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Transcripts For CSPAN Discussion On Justice Dept. Mission I
Transcripts For CSPAN Discussion On Justice Dept. Mission I
Transcripts For CSPAN Discussion On Justice Dept. Mission Intersection With Politics 20240712
Restrictions and whether they should be followed or not, if it is not about the election and concerns about the legality of elections, procedures to the election, not to mention the number of cases involving
Administration Officials
and the doj role as those cases through the system. I think we have a lot to talk about. I want to start with the big question. Does it really look different to you . Doesnt look like a different environment when the two of you were at the department of justice . Are we just overreacting . We are talking about
National Security
today in particular, what does it look like over the last number of years, bringing us up to the present moment. In getting ready for todays conversation, i decided to go and look at the recent press releases, recent announcements on cases, see what is being publicly announced. I went back to the beginning of august, end of july. Drowning this conversation in
National Security
, i saw any number of cases in the
National Security
realm that you could have taken the same snapshot from five years ago, 10 years ago. I saw a
Material Support
case, attempted
Material Support
case for isis, one about al qaeda, some very interesting cases involving the cyber threat, the takedown of cryptocurrency terroristelated to organizations, and so forth. In that snapshot, on the one hand, you can say the study stream of
National Security
prosecutions that have been in place in one form or the other since september 11 and picked up steam with the founding of the
National Security
division in 2006 remains consistent. I have thought for a long time that the general public, who doesnt follow these issues on a daytoday basis, would generally be surprised to find that these cases are happening with some regularity. Isisugust, there was an case, or what have you. On that level, there has been a remarkable degree of consistency. The second thing i would say is you place that in the context of cases,you place those what is happening on the daytoday line level with the larger context. To use a phrase from davids book, what is the difference between institutional government and the political class, or the political set of factors that weigh in on any administration . That is the interesting dividing line, if you will, that i think he will get into today. Do you think the
National Security
following up the
National Security
division in 2006, as you say, is sort of what is true for them is true for other departments in the department of justice, or not . If you extrapolate out, there is a steady stream of what i would call regular bread and butter cases being brought across the department. Of course, do you everyone is well aware, unlike a lot of other executive
Branch Agencies
that have this dichotomy between the institution of main justice and individually appointed u. S. Attorneys separately president ial appointees confirmed in the district around the country. Again, i think there is a tremendous amount of that work that goes on daytoday. You in ons bring this. Your experience is more recent, having worked for the
Obama Administration
. I am just wondering how you see this. Particularly talk about the department of justice in the whole, but also if you like the nsd. Casesount of terrorism that joshua is referring to are down in numbers, have been since the end of the
Obama Administration
emma largely because of the defeat of the caliphate, a number of other reasons. National
Security Division
doing these days . Are some of the politically charged issues like black lives matter protests, the threats to them, is that in the
National Security
interest or elsewhere . I want to thank everyone for setting this up. Its a pleasure to be doing this with david, josh, karen, tackling such an important issue. To maybe make a comparison and build on what josh said, when people ask is the
Supreme Court
divided or polarized . You sometimes hear people say there are cases that are nearly unanimous that the public does not notice. That feels like a comparison to what josh is rightly calling our attention to. Prosecutions and other matters done primarily by career officials that are roughly continuing a pace at least in the
National Security
space, maybe not in the
Voting Rights
section or the environmental book, but in the
National Security
state. What people say about the
Supreme Court
is there are some highprofile cases that are polarized. Those cases happen to matter a lot. Again the analogy holds up here. There are some highprofile cases that are being handled very unusually now, and they matter a lot. It me zoom in and give may not seem like a big moment, but it reveals just how disruptive that
Political Leadership
of the
Justice Department
is to norms and traditions. Folks may recall when the
Inspector General
Justice Department
, michael horowitz, issued his longawaited and just plain long report on the origins of the
Russian Investigation
, for lack of a better way to civil if i what he looked into. He found there was no political bias to the opening of the investigation, though, he did identify problems with the fisa process at a granular level. Within hours of it being issued, john durham, prosecutor in the
Justice Department
, issued a statement, saying he disagreed with horowitzs conclusions, and that his own investigation might yield something different. Again, that may seem like a few sentences, and it was. It was also completely wild. That a prosecutor would do two things, one, disagree with the work of his own departments
Inspector General
