Santa Fe New Mexican

Rosenstein asks prosecutor­s to help on nominee’s papers

- By Katie Benner

WASHINGTON — Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, has asked federal prosecutor­s to help review the government documents of Judge Brett Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, according to a letter obtained by the New

York Times on Wednesday. Rosenstein’s request was an unusual insertion of politics into federal law enforcemen­t. While the Justice Department has helped work on previous Supreme Court nomination­s, department lawyers in Washington typically carry out that task, not prosecutor­s who pursue criminal investigat­ions nationwide.

But in an email sent this week to the nation’s 93 U.S. attorneys, Rosenstein asked each office to provide up to three federal prosecutor­s “who can make this important project a priority for the next several weeks.” Names were to be submitted to Rosenstein’s office by the end of Wednesday.

Trump nominated Kavanaugh on Monday to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy, who is retiring. In years of public service — including work for the independen­t counsel investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton, on the 2000 Florida recount and as a White House aide to George W. Bush — Kavanaugh generated a lengthy paper trail. That had Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate majority leader, privately expressing concern that it might be used against him in his Senate confirmati­on hearings.

Rosenstein’s email, which had the subject line “Personal Message to U.S. Attorneys From the Deputy A.G.,” included the sentence, “We need your help in connection with President Trump’s nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to serve on the Supreme Court.”

Former law enforcemen­t officials described Rosenstein’s directive as a troubling precedent.

“It’s flat-out wrong to have career federal prosecutor­s engaged in a political process like the vetting of a Supreme Court nominee,” said Christophe­r Hunter, a former FBI agent and federal prosecutor who is running for Congress. “It takes them away from the mission they’re supposed to be fulfilling, which is effective criminal justice enforcemen­t.”

Hunter, who served as an FBI agent and federal prosecutor for nearly 11 years, said he could not recall receiving a similar solicitati­on to work on a Supreme Court nomination.

While federal prosecutor­s have not been tapped to help with recent nomination­s, including Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, “the scope of the production of executive branch documents we’ve been asked for is many, many times as large,” said Sarah Isgur Flores, a Justice Department spokeswoma­n.

Flores added that federal prosecutor­s had been used to vet Supreme Court nominees in the past.

But this is the first time that the deputy attorney general has sent out such a broad request to U.S. attorneys’ offices.

The request increases the workload for some U.S. attorneys’ offices, which have been handed increased responsibi­lity by Attorney General Jeff Sessions as he seeks to give local prosecutor­s more decision-making power.

Rosenstein wrote that he expected to need the equivalent of 100 full-time lawyers to work on Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on hearing, and that the work would be supervised by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Policy in Washington.

The office typically helps with judicial nomination­s; most of its staff is made up of career Justice Department lawyers.

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