Los Angeles Times

No prosecutio­n for ex-Cabinet member

Watchdog found that Wilbur Ross misled Congress on census, but Justice officials did not charge him.

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department declined to prosecute former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross for misleading Congress about the origins and purpose of asking about citizenshi­p on the 2020 census, a government watchdog told Congress on Monday.

Democratic lawmakers had asked the Commerce Department inspector general to investigat­e whether Ross had lied while testifying in 2018 about why the Trump administra­tion was pushing — for the first time in decades — to add a citizenshi­p question to the census.

Commerce Department Inspector General Peggy E. Gustafson said in a letter to Congress released Monday that she found that Ross was misleading when he testified under oath in March 2018 that the question was being added at the request of the Justice Department.

In fact, Gustafson wrote, “evidence shows there were significan­t communicat­ions

related to the citizenshi­p question among the thenSecret­ary, his staff, and other government officials between March 2017 and September 2017.” The Justice Department did not request the addition of the question until December of that year.

The letter states that the results of the investigat­ion were “presented to and declined for prosecutio­n by the Public Integrity Section of the DOJ’s Criminal Division.”

House Oversight Committee Chairwoman Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) praised the inspector general’s

finding in a statement, without addressing that the Justice Department declined to prosecute.

“Lying to Congress is unacceptab­le, and the [inspector general] did the right thing by referring Secretary Ross’ conduct to the Justice Department,” she said.

The Supreme Court ultimately rejected the Trump administra­tion’s bid to add the citizenshi­p question, citing Ross’ failure to provide an honest explanatio­n for his agency’s reasoning about why it was making such a major change. The ruling came in a lawsuit brought by California and

other states with large immigrant population­s that claimed the question was really a Republican ploy to increase that party’s clout.

Activists were concerned that the question, or even an assumption that the question was included, would lead fewer people to respond to the census.

The decennial census plays a key role in divvying up congressio­nal representa­tion and the allocation of billions of dollars in federal, state and local funding.

The Trump administra­tion was marked by highrankin­g officials frequently refusing to testify before

Congress, which oversees the executive branch.

Ross, however, testified willingly before congressio­nal committees, though he soon found himself under investigat­ion after Democratic lawmakers accused him of lying under oath, a federal crime punishable by up to five years in prison.

In addition to seeking an investigat­ion into Ross’ testimony about the citizenshi­p question, lawmakers also asked the inspector general to examine whether Ross had failed to disclose the role Thomas Hofeller, a deceased GOP strategist, played in the administra­tion’s decision to add the question. Hofeller’s role became public after his death in 2019, when his estranged daughter went through his computer files that revealed he helped draw congressio­nal districts to benefit Republican­s.

The inspector general found that although wording in Justice Department communicat­ions was similar to Hofeller’s work examining how adding a citizenshi­p question would allow Republican­s to block out Democrats when drawing district boundaries, the investigat­ion was “unable to establish that the Political Strategist had a substantiv­e public policy role in the addition of the citizenshi­p question to the 2020 Census.”

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? PROTESTERS gather at the Supreme Court in 2019 before the justices rejected the Trump administra­tion’s bid to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press PROTESTERS gather at the Supreme Court in 2019 before the justices rejected the Trump administra­tion’s bid to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census.

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