that had issued pages and pages after months of investigations wild. Second, that he would comment about what is going on with his own investigation while the investigation was still occurring. I would say not just wild but inappropriate. That is just a piece of what the
Justice Department
is doing right now, to go back to josh, and his efforts to situate us. At the same time, the things under that political magnifying glass seem to me to be handled friendly right now from how we used to see them handled, and frankly, how we would like to see them handled. Karen david, part of your recent book focuses on the longterm scope. You talk about changes from one administration to another. There were politicized issues within the department of justice, and then sort of a recalibration after. Do you want to put this in perspective in how you see it, given your knowledge of the history of the department . David i want to thank you as well for setting this up. Knowned both joshs who more than i do about the
Justice Department
. Thank you for the institutional government plug. [laughter] i still have more on that. And i am a nerd, so let me get that out there. Him that much about the
Justice Department
, i had worked more overseas as a journalist. The key thing for me is understanding the modern
Justice Department
, and you understand it through the example of john mitchell,
Richard Nixons
attorney general, who used his office to investigate the vietnam war protesters, black panthers, and other groups, as a way to reinforce president nixons messaging about chaos in the country, the need for law and order. Mitchell, he left his post as attorney general and then famously chaired president nixons
Reelection Campaign
and then ended up going to jail for his actions as his role in the campaign. You had these massive reforms in the 1970s. You had president ford appoint edward leavy as attorney general. You know him, i think many love him. President of the university of chicago. Many people watching may know this already but he created this idea that the attorney general should carry out justice programs,
Law Enforcement
priorities that the president asks to do. Barack obama wanted to crackdown on environmental, or
Voting Rights
, lets say, violations, and
President Trump
wants to crackdown on crime, that is his right. He is a democratically elected president. But the difference is if the president wants to crackdown on pharmaceutical companies, he can say that to the attorney general, but it should not be mr. Attorney general, go after this certain pharmaceutical ceo because he did not give me a campaign donation. All of this is old to you, but it helped me understand the modern
Justice Department
, the modern attorney general, edward leavy embodied it. We can talk about the ups and through billm all barr. To have people trust the politically neutral enforcement of the law. And i do think that is being questioned. I agree with josh, the institution is functioning. Dangerous people are being prosecuted across the country. People should not overreact to the headlines about what is happening, but i think the department is being used in a way to aid a president s
Political Goals
and reelection efforts in a way that it has not been used since watergate. Karen that is interesting. Are you all making a distinction between the doj on the one hand and the office of the attorney general on the other hand, that you can sort of separate them and assess them differently . I think this attorney general is making that more of a distinction that we are accustomed to seeing. We are having this conversation just hours after the attorney general gave yet another interview again, attorney generals sometimes give interviews, sometimes they speak, but to do so in the way that this is attorney general does the where he deliberately replicates words chosen by the president , whether that is how he described a rush investigation in 2016, how he talks about mailin ballots, despite telling congress under oath he had no evidence to support his characterization, and again saying it on national tv last night when he creates his mouthpiece as something as prominent as it is and as allied with the president as it is, i think it is the attorney general who makes that office and that person, in some ways, a distinction below from the department from a greater degree than we have been accustomed to in the past. Karen let me ask you to weigh in onhere. There have been attorney generals in the past that have been close to the president. John f. Kennedy had his brother as his attorney general. It is not the closeness in and of itself that matters but the office. Is there a distinction to be made . Maybe david can talk about this. In the past, there have been suggestions that the attorney general role and the department of justice role should be rolled out as a completely independent entity. Answer let me try to that in the lens of
National Security
. One of the challenges when you talk about
National Security
is, in some ways, is more a subjective area than other areas of the law. We can talk about certain types of violent crime, homicide of course prosecuted at the state level. There is not a lot of debate around homicide. There is certainly debate around punishment and that sort of thing, but not
National Security
. The
National Security
priorities of the country are always changing. There are a variety of components that go into that. When you talk about
National Security
, you talk about the nature of the threat, the
Threat Landscape
has changed dramatically as always changed cyber, the area that i working a lot, is the biggest headline in terms of the changing nature of the threat. When you say, what do prosecutions look like, what are the enforcement priorities of the department looking like at any given time . There are always prosecutorial choices being made. In the
National Security
