Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Jan. 6 investigat­ors to Garland: ‘Do your job’

Lawmakers pressure the attorney general to prosecute Trump and his allies.

- By Farnoush Amiri and Michael Balsamo Amiri and Balsamo write for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol are increasing­ly going public with critical statements, court filings and more to deliver a blunt message to Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland and the Justice Department.

President Trump and his allies likely committed crimes, they say. And it’s up to you to do something about it.

“Atty. Gen. Garland, do your job so we can do ours,” said Rep. Elaine Luria (DVa.).

“We are upholding our responsibi­lity. The Department of Justice must do the same,” echoed Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank).

Their rhetoric, focused last week on two contempt of Congress referrals approved by the Jan. 6 committee, is just the latest example of the pressure campaign the lawmakers are waging. It ref lects a stark reality: Though they can investigat­e Jan. 6 and issue subpoenas to gather informatio­n, only the Justice Department can bring criminal charges.

Committee members see the case they are building against Trump and his allies as a once-in-a-generation circumstan­ce. If it’s not fully prosecuted, they say, it could set a dangerous precedent that threatens the foundation­s of American democracy.

The lawmakers seem nearly certain to send a criminal referral to the Justice Department once their

work is through.

It all puts Garland, who has spent his tenure trying to shield the Justice Department from political pressure, in a precarious spot. Any criminal charges related to Jan. 6 would trigger a firestorm, thrusting prosecutor­s back into the partisan crossfire that proved so damaging during the Trump-Russia influence investigat­ion and an email inquiry of Hillary Clinton.

Garland has given no public indication about whether prosecutor­s might be considerin­g a case against the former president. He has, though, vowed to hold accountabl­e “all Jan. 6 perpetrato­rs, at any level,” and has said that would include those who were “present that day or were otherwise criminally responsibl­e for the assault on our democracy.”

It’s already the largest

criminal prosecutio­n in the department’s history — for rioters who entered the Capitol building on Jan. 6 as well as members of extremist groups who are accused of planning the attack. More than 750 people have been charged with federal crimes. More than 220 riot defendants have pleaded guilty, more than 100 have been sentenced, and at least 90 others have trial dates.

Parts of the department’s investigat­ion have overlapped with the committee’s. One example is in late January when the Justice Department announced it had opened an inquiry into a fake slate of electors who tried to declare Trump the winner of the 2020 election in seven swing states that Joe Biden won. Three days later, lawmakers subpoenaed more than a dozen people involved in the effort.

But the Jan. 6 committee

wants more. Its message was amplified last week when a federal judge in California — District Judge David O. Carter, a President Clinton appointee — wrote that it is “more likely than not” that Trump himself committed crimes in his attempt to stop the certificat­ion of the 2020 election.

The practical effect of that ruling was to order the release of more than 100 emails from Trump advisor John Eastman to the Jan. 6 committee. But lawmakers zeroed in on a particular passage in the judge’s opinion that characteri­zed Jan. 6 as a “coup.”

“Dr. Eastman and President Trump launched a campaign to overturn a democratic election, an action unpreceden­ted in American history. Their campaign was not confined to the ivory tower — it was a coup in search of a legal theory,” Carter wrote.

But experts caution that Carter’s opinion was only in a civil case and does not meet the long-standing charging policy the Justice Department is required to meet.

Justin Danilewitz, a Philadelph­ia-based attorney and former federal prosecutor, noted the department faces a higher burden of proof in court to show that presidenti­al immunity should not apply. And he said the legal advice Trump received from Eastman “undermines an inference of corrupt or deceitful intent.”

The department will be guided by the evidence and law, he said, “but the social and political ramificati­ons of a decision of this kind will not be far from the minds of Atty. Gen. Garland and his staff.”

“A decision to bring or not bring criminal charges will have significan­t ripple effects,” he added.

Taylor Budowich, a Trump spokespers­on, called the judge’s ruling an “absurd and baseless ruling by a Clinton-appointed judge in California.”

Another point of friction with the Justice Department is the effort to enforce subpoenas through contempt of Congress charges.

The House approved a contempt referral against former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in December after he ceased cooperatin­g with the Jan. 6 panel. Though an earlier contempt referral against former Trump advisor Stephen K. Bannon resulted in an indictment, the Justice Department has been slower to decide whether to prosecute Meadows.

“The Department of Justice is entrusted with defending our Constituti­on,” Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, the Republican committee chair, said at a hearing last week. “Department leadership should not apply any doctrine of immunity that might block Congress from fully uncovering and addressing the causes of the Jan. 6 attack.”

A decision to pursue the contempt charges against Meadows would have to come from career prosecutor­s in the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington before senior Justice Department officials would weigh in and decide how to proceed.

Bringing a case against Meadows would be more challengin­g for prosecutor­s than the case against Bannon, in large part because Bannon wasn’t a White House official during the insurrecti­on.

The Justice Department has long maintained that senior aides generally cannot be forced to testify if a president invokes executive privilege, as Trump has done. And bringing charges could risk underminin­g the long-standing principle that lets the executive branch of the government keep most discussion­s private.

Though most committee members have turned up the pressure on Garland, one member, Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, has not gone as far.

“I feel strongly that we restore the tradition of respect for the independen­ce of the law enforcemen­t function,” Raskin said. “That was one of the things that got trashed during the Trump period. And so I think that Congress and the president should let the Department of Justice and attorney general do their job.

“Atty. Gen. Garland is my constituen­t,” Raskin added, “and I don’t beat up on my constituen­ts.”

 ?? Kevin Lamarque Pool Photo ?? ATTY. GEN. MERRICK GARLAND has given no public indication about whether prosecutor­s are considerin­g a case against former President Trump.
Kevin Lamarque Pool Photo ATTY. GEN. MERRICK GARLAND has given no public indication about whether prosecutor­s are considerin­g a case against former President Trump.

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