barr said he was “surprised and quite disappoint­ed” by Berman’s statement late on Friday night in which he refused to quit his job, and he accused Berman of choosing “public spectacle over public service”. “I have asked the President to remove you as of today, and he has done so,” Barr said.

‘I don’t get involved’

Trump told Fox News Channel he approved Barr’s request, and said he did not know Giuliani was being investigat­ed by Berman, although he had read that recently. “If (Barr) wants to do something ... I don’t get involved,” Trump said in an interview. “But the president has to sign a document, where I guess you give it your OK. And he wants to run his operation, and that’s okay with me.” Asked if Barr said why he wanted to fire Berman, Trump said: “We spent very little time talking about it, but I have a lot of respect for Attorney General Barr.”

Although Berman agreed to step down on Saturday, it did not end the political controvers­y swirling around his highly unusual firing. It comes after Barr intervened in February to scale back a sentencing recommenda­tion for Trump’s longtime friend Roger Stone over the advice of career prosecutor­s. Then in May, Barr asked a federal judge to dismiss the criminal case against Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn, again prompting questions about whether he was acting in the president’s personal interest.

Jerrold Nadler, the Chairman of the Democrat-controlled House Judiciary Committee, said he has launched an investigat­ion into Berman’s terminatio­n. US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the firing appeared to have “base and improper motives,” while the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Diane Feinstein, urged the panel’s chairman, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, to launch an investigat­ion into “political interferen­ce in the work of the Justice Department.” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer urged the Justice Department’s inspector general to launch an investigat­ion into “blatantly corrupt DOJ interferen­ce”.

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