arena, if you start with what are the priorities of the country, and how do you protect them, taking action and so forth . That will change over time. The example i would use in terms of saying what parts of the institution are consistent, what parts of the institution are dynamic across administrations, i think the sanctions regime is a good example. Enhanced sanctions, the increased use of sanctions is a well told story at this point since september 11, even though sanctions have been in place under different regimes before september 11. But the expanded use of sanctions has been moving in one direction under various administrations for quite some time now. So you have that line happening, but you have choices being made by different administrations at
Different Levels
about who will be sanctioned and for what purpose. The sanctions regime, as everyone knows, is incredibly complex, very dynamic, changes on a daytoday basis. For example, if you are on the backside trying to keep up with who to keep out of the u. S. Financial system. On the one hand, you see consistency. It is a tool that has been used by lots of different types of administrations. On the other hand, you are making strategic choices about who will be sanctioned when, and what purposes. Karen one of the questions that comes to us and it fits perfectly into this conversation is from johnny dwyer. Is the nature of
National Security
changing, the definition of
National Security
changing . We hear about the protests themselves being a
National Security
concern of major importance. That . O you think about do we need a rethink in terms of the
National Security
division . Its portfolio become broader, is it focusing domestically in ways it has not before, how do we think about it . Joshua it is a great question from johnny, who has written about these issues. The recognition that it is not that there is a set of cases that is obvious and objective, that any
Justice Department
simply needs to pick up and do. Instead, there are policy choices, leadership choices about where to find cases in the first place. Or as josh said, to use an established tool but how to direct it. Not
Justice Department
is just a place that turns out law but also makes policy choices. A
National Security
division was created in part to enhance the
Justice Department
s policy role, voice in the interagency process. It is incumbent on the
National Security
division amidst the broader
Justice Department
to keep up. When i had the pleasure of working there, folks like lisa monico, mary mccord made sure the division, while never taking its eye off of the terrorist right, realized cyber thing was getting bigger and more consequential. Josh is the real cyber expert in this crew. But that is an important pivot you seek,he expertise who you hire, what parts of partnerships you forged with the fbi, how you work with u. S. Attorneys offices. That evolution needs to happen. And johnny put his finger on what i think needs to be a big part of that evolution, dealing with this surging domestic terrorist threat, what i call the white supremacist terrorist threat. Increasingly it has transnational links. Unfortunately, it is global. We see a little bit of innovation on that front. We saw the fbi and the broader
Justice Department
disrupt a plot in colorado that the doj and fbi said was the first public manifestation of new cooperation between the counterterrorism investigators and hate crimes investigators. These are people that use different tools and tend to come at things differently. Domestic terrorism in some ways slices between them. So there was adaptation, a new collaboration in that which hate crimes investigators look to know for, and the tools that counterterrorism folks use, tools often focused on stopping a crime, or catching someone when they have committed a crime without people getting hurt, bringing that together in a useful way that may save lives. I think more is needed, and i think this
Justice Department
over all has not made that pivot toward addressing the rise of what supremacist threat as much as it could or should have, but you see some indications of that adaptation. Things if the you just sent to the normal educated reader of the media, what are the
National Security
concerns that the department of justice is involved in right now would mention the durham investigation. Intoct investigation igins of the
Russian Investigation
taking about how that was handled, there is a question about what the political dimension of it is. Attorney general barr has refused to say that he will not release the report prior to the policy thaten it is within six days of an election,
Justice Department
60 days of an election,
Administration Officials<\/a> and the doj role as those cases through the system. I think we have a lot to talk about. I want to start with the big question. Does it really look different to you . Doesnt look like a different environment when the two of you were at the department of justice . Are we just overreacting . We are talking about
National Security<\/a> today in particular, what does it look like over the last number of years, bringing us up to the present moment. In getting ready for todays conversation, i decided to go and look at the recent press releases, recent announcements on cases, see what is being publicly announced. I went back to the beginning of august, end of july. Drowning this conversation in
National Security<\/a>, i saw any number of cases in the
National Security<\/a> realm that you could have taken the same snapshot from five years ago, 10 years ago. I saw a
Material Support<\/a> case, attempted
Material Support<\/a> case for isis, one about al qaeda, some very interesting cases involving the cyber threat, the takedown of cryptocurrency terroristelated to organizations, and so forth. In that snapshot, on the one hand, you can say the study stream of
