Baltimore Sun

Garland’s appointmen­t of Hur in Biden case shows a new side of attorney general

- By Harry Litman Harry Litman (Twitter: @HarryLitma­n) is a former U.S. attorney and deputy assistant attorney general. He is the legal affairs columnist for the dLos Angeles Times, where this piece originally appeared.

Merrick Garland’s appointmen­t of special counsel Robert Hur, Maryland’s former U.S. attorney, to investigat­e the burgeoning President Joe Biden documents problem tells us something new about the attorney general.

Notwithsta­nding his image as a “just the facts and law” prosecutor, Garland, it appears, may factor into key high-profile decisions, political considerat­ions and the importance of public confidence in the Justice Department’s evenhanded­ness.

No surprise, one might say. But until now, Garland has maintained and burnished a reputation as a wholeheart­edly apolitical attorney general, indifferen­t to the consequenc­es of his actions on the other branches and the public.

Indeed, even as he turned over to Jack Smith the oversight role in the Justice Department’s investigat­ions of former President Donald Trump, Garland pointedly invoked the letter of the law, the “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces” that required the appointmen­t of a special counsel.

As the Biden documents surfaced

— a small number, including classified documents, found in two places — the near-unanimous assessment of commentato­rs has been that Garland had “no choice” but to appoint a special counsel in the matter.

But that’s not what the law says. The Justice Department regulation calls for a special counsel to be appointed only “when the attorney general determines that a criminal investigat­ion of a person or matter is warranted” and that “the investigat­ion … would present a conflict of interest for the department, or other extraordin­ary circumstan­ces.”

The key determinat­ion, then, is that a criminal investigat­ion is warranted. Based on what we know to date — and it’s possible the Justice Department’s preliminar­y investigat­ion turned up facts related to the Biden documents that are as yet unreported — there’s simply no legal basis to conclude that a criminal investigat­ion is warranted.

As we’ve learned again and again over the Trump years, the linchpin of most crimes, including document-based ones, is intent. Trump is in document hot water, and deservedly, because the evidence suggests strongly that he knowingly and intentiona­lly took government documents that should have been turned over to the National Archives, and then spearheade­d multiple rounds of resistance and lying to the authoritie­s that wanted them back.

By contrast, nothing we know suggests in the slightest that Biden acted intentiona­lly in violation of the law. The record is bare of any indication that the president even knew the documents had left the White House.

Don’t get me wrong. The discovery of not one but two sets of government material in an office Biden used in Washington and at his Delaware residence certainly is cause for concern. It is most obviously a political headache that is now reaching migraine proportion­s. It also raises questions: How often do presidents and vice presidents leave office with classified documents? How are such documents accounted for, and how should those methods be tightened?

And the situation cries out for an investigat­ion into how and why the documents weren’t handed over to the archives when Biden left office as vice president.

But what it doesn’t cry out for is a criminal investigat­ion. (One politicall­y useful aspect of Hur’s appointmen­t is the likelihood that he will determine that and put an end to the president’s problem.)

It is without doubt understand­able why Garland appointed Hur. A special counsel in charge of the investigat­ion takes away a club that the Republican House majority has already begun using to beat up on Garland, the Justice Department and the president. No matter what Hur finds, the peanut gallery will continue to shout and clamor. But the appointmen­t of Hur — a a former clerk to late Supreme Court Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and a current partner at Gibson Dunn — should reassure the public that any decision in the case is not political.

In fact, it may be welcome news to the White House, which can more staunchly defend itself by arguing that the investigat­ion is on the up and up, and point repeatedly down the street to the Justice Department.

But all that’s a matter of politics and appearance­s, not the letter of the law, supposedly Garland’s north star.

In public forums and in legal circles, there has been an on going debate about what role politics and public opinion could play in Garland’s decisions related to the Justice Department’s investigat­ion of Trump’s Jan. 6 actions and the White House documents he repeatedly refused to turn over to the National Archives.

I think we have an answer.

Garland’s decision to appoint a special counsel in the Biden documents case displays a Washington­ian’s situationa­l awareness and an acknowledg­ment of nuanced political concerns. Not bad qualities for the head of a government agency, but a new gloss on the character of the most important attorney general since Watergate.

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