Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

30,000 emails tied to IRS unit chief said recovered

- ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Federal investigat­ors have told Congress that they have recovered data that may include lost emails from one of the pivotal figures in the controvers­y over the IRS’ treatment of Tea Party groups, congressio­nal aides said Friday.

Frederick Hill, spokesman for Republican­s who run the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said the investigat­ors told congressio­nal staff members at a briefing Friday that they have recovered up to 30,000 emails to and from Lois Lerner.

“They didn’t indicate any doubt that they’ll be able to recover emails,” Hill said.

A statement from Democrats and Republican­s on the Senate Finance Committee was more measured. It said the investigat­ors have recovered data “which may include emails to and/or from Lois Lerner which could be material to the investigat­ion.” The Senate Finance statement did not specify a figure.

In a statement, the IRS said it remains committed to cooperatin­g with all investigat­ions.

Lerner headed the IRS division that processes applicatio­ns for tax exempt status. She told a congressio­nal committee that she’d done nothing wrong and refused to answer lawmakers’ questions, citing her constituti­onal protection against self-incriminat­ion, and has since retired.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have been trying to determine whether the treatment of conservati­ve groups was politicall­y motivated. The IRS has acknowledg­ed that its handling of those groups was inappropri­ately burdensome, but no evidence has been made public that anyone outside the IRS directed the targeting or knew about it.

The investigat­ors were from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administra­tion, which audits the IRS. A spokesman for the inspector general, Karen Kraushaar, declined comment, saying the investigat­ion was continuing.

In May 2013, the investigat­ors issued a report saying IRS agents had given exceptiona­lly close scrutiny to Tea Party and other conservati­ve groups that applied for tax-exempt status.

Since then, documents have suggested that liberal groups were also targeted for examinatio­ns, though Republican­s say conservati­ve organizati­ons were treated more harshly.

IRS officials have said Lerner’s computer crashed in 2011, destroying an untold number of emails.

Hill said it will take weeks for the investigat­ors to process the informatio­n into a usable format and give it to the IRS, which would review it. The House Oversight panel is headed by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif.

The Senate Finance Committee aides said the investigat­ors must assess if the data can be made readable before documents can be delivered to their committee.

They said their panel expects to complete its bipartisan investigat­ion of the IRS early next year. By then, majority control of the committee will flip from Democrats to Republican­s.

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