National Security<\/a> prosecutions that have been in place in one form or the other since september 11 and picked up steam with the founding of the
National Security<\/a> division in 2006 remains consistent. I have thought for a long time that the general public, who doesnt follow these issues on a daytoday basis, would generally be surprised to find that these cases are happening with some regularity. Isisugust, there was an case, or what have you. On that level, there has been a remarkable degree of consistency. The second thing i would say is you place that in the context of cases,you place those what is happening on the daytoday line level with the larger context. To use a phrase from davids book, what is the difference between institutional government and the political class, or the political set of factors that weigh in on any administration . That is the interesting dividing line, if you will, that i think he will get into today. Do you think the
National Security<\/a> following up the
National Security<\/a> division in 2006, as you say, is sort of what is true for them is true for other departments in the department of justice, or not . If you extrapolate out, there is a steady stream of what i would call regular bread and butter cases being brought across the department. Of course, do you everyone is well aware, unlike a lot of other executive
Branch Agencies<\/a> that have this dichotomy between the institution of main justice and individually appointed u. S. Attorneys separately president ial appointees confirmed in the district around the country. Again, i think there is a tremendous amount of that work that goes on daytoday. You in ons bring this. Your experience is more recent, having worked for the
Obama Administration<\/a>. I am just wondering how you see this. Particularly talk about the department of justice in the whole, but also if you like the nsd. Casesount of terrorism that joshua is referring to are down in numbers, have been since the end of the
Obama Administration<\/a> emma largely because of the defeat of the caliphate, a number of other reasons. National
Security Division<\/a> doing these days . Are some of the politically charged issues like black lives matter protests, the threats to them, is that in the
National Security<\/a> interest or elsewhere . I want to thank everyone for setting this up. Its a pleasure to be doing this with david, josh, karen, tackling such an important issue. To maybe make a comparison and build on what josh said, when people ask is the
Supreme Court<\/a> divided or polarized . You sometimes hear people say there are cases that are nearly unanimous that the public does not notice. That feels like a comparison to what josh is rightly calling our attention to. Prosecutions and other matters done primarily by career officials that are roughly continuing a pace at least in the
National Security<\/a> space, maybe not in the
Voting Rights<\/a> section or the environmental book, but in the
National Security<\/a> state. What people say about the
Supreme Court<\/a> is there are some highprofile cases that are polarized. Those cases happen to matter a lot. Again the analogy holds up here. There are some highprofile cases that are being handled very unusually now, and they matter a lot. It me zoom in and give may not seem like a big moment, but it reveals just how disruptive that
Political Leadership<\/a> of the
Justice Department<\/a> is to norms and traditions. Folks may recall when the
Inspector General<\/a>
Justice Department<\/a>, michael horowitz, issued his longawaited and just plain long report on the origins of the
Russian Investigation<\/a>, for lack of a better way to civil if i what he looked into. He found there was no political bias to the opening of the investigation, though, he did identify problems with the fisa process at a granular level. Within hours of it being issued, john durham, prosecutor in the
Justice Department<\/a>, issued a statement, saying he disagreed with horowitzs conclusions, and that his own investigation might yield something different. Again, that may seem like a few sentences, and it was. It was also completely wild. That a prosecutor would do two things, one, disagree with the work of his own departments
Inspector General<\/a> that had issued pages and pages after months of investigations wild. Second, that he would comment about what is going on with his own investigation while the investigation was still occurring. I would say not just wild but inappropriate. That is just a piece of what the
Justice Department<\/a> is doing right now, to go back to josh, and his efforts to situate us. At the same time, the things under that political magnifying glass seem to me to be handled friendly right now from how we used to see them handled, and frankly, how we would like to see them handled. Karen david, part of your recent book focuses on the longterm scope. You talk about changes from one administration to another. There were politicized issues within the department of justice, and then sort of a recalibration after. Do you want to put this in perspective in how you see it, given your knowledge of the history of the department . David i want to thank you as well for setting this up. Knowned both joshs who more than i do about the
Justice Department<\/a>. Thank you for the institutional government plug. [laughter] i still have more on that. And i am a nerd, so let me get that out there. Him that much about the
Justice Department<\/a>, i had worked more overseas as a journalist. The key thing for me is understanding the modern
Justice Department<\/a>, and you understand it through the example of john mitchell,
Richard Nixons<\/a> attorney general, who used his office to investigate the vietnam war protesters, black panthers, and other groups, as a way to reinforce president nixons messaging about chaos in the country, the need for law and order. Mitchell, he left his post as attorney general and then famously chaired president nixons
