Monday, October 31, 2016

On Clinton Emails, Did the F.B.I. Director Abuse His Power?


THE F.B.I. is currently investigating the hacking of Americans’ computers by foreign governments. Russia is a prime suspect.

Imagine a possible connection between a candidate for president in the United States and the Russian computer hacking. Imagine the candidate has business dealings in Russia, and has publicly encouraged the Russians to hack the email of his opponent. It would not be surprising for the F.B.I. to include this candidate and his campaign staff in its confidential investigation of Russian computer hacking.

But it would be highly improper, and an abuse of power, for the F.B.I. to conduct such an investigation in the public eye, particularly on the eve of the election. It would be an abuse of power for the director of the F.B.I., absent compelling circumstances, to notify members of Congress that the candidate was under investigation. It would be an abuse of power if F.B.I. agents went so far as to obtain a search warrant and raid the candidate’s office tower, hauling out boxes of documents and computers in front of television cameras.

The F.B.I.’s job is to investigate, not to influence the outcome of an election.

Such acts could also be prohibited under the Hatch Act, which bars the use of an official position to influence an election. That is why the F.B.I. presumably would keep those aspects of an investigation confidential until after the election. The usual penalty for a violation is termination of federal employment.

That is why, on Saturday, I filed a complaint against the F.B.I. with the Office of Special Counsel, which investigates Hatch Act violations, and with the Office of Government Ethics. I spent much of my career working on government and lawyers’ ethics, including as the chief White House ethics lawyer for George W. Bush. I never thought that the F.B.I. could be dragged into a political circus surrounding one of its investigations. Until this week.

(For the sake of full disclosure, in this election I have supported Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, John Kasich and Hillary Clinton for president, in that order.)

On Friday, the director of the F.B.I., James B. Comey, sent members of Congress a letter about developments in the agency’s investigation of Mrs. Clinton’s emails, an investigation which supposedly was closed months ago. This letter, which was quickly posted on the internet, made highly unusual public statements about an F.B.I. investigation concerning a candidate in the election. The letter was sent in violation of a longstanding Justice Department policy of not discussing specifics about pending investigations with others, including members of Congress. According to some news reports, the letter was sent before the F.B.I. had even obtained the search warrant that it needed to look at the newly discovered emails. And it was sent days before the election, when many Americans are already voting.

Violations of the Hatch Act and of government ethics rules on misuse of official positions are not permissible in any circumstances, including in the case of an executive branch official acting under pressure from politically motivated members of Congress. Violations are of even greater concern when the agency is the F.B.I.

It is not clear whether Mr. Comey personally wanted to influence the outcome of the election, although his letter — which cast suspicion on Mrs. Clinton without revealing specifics — was concerning. Also concerning is the fact that Mr. Comey already made unusual public statements expressing his opinion about Mrs. Clinton’s actions, calling her handling of classified information “extremely careless,” when he announced this summer that the F.B.I. was concluding its investigation of her email without filing any charges.

But an official doesn’t need to have a specific intent — or desire — to influence an election to be in violation of the Hatch Act or government ethics rules. The rules are violated if it is obvious that the official’s actions could influence the election, there is no other good reason for taking those actions, and the official is acting under pressure from persons who obviously do want to influence the election.[...]

17 comments:

  1. But an official doesn’t need to have a specific intent — or desire — to
    influence an election to be in violation of the Hatch Act or government
    ethics rules.


    Nor is intent needed for most of what Clinton violated either. It's amusing to see the media, at Democratic command, turn on a dime to vilify last month's saint.

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  2. This is really a stretch. Every reasonable prosecutor such as Giukiani, Mukasey, Anderson and others have said that Comey totally politicized and perverted the original investigation of Hillary's email abuse which was the paradigm of reckless carelessness with secret information. Now Comey was forced to reopen the investigation due to the overwhelming evidence against her and the incipient mutiny of senior FBI staff.

    The NY Slimes can be trusted to warp anything in the most egregious Leftist fashion.

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  3. Mr. Comey - while under congressional subpoena and under oath - assured Congress he would advise them of any new information. His letter last Friday did precisely that.

    For those of us who remember the Clinton presidency, this attack on Comey is yet another page out of their playbook. Perhaps if the former President hadn't met with the AG on an airport tarmac, the AG wouldn't have had to defer the decision to prosecute to Mr. Comey. And then, he would never have been hauled in front of Congress in the first place, so he would have had no duty to inform them of the most recent information.

    Karma - or, for us, השגחה - can really come back to bite someone badly, no?

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  4. rather strange to call it an attack. He is clearly violating his guidelines and was told that he was.
    As noted why isn't he doing the same thing regarding Trump's connection to Putin?

    there are clearly a number of strange things about the latest FBI involvement

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  5. No stretch. I would not have had a problem if he had recommended indictment the first time around - at least he was fully aware of all the information.

    This time around he has no idea what is involved. But he does acknowledge that he is pushing himself into an election and that according to FBI guidelines he has no business being there.

    This is not just the NY Times - check out the Wal Street Journal etc etc

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  6. the criticism is not arbitrary nor is it partisan. We are a week away from the elections and he is tossing out a bomb - that maybe there is something there - he has not the foggiest idea. It is clearly against FBI and Justice Department guidelines to do what he is doing.

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  7. http://daattorah.blogspot.com/2016/10/former-attorney-generals-gonzales.html

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  8. I guess you are in Eretz Yisrael right now. Numerous arms of the media have joined Clinton's spin, and are now calling for Comey's resignation.

    I answered your non-sequitur about Putin in my original comment: he is updating Congress, as he swore to do.

    RDE: are you ever able to change your mind? http://www.cnn.com/2016/10/30/opinions/dont-blame-comey-for-this-mess-opinion-pate/

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  9. Of course he has an idea of what these emails contain -- don't be naive. They were discovered by the team investigating Weiner (and possibly the one investigating the Clinton Foundation as well). There's no doubt that they read some of them, enough to get the idea that there's something big here. He would not have acted without knowing that.

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  10. Even Obama agrees that Comey is not trying to influence the election. Can't get a better lefty haskama than that:

    http://www.politico.com/story/2016/10/white-house-james-comey-clinton-fbi-230540

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  11. If what you are saying is true, then they have essentially spoiled the evidence, as they had no warrant to read any of those emails at that point in time.

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  12. I don't think anyone thinks he is trying to influence the elections but that is clearly the result of his actions and he should have been smarter to realize that is what would happen

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  13. I change my mind all the time - if there is sufficient evidence.

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  14. Actually, no. They would be restricted from delving further into the emails once they knew they were Abedin's, but there's ample precedent to allow for what they saw while they were engaged in another, legitimate investigation.

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  15. I don't think anyone thinks he is trying to influence the elections

    Oh, really? Take a listen to James Carville's meltdown on MSNBC.

    http://www.lifezette.com/polizette/carville-melts-asserts-fbi-gop-kgb-cahoots/

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  16. Read Mukasey's full statement I just posted. He seems to claim Comely's motivation is to save Clinton not to help Trump

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  17. There are a dozen sevaros out there purporting to explain Comey. My purpose in posting Carville was to show that there most definitely are some who say that he is trying to influence the election in Trump's favor. [He comes across as unhinged btw.]

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