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Congress Votes Attorney General Eric Holder in Criminal Contempt

by on June 29, 2012

http://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2012/06/28/congress_votes_holder_in_criminal_contempt

The House has voted to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in civil contempt, in addition to criminal contempt. Twenty-one Democrats voted with Republicans for civil contempt. Civil contempt will allow the Oversight Committee to proceed with their quest for documents in front of a judge, rather than simply relying on the U.S. Attorney in Washington D.C. to assess the charge. …

 

After 18 months of investigation and non-responses to Congressional subpoenas about Operation Fast and Furious, the House of Representatives has voted to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in criminal contempt. The vote was bipartisan with 17 Democrats voting with Republicans. The final vote tally was 255 yeas, 67 nays and 110 members didn’t vote. Many members of the Congressional Black Caucus and Democrats walked out of the vote in protest. Holder is the first sitting attorney general to be held in contempt and the first sitting cabinet member to be held in contempt. The criminal contempt charge will now move to the U.S. Attorney in Washington D.C. for review.

Chairman of the House Oversight Committee Darrell Issa offered to delay or cancel the contempt vote today, so long as Attorney General Eric Holder delivered 1300 documents as part of compliance with a 22 part October 2011 subpoena regarding Operation Fast and Furious. After a series of last minute meetings and efforts to prevent the vote, Holder failed to deliver those documents and the House proceeded as planned.
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“The Terry Family wants to know how this happened and they have every right to know. And the House needs to know what happened,” Speaker John Boehner said. “No Justice Department is above the law.”

Holder responded by listing the things he sees as positive developments during his tenure as attorney general and said, “As a result of the action today taken by the House, an unnecessary battle will ensure.” Holder also called the vote “a disservice to the American people.”

Debate about the contempt citation on the House floor before the vote was tense, with accusations of a “political witch hunt” being hurled from the mouths of Democrats toward Republicans. Former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi called the vote “heinous” while Democrat Steny Hoyer said it was an “irresponsible day for the House of Representatives” and that “this investigation has been extraordinarily superficial.”

“Let me be crystal clear about what my motivation is here, we have a dead border patrol agent. We have more than 200 dead Mexicans.” Republican Jason Chaffetz said. “This is not about Eric Holder, this is about the Department of Justice and justice in the United States of America……I want all the facts, that is what we are asking for today, the facts.”

Issa made it clear that he will continue to investigate Operation Fast and Furious, despite Holder’s continued refusal to cooperate and has issued an official statement.

“Today, a bipartisan majority of the House of Representatives voted to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt for his continued refusal to produce relevant documents in the investigation of Operation Fast and Furious. This was not the outcome I had sought and it could have been avoided had Attorney General Holder actually produced the subpoenaed documents he said he could provide.

“The Congressional inquiry into Operation Fast and Furious, and the cover-up by Justice Department officials of wrongdoing, has been a fair and fact based investigation.  False and partisan allegations by the White House and some congressional Democrats about the Oversight Committee’s efforts were undermined by the votes of 17 Democrats.  These Members resisted the pressure of their own leadership and the Obama Administration to support this investigation on the House floor.

“Claims by the Justice Department that it has fully cooperated with this investigation fall at odds with its conduct:  issuing false denials to Congress when senior officials clearly knew about gunwalking, directing witnesses not to answer entire categories of questions, retaliating against whistleblowers, and producing only 7,600 documents while withholding over 100,000.

“I greatly appreciate the ongoing efforts of Senator Chuck Grassley, his staff, and other Senators on the Judiciary Committee who have pressed the Obama Administration for the full truth.  Senator Grassley began this investigation and has been a full partner throughout it.  I must also recognize the hard work done by many of my colleagues here in the House – without their efforts the Justice Department’s stonewalling would have succeeded.

“My message to my colleagues and others who have fought for answers:  We are still fighting for the truth and accountability – for the family of murdered Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, for whistleblowers who have faced retaliation, and for countless victims of Operation Fast and Furious in Mexico.  Unless President Obama relents to this bipartisan call for transparency and an end to the cover-up, our fight will move to the courts where we will prevail in getting the documents that the Justice Department and President Obama’s flawed assertion of executive privilege have denied the American people.”

Update: The Romney camp recently released the following statement.

“Governor Romney supports the vote to hold Attorney General Holder in contempt of congress.”

 

 

 

 

One Comment
  1. Anonymous permalink

    “Many members of the Congressional Black Caucus and Democrats walked out of the vote in protest.” These members are racists. This is shameful! This is not about the color of skin. This is about the death of two Americans who were serving their country and countless other innocents. I’m sick and tired of these self-serving racists.

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