Oversight Committee
Chaired by Issa to Consider Operation Fast and Furious Contempt Report
on June 20
On Wednesday, June 20, 2012, the House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee will convene to consider a report holding Attorney General
Eric Holder in contempt of Congress for his failure to produce documents
specified in the Committee's October 12, 2011, subpoena. Oversight and
Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa issued the following
statement on the scheduling of a Committee vote on contempt:
"For over a year and a half, the House Oversight Committee, with Senator
Chuck Grassley, has conducted a joint investigation of reckless conduct
in Operation Fast and Furious. With the support of House leadership, the
Republican Conference, and even some Democratic Members who have
expressed concern to the White House over the Justice Department's
failure to cooperate, this investigation has yielded significant
results. The Attorney General has acknowledged that the operation was
fundamentally flawed and he has committed to take steps to ensure that
it does not occur again. Evidence found in applications for wiretaps
shows that although senior officials were given information about
reckless tactics, they still signed affirmations that they had reviewed
the investigation and determined that electronic surveillance of phones
was necessary.
Chairman
Darrell Issa
"Despite what the investigation has uncovered through whistleblowers and
documents the Justice Department had tried to hide, the Committee's work
is not yet complete. Attorney General Holder has failed to meet his
legal obligations pursuant to the October 12 subpoena. House leaders
reiterated this failure in a May 18, 2012, letter. Specifically, the
Justice Department has refused to turn over critical documents on the
grounds that they show internal Department deliberations and were
created after February 4, 2011 – the date Justice issued a false denial
to Congress. Contempt will focus on the failure to provide these post
February 4th documents.
"The
Obama Administration has not asserted Executive Privilege or any other
valid privilege over these materials and it is unacceptable that the
Department of Justice refuses to produce them. These documents pertain
to Operation Fast and Furious, the claims of whistleblowers, and why it
took the Department nearly a year to retract false denials of reckless
tactics. The Justice Department's actions have obstructed the
investigation. Congress has an obligation to investigate unanswered
questions about attempts to smear whistleblowers, failures by Justice
Department officials to be truthful and candid with the congressional
investigation, and the reasons for the significant delay in
acknowledging reckless conduct in Operation Fast and Furious.
"While the Justice Department can still stop the process of contempt,
this will only occur through the delivery of the post February 4, 2011,
documents related to Operation Fast and Furious and whistleblower
accusations subpoenaed by the Committee. If the Attorney General decides
to produce these subpoenaed documents, I am confident we can reach
agreement on other materials and render the process of contempt
unnecessary."
Committee consideration of a contempt citation is a debatable and
amendable measure. Committee approval requires a majority vote. Contempt
is a process for enforcing compliance with a lawful subpoena and does
not assign blame for the flawed and reckless conduct that took place in
Operation Fast and Furious.