Los Angeles Times

How the Justice Dept. regains its integrity

Following up on Louis DeJoy’s alleged campaign finance misdeeds would be a start.

- HARRY LITMAN @HarryLitma­n

At some point — and maybe as soon as January — the Department of Justice will find itself facing a herculean task: restoring confidence in its integrity and commitment to enforcing the law without fear or favor, a bedrock principle that the Trump administra­tion has methodical­ly savaged.

The shoveling-out work will take many forms: supporting new legislatio­n to prevent the flippant disregard of congressio­nal oversight; setting new DOJ policies — for example to rebuild the wall precluding most communicat­ions between the White House and the department; demanding more profession­alism in the hiring of political appointees.

And prosecutio­ns to repudiate the abuses of the Trump years and deter such behavior in the future.

I’m not talking here about investigat­ing and charging Donald Trump, or his inner circle. A Justice Department prosecutio­n of those figures could roil the country and deeply complicate all other government agendas, and a decision about whether to pursue such cases will come from the very top. But there are plenty of other potential Trump-era prosecutio­ns for the career attorneys at the department to consider.

One possible “righteous prosecutio­n” — in the parlance of department staff — was uncovered by the Washington Post in an investigat­ion of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s campaign fundraisin­g activities. The Justice Department would appear to have every reason in the world to investigat­e him and possibly to indict.

Let’s start with the allegation­s first published in the Washington Post on Sept. 6. According to former employees of DeJoy’s New Breed Logistics, their boss put in place what looks as if it might have been a ham-handed method of funneling hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal campaign contributi­ons to Republican candidates for president and Congress. If the allegation­s are correct, DeJoy also may have lied brazenly to Congress about it.

The Post cited five people who worked for New Breed who said DeJoy pushed them to make political contributi­ons; two former New Breed executives said such contributi­ons were reimbursed with corporate money, as bonuses. Public records showed, in all, 124 New Breed employees gave more than $1 million to federal and state GOP candidates from 2000 to 2014. (During the same period, they gave $700 to Democrats.)

What the reporting describes sounds a lot like a classic straw donor scheme, designed to evade individual contributi­on limits and the prohibitio­n against corporate donations to candidates. The true donor, according to the allegation­s, was DeJoy’s company, which at his instructio­n paid the employees back.

DeJoy’s overall success at corralling donations for the GOP propelled him to a position of power in the party, and then into the job of running the U.S. Postal Service, where he has instituted cost-cutting measures that have contribute­d to doubts that the post office can handle mail-in ballots come November.

DeJoy was tapped for the Postal Service job despite having zero direct post office experience. He famously couldn’t tell Rep. Katie Porter (D-Irvine) the price of postage for a postcard and, according to a former Postal Service inspector general, he had to be coached through the most basic questions in his job interview with the agency’s board.

There is some doubt as to whether the allegation­s would fall outside the applicable federal five-year statute of limitation­s. (In DeJoy’s home state of North Carolina, however, there is no statute of limitation­s for campaign finance felonies.) DeJoy sold New Breed in 2014 (he stayed on in an executive role until the end of 2015), and the contributi­ons the Post documented ended in 2014. Federal prosecutor­s, however, will ask whether the scheme was ongoing or part of a conspiracy that continued past the date of the known contributi­ons. If so, the five years may still have time to run.

No matter how the campaign finance statute of limitation­s analysis plays out, DeJoy’s statements to Congress on Aug. 24 could still be the basis of a Justice Department perjury case against him.

Called before the House Oversight Committee when concerns arose about slowed-down mail service, DeJoy was asked directly whether he had repaid his executives for contributi­ng to the Trump campaign — the precise conduct attested to in the Post article. “That’s an outrageous claim sir,” he responded, “and I resent it . ... The answer is no.”

But when the Post reporters asked for a comment on their findings, DeJoy’s response didn’t resemble his under-oath, chestthump­ing, outraged “no.” According to a statement from a spokesman, Dejoy “believes that he has always followed campaign fundraisin­g laws and regulation­s.” He had “sought and received legal advice” from a former general counsel for the Federal Election Commission. (I’d bet the USPS operating deficit that a former FEC lawyer never blessed a donation pay-back scheme.)

The House Oversight Committee has said it will investigat­e the “issue” of DeJoy’s campaign finance conduct, but congressio­nal oversight hasn’t gotten very far against Trump officials. And if the Justice Department were to pursue perjury charges against DeJoy, we could expect Republican­s in Congress to jump up and down and scream that lying under oath is a mere “process crime,” and prosecutin­g it amounts to a witch hunt. It is ironic that members of Congress would be cavalier about efforts to foil their own oversight authority, but that’s the upshot of Trump’s complete capture of the Republican Party.

Which brings us back to Department of Justice’s herculean task. The toxic legacy of the current administra­tion invests potential prosecutio­ns such as DeJoy’s with a purpose beyond legalities. His conduct — and that of others in the administra­tion who may have flouted the law — should not be given a pass. If the Post’s reporting holds up, DeJoy’s possible indictment would help in an incrementa­l way to set right the system that Trump has turned on its head.

 ?? Getty Images ?? POSTMASTER GENERAL Louis DeJoy testified last month to Congress about U.S. Postal Service operations.
Getty Images POSTMASTER GENERAL Louis DeJoy testified last month to Congress about U.S. Postal Service operations.

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