Reelection Campaign<\/a> and then ended up going to jail for his actions as his role in the campaign. You had these massive reforms in the 1970s. You had president ford appoint edward leavy as attorney general. You know him, i think many love him. President of the university of chicago. Many people watching may know this already but he created this idea that the attorney general should carry out justice programs,
Law Enforcement<\/a> priorities that the president asks to do. Barack obama wanted to crackdown on environmental, or
Voting Rights<\/a>, lets say, violations, and
President Trump<\/a> wants to crackdown on crime, that is his right. He is a democratically elected president. But the difference is if the president wants to crackdown on pharmaceutical companies, he can say that to the attorney general, but it should not be mr. Attorney general, go after this certain pharmaceutical ceo because he did not give me a campaign donation. All of this is old to you, but it helped me understand the modern
Justice Department<\/a>, the modern attorney general, edward leavy embodied it. We can talk about the ups and through billm all barr. To have people trust the politically neutral enforcement of the law. And i do think that is being questioned. I agree with josh, the institution is functioning. Dangerous people are being prosecuted across the country. People should not overreact to the headlines about what is happening, but i think the department is being used in a way to aid a president s
Political Goals<\/a> and reelection efforts in a way that it has not been used since watergate. Karen that is interesting. Are you all making a distinction between the doj on the one hand and the office of the attorney general on the other hand, that you can sort of separate them and assess them differently . I think this attorney general is making that more of a distinction that we are accustomed to seeing. We are having this conversation just hours after the attorney general gave yet another interview again, attorney generals sometimes give interviews, sometimes they speak, but to do so in the way that this is attorney general does the where he deliberately replicates words chosen by the president , whether that is how he described a rush investigation in 2016, how he talks about mailin ballots, despite telling congress under oath he had no evidence to support his characterization, and again saying it on national tv last night when he creates his mouthpiece as something as prominent as it is and as allied with the president as it is, i think it is the attorney general who makes that office and that person, in some ways, a distinction below from the department from a greater degree than we have been accustomed to in the past. Karen let me ask you to weigh in onhere. There have been attorney generals in the past that have been close to the president. John f. Kennedy had his brother as his attorney general. It is not the closeness in and of itself that matters but the office. Is there a distinction to be made . Maybe david can talk about this. In the past, there have been suggestions that the attorney general role and the department of justice role should be rolled out as a completely independent entity. Answer let me try to that in the lens of
National Security<\/a>. One of the challenges when you talk about
National Security<\/a> is, in some ways, is more a subjective area than other areas of the law. We can talk about certain types of violent crime, homicide of course prosecuted at the state level. There is not a lot of debate around homicide. There is certainly debate around punishment and that sort of thing, but not
National Security<\/a>. The
National Security<\/a> priorities of the country are always changing. There are a variety of components that go into that. When you talk about
National Security<\/a>, you talk about the nature of the threat, the
Threat Landscape<\/a> has changed dramatically as always changed cyber, the area that i working a lot, is the biggest headline in terms of the changing nature of the threat. When you say, what do prosecutions look like, what are the enforcement priorities of the department looking like at any given time . There are always prosecutorial choices being made. In the
National Security<\/a> arena, if you start with what are the priorities of the country, and how do you protect them, taking action and so forth . That will change over time. The example i would use in terms of saying what parts of the institution are consistent, what parts of the institution are dynamic across administrations, i think the sanctions regime is a good example. Enhanced sanctions, the increased use of sanctions is a well told story at this point since september 11, even though sanctions have been in place under different regimes before september 11. But the expanded use of sanctions has been moving in one direction under various administrations for quite some time now. So you have that line happening, but you have choices being made by different administrations at
Different Levels<\/a> about who will be sanctioned and for what purpose. The sanctions regime, as everyone knows, is incredibly complex, very dynamic, changes on a daytoday basis. For example, if you are on the backside trying to keep up with who to keep out of the u. S. Financial system. On the one hand, you see consistency. It is a tool that has been used by lots of different types of administrations. On the other hand, you are making strategic choices about who will be sanctioned when, and what purposes. Karen one of the questions that comes to us and it fits perfectly into this conversation is from johnny dwyer. Is the nature of
National Security<\/a> changing, the definition of
