The Palm Beach Post

House panel chair: Impeach leader of IRS

Agency chief violates trust, says GOP lawmaker.

- By Matthew Daly Associated Press

The Republican chairman of a House committee moved Tuesday to impeach Internal Revenue Service Commission­er John Koskinen, saying Koskinen had violated the public trust and obstructed congressio­nal investigat­ions into the treatment of conservati­ve groups.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah said Koskinen failed to comply with a congressio­nal subpoena, allowed documents to be destroyed and misled the public. Chaffetz chairs the House Oversight Committee, which has been investigat­ing the IRS for more than two years.

He called impeachmen­t an appropriat­e tool to restore public confidence in the IRS and “demonstrat­e to the American people that the IRS is under repair.”

The impeachmen­t bid comes less than a week after the Justice Department said no IRS official will face criminal charges in the political controvers­y over the processing of applicatio­ns by groups seeking tax-exempt status.

The decision closed a two-year investigat­ion into accusation­s that stoked outrage among Republican­s in Congress, who alleged bias in the tax agency’s treatment of conservati­ve and tea party groups in seeking the tax-exempt designatio­n.

The Justice Department said it found no evidence that Lois Lerner or any IRS official acted based on political, discrimina­tory, corrupt or other inappropri­ate motives that would support a criminal prosecutio­n. Lerner, who has since retired, headed the division that processes applicatio­ns for tax-exempt status during the 2010 and 2012 elections and gained notoriety when she cited her Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incriminat­ion while testifying before the committee in 2013. Congress later voted to hold her in contempt.

The IRS destroyed Lerner’s emails in March 2014, but did not notify Congress that the emails were missing until four months later and well after the White House and the Treasury Department were notified, Chaffetz said.

The IRS said in a statement that the agency “vigorously disputes the allegation­s in the resolution. We have fully cooperated with all of the investigat­ions.”

Eighteen Republican­s on the committee joined Chaffetz in co-sponsoring the impeachmen­t resolution, which now goes to the House Judiciary Committee.

Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the senior Democrat on the oversight panel, called the impeachmen­t effort “ridiculous,” adding that, “just as in the Benghazi and Planned Parenthood investigat­ions, it appears that facts simply don’t matter to Republican­s.”

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