Chattanooga Times Free Press

GET READY FOR WEAPONIZAT­ION OLYMPICS

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William Barr took another spin through the news cycle last week, and though it wasn’t anywhere near as uplifting as his star turn before the Jan. 6 committee, you can be sure he came out wearing the identical self-assured smirk he’s long since perfected.

America has long endured attorneys general who’ve demonstrat­ed far less interest in the law or the Constituti­on than in the political goals of the presidents who appointed them — John Mitchell went to prison for serving Richard Nixon’s nefarious purposes, for example — but Barr might well set new standards for duplicity by the time his total machinatio­ns are fully understood.

That effort got a serious boost last week thanks to an investigat­ive piece in The New York Times.

Not content to have delayed and mischaract­erized the damning conclusion­s of the Mueller report into Trump’s extensive Russia connection­s and their impact on the 2016 election, Barr soon unleashed special counsel John Durham to investigat­e the investigat­ors, no doubt looking for the so-called deep state operatives who were always out to get the president (and doing a terrible, terrible job).

In the expose by Times reporters Charlie Savage, Adam Goldman and Katie Benner, rich detail emerges not only on the extent Barr and Durham went to turn up nothing save for two dubious charges that resulted in acquittal, but also on how they came across evidence implicatin­g Trump in a series of questionab­le internatio­nal financial dealings. Those allegation­s, provided by officials in Italy, led to criminal investigat­ion that Barr appears to have allowed everyone to think was homing in on the deep staters instead of on his boss.

The Times article further alleges that when Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department’s inspector general, issued a report debunking the very premise of the Durham inquiry, Barr tried to pressure Horowitz to keep the report private. And that when it became public, Barr mischaract­erized that as well.

“This is all about the Trump weaponizat­ion of the DOJ,” tweeted Andrew Weissmann, who spent 20 years at the Justice Department. “But we know the House Republican­s won’t give a damn about it.”

And this, of course, is what Barr needs so desperatel­y right now, for the Republican­s of Animal House to smoke screen this weaponizat­ion with their own weaponizat­ion hearings under the direction of inveterate agitator Jim Jordan.

Jordan is set to lead a select subcommitt­ee looking into every conceivabl­e Trumpian fever dream — Hunter Biden’s laptop, the

Jan. 6 investigat­ion, the Mar-a-Lago search, Big Tech’s liberal bias, the Education Department’s liberal bias, Madison Avenue’s liberal bias relative to M&M’s, the radical social communist woke media’s leftist agenda, and, I wouldn’t be surprised, Benghazi III: The Final Beginning.

While all that’s going on, Bill Barr should be able to stick to the back streets and smirk off into the sunset, unless Democrats in the Senate counter with their own weaponizat­ion.

Merrick Garland, rumored to be the current AG, appears to be too busy appointing special counsels to move the needle on the one person accountabl­e for all these machinatio­ns and all the cynicism they produce.

Investigat­ions of Trump in Georgia are at the stage where indictment­s are said to be “imminent,” and have been “imminent” for weeks. Investigat­ions in New York going back to 2016 — including the one that prompted Bill Barr to fire head prosecutor Geoffrey Berman for looking too energetica­lly into the Trump Organizati­on — are said to have found renewed traction in the general vicinity of Stormy Daniels.

But Trump golfs, Barr smirks, and on we go.

 ?? ?? Gene Collier
Gene Collier

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