The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pak describes how ex-president insisted Atlanta prosecutor be fired for not validating false claims.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.mitchell@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — Former Atlanta-based U.S. Attorney Byung “Bjay” Pak confirmed in testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee that pressure to investigat­e false claims of election fraud led to his abrupt resignatio­n.

President Donald Trump’s unhappines­s with Pak has long been reported as the reason why he stepped down Jan. 4, but transcript­s released Thursday mark the first time he described publicly how it all unfolded.

Pak said he wrote his resignatio­n letter after a late-night phone call with Richard Donoghue, who was serving as the acting deputy U.S. attorney general.

“That’s when Mr. Donoghue relayed to me that the President was very unhappy and that he wanted to fire me, that he believed that I was a Never Trumper,” Pak told lawmakers and their attorneys Aug. 11, according to the transcript. “And Mr. Donoghue told me that he had told Mr. Trump that he thought that was incorrect, and that the President did not care but wanted me out of that spot.”

The transcript was included as part of a report from the Judiciary Committee, which spent eight months investigat­ing how Trump and his allies attempted to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. A House select committee has a similar investigat­ion underway, and its scope also includes the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Trump and his loyalists continued to falsely claim the election was stolen from him, and they made several baseless allegation­s about Georgia in the weeks after the November general election.

Testimony from Pak and other former Justice Department officials sheds light on these attempts to influence lawmakers in Georgia to overturn Joe Biden’s win.

But their remarks also highlight the individual­s who tried to stand in the way of these attempts to undermine the election.

Pak, who was confirmed as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia in September 2017, told the committee that his office looked into various claims of fraud.

That included Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani’s allegation­s of a suitcase full of ballots in Fulton County and state Sen. William Ligon’s concerns about ballot handling in Cobb County. None of it was substantia­ted, Pak said.

Right around New Year’s Eve, Pak and Donoghue, who had a friendly relationsh­ip, spoke about their frustratio­ns because Trump would not accept that he lost Georgia. Donoghue told Pak that Jeffrey Clark, who was serving as acting head of the Justice Department’s civil division, had suggested a letter be sent to the General Assembly asking lawmakers to refuse to certify Electoral College votes for Biden.

“That’s just highly crazy,” Pak said he remembered saying to Donoghue during that conversati­on. “I think the words I used were — I think Rich used the words that this is bat-(expletive) crazy.”

On Jan. 2, Trump called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger asking him to “find” votes to overturn the election. The call has since become a focal point of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s investigat­ion.

“I was very upset,” Pak said about learning of that conversati­on. “At the same time very disappoint­ed because the call — the summary of the descriptio­n about the call indicated that despite at least me and also the attorney general (William Barr) reporting up that there had not been widespread fraud, that the President was seeking to overturn the election or at least find ballots or represent that there was irregulari­ties.”

Pak said he considered stepping down on Jan. 3 but didn’t want his resignatio­n to give credibilit­y to the false allegation­s or disrupt Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoffs on Jan. 5. But later that night, Donoghue called to tell him that Trump wanted him out. Immediatel­y.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2021 ?? Byung “Bjay” Pak resigned Jan. 4 from his position as U.S. attorney in Atlanta after the acting deputy attorney general of the U.S. Justice Department made it clear that President Donald Trump wanted him out immediatel­y for not backing Trump’s attempts to have his election defeat overturned.
ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2021 Byung “Bjay” Pak resigned Jan. 4 from his position as U.S. attorney in Atlanta after the acting deputy attorney general of the U.S. Justice Department made it clear that President Donald Trump wanted him out immediatel­y for not backing Trump’s attempts to have his election defeat overturned.

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