Attorney General
Merrick Garland
has now appointed two veteran prosecutors as special counsels to oversee investigations into how President Joe Biden and former President
Donald Trump
handled classified documents after leaving office —
Biden after he ended his terms as vice president
in 2017, and
Trump after leaving the Oval Office
in 2021.
Robert Hur
, a former federal prosecutor in Maryland, will investigate whether Biden or any of his staff or associates mishandled classified information.
Jack Smith
, a longtime top investigator in the Department of Justice, is overseeing
two criminal investigations
into former President
Donald Trump
. Garland’s goal, in both cases, is to shield the probes from the appearance of partisanship. But in
immediate
and
repeated
attacks,
Trump
, and some of his
allies
, alleged
political bias
anyway. For instance, in one highly charged social media post, the former president argued that he won’t “
get a fair shake
” from Smith. Biden, for his part, has said he is “
cooperating fully and completely
” with the Justice Department’s inquiries. Fairness and justice, though, are what Garland appointed Smith and Hur to deliver. In his announcement that Smith would take charge of the Department of Justice investigations into Trump’s role in the 6
January insurrection
and Trump’s
handling of classified government documents
, Garland described Smith
as someone who
“has built a reputation as an impartial and determined prosecutor.” When appointing Hur, Garland emphasised his “
department’s commitment to both independence and accountability
in particularly sensitive matters and to making decisions indisputably guided only by the facts and the law.” [caption id=“attachment_11994692” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice. AP[/caption] In his own statement, Smith,
who most recently
investigated and prosecuted war crimes at
the International Criminal Court
in
The Hague
,
promised to
“independently … move the investigations forward … to whatever outcome the facts and the law dictate.” From my perspective as
a political scientist
who studies presidential systems, I believe that while special counsels are intended to be independent, in practice they are aren’t entirely. Here’s why. Independent and special counsels Ensuring impartiality in the Department of Justice can be difficult, as the attorney general is
appointed by
— and answerable to — a partisan president. This gives presidents the power to try to compel attorneys general, who head the department, to pursue a political agenda. President
Richard Nixon
did this during the investigation of the Watergate break-in, which threatened to implicate him in criminal acts. On the evening of 20
October, 1973
, Nixon ordered Attorney General
Elliot Richardson
to fire
Archibald Cox
, whom Richardson had appointed to lead the Watergate investigation. Richardson refused and resigned. Nixon then ordered Deputy Attorney General
William Ruckelshaus
to fire Cox Ruckelshaus also refused and resigned. Finally, Nixon ordered Solicitor General
Robert Bork
, the next most senior official at the Department of Justice, to fire Cox Bork complied. This shocking series of events, often referred to as the
Saturday Night Massacre
, demonstrated how presidents could exercise political power over criminal investigations. As a result of the Watergate scandal, Congress passed the
Ethics in Government Act of 1978
. This allowed for investigations into misconduct that could operate outside of presidential control. After passage of this legislation, if the attorney general received “specific information” alleging that the president, vice president or other
high-ranking executive branch officials
had committed a serious federal offense, the attorney general would ask a special three-judge panel to appoint an independent counsel, who would investigate. The Ethics in Government Act also disqualified Department of Justice employees, including the attorney general, from participating in any investigation or prosecution that could “
result in a personal, financial, or political conflict of interest
, or the appearance thereof.” In the decades since the law’s passage, independent counsels investigated
Republicans
and
Democrats
alike. In 1999,
Congress
let the Ethics in Government Act expire. That year, then-Attorney General Janet Reno
authorised
the appointment of special counsels, who could investigate certain sensitive matters, similar to the way independent counsels operated. Robert Mueller, who was appointed in
2017
by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to investigate
possible Russian interference in the 2016 elections
and
possible links between the Trump campaign and the Russian government
, was a special counsel. Some Republicans accused him of
bias
, despite his long career serving under
both Democratic and Republican presidents
. In
2020
, John Durham — another
veteran
of the Department of Justice — was appointed as special counsel to investigate the origins of the investigation that triggered Mueller’s appointment. Michael Sussmann, a former Democratic Party lawyer and target of that probe, accused Durham of
political prosecution
. Sussmann was later
acquitted
. Politicising the process Although special counsels were meant to resemble independent counsels, there are notable differences. [caption id=“attachment_11994722” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
The building that housed office space of President Joe Biden’s former institute, the Penn Biden Centre, where classified documents were found is seen at the corner of Constitution and Louisiana Avenue NW, in Washington. AP[/caption]
For instance
, while special counsels operate independently of the attorney general, both their appointment and the scope of their investigations are determined by the attorney general. In contrast, the appointment of independent counsels and the scope of their investigations were determined by a three-judge panel, which in turn was appointed by the
chief justice of the United States
. Also, since Congress authorised independent counsels, presidential influence was limited by law. In contrast, since Department of Justice regulations authorise special counsels, a president could try to compel the attorney general to change departmental interpretation of these regulations — or even just revoke them entirely — to influence or
end
a special counsel investigation. For example, at one point, Trump
wanted to fire Mueller
. After his attorney general,
Jeff Sessions
, who had recused himself from the Russia probe, did not “
end the phony Russia Witch Hunt
,” Trump fired him. Seemingly supportive of this,
William Barr
, who had served as attorney general under President
George W Bush
, sent an unsolicited memo to the Department of Justice defending Trump by arguing that presidents have “
complete authority to start or stop a law enforcement proceeding
.”
Unsurprisingly
, Trump then
chose
Barr to replace
Sessions
as attorney general.
In my own research
,
I have found
that abuses of power are more common in situations in which the president and the attorney general are political allies. For instance, after Mueller finished his
report
in 2019, Barr released a
summary
of its “principal conclusions.” Later, Barr’s summary was criticised for “
not fully captur[ing] the context, nature, and substance
” of Mueller’s work. In 2020, a Republican-appointed judge
ruled
that Barr “failed to provide a thorough representation of the findings set forth in the Mueller Report” and questioned whether Barr had “made a calculated attempt to influence public discourse … in favour of President Trump.” To be or not to be free of partisanship The independence of the Department of Justice rests, in part, on who occupies the offices of president and attorney general. Trump, for example,
saw himself
as “the chief law enforcement officer of the country” and thought it was appropriate to “be totally involved.” Meanwhile,
Biden
has
a long history
of supporting the independence of Department of Justice investigations, dating as far back as his
1987-1995 tenure as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee
. Barr once
argued
that the attorney general’s role is to advance “all colourable arguments that can [be] mustered … when the president determines an action is within his authority — even if that conclusion is debatable.” In contrast, Garland — a former US circuit judge —
insists
that “political or other improper considerations must play no role in any investigative or prosecutorial decisions.” Given that
Trump
and
Biden
may end up facing off in
2024
, it makes sense that Garland would want to appoint special counsels in order to avoid directly overseeing investigations into his boss and into a political opponent of his boss. Still, Smith and Hur will not be entirely independent of Garland, just as Garland
is not entirely independent
of Biden. This article is republished from
The Conversation
under a Creative Commons license. Read the
original article
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