National Security<\/a> changing . We hear about the protests themselves being a
National Security<\/a> concern of major importance. That . O you think about do we need a rethink in terms of the
National Security<\/a> division . Its portfolio become broader, is it focusing domestically in ways it has not before, how do we think about it . Joshua it is a great question from johnny, who has written about these issues. The recognition that it is not that there is a set of cases that is obvious and objective, that any
Justice Department<\/a> simply needs to pick up and do. Instead, there are policy choices, leadership choices about where to find cases in the first place. Or as josh said, to use an established tool but how to direct it. Not
Justice Department<\/a> is just a place that turns out law but also makes policy choices. A
National Security<\/a> division was created in part to enhance the
Justice Department<\/a>s policy role, voice in the interagency process. It is incumbent on the
National Security<\/a> division amidst the broader
Justice Department<\/a> to keep up. When i had the pleasure of working there, folks like lisa monico, mary mccord made sure the division, while never taking its eye off of the terrorist right, realized cyber thing was getting bigger and more consequential. Josh is the real cyber expert in this crew. But that is an important pivot you seek,he expertise who you hire, what parts of partnerships you forged with the fbi, how you work with u. S. Attorneys offices. That evolution needs to happen. And johnny put his finger on what i think needs to be a big part of that evolution, dealing with this surging domestic terrorist threat, what i call the white supremacist terrorist threat. Increasingly it has transnational links. Unfortunately, it is global. We see a little bit of innovation on that front. We saw the fbi and the broader
Justice Department<\/a> disrupt a plot in colorado that the doj and fbi said was the first public manifestation of new cooperation between the counterterrorism investigators and hate crimes investigators. These are people that use different tools and tend to come at things differently. Domestic terrorism in some ways slices between them. So there was adaptation, a new collaboration in that which hate crimes investigators look to know for, and the tools that counterterrorism folks use, tools often focused on stopping a crime, or catching someone when they have committed a crime without people getting hurt, bringing that together in a useful way that may save lives. I think more is needed, and i think this
Justice Department<\/a> over all has not made that pivot toward addressing the rise of what supremacist threat as much as it could or should have, but you see some indications of that adaptation. Things if the you just sent to the normal educated reader of the media, what are the
National Security<\/a> concerns that the department of justice is involved in right now would mention the durham investigation. Intoct investigation igins of the
Russian Investigation<\/a> taking about how that was handled, there is a question about what the political dimension of it is. Attorney general barr has refused to say that he will not release the report prior to the policy thaten it is within six days of an election,
Justice Department<\/a> 60 days of an election,
Justice Department<\/a> does not affect things that could affect an election. Do you have a sense, david, about how the durham investigation has brought a spotlight onto the department of justice and how maybe that is unfair . David it has. We are talking about hate crimes. Terrorist,define a how do you define a
National Security<\/a> threat. That can be a political thing. The president talking about these protests in terms of antifa, and that is the threat to security, so my revolutionary is your terrorism, so to speak, and
Justice Department<\/a> is a difficult position deciding who is a criminal and who is pushing for change. In terms of the durham investigation, it is surprising that barr will not rule out announcing what they will find before the election. That would be a clear effort to boost the president s reelection chances. , in theked about barr interview last night, talking about voting and voter fraud. What is amazing is the power of the
Justice Department<\/a> in so many realms, whether who is in a hate group, who is in a legitimate political movement. , but you to meander all mentioned digital. I talked with senator mark warner. Too. Edia is at fault here, we have no rules of the road for the digital age. Everything from hate speech to disinformation to monopolies that is back to the
Justice Department<\/a>, antitrust vision division. It is vital for the institution to not be seen as political but it is also an extra ordinarily challenging time for the
Justice Department<\/a>. Elected, it iss a difficult time to navigate. Karen and we will get to that before we go. We have a question that builds on what we were talking about n. Om matt olso what are the implications for the
National Security<\/a> division because of the fact that the ag has turned to other prosecutors like durham . I see you nodding, josh. Go for it. Joshua what i really like to do is get matt to answer his own questions because he will have more thoughts on all of us combined in this area. Are twoes me there things worth saying about it. I think it adds to the sense look not wants a situated in understanding how these sorts of investigations tend to get open, the purpose, even the fact that they seem to be interviewing people in the
Intelligence Community<\/a> at the analyst, providing an assessment of counterintelligence is a threat, all of this so adjusting the desire to upend how things are done properly, rather than grappling with how they are normally done. The other thing is this
Justice Department<\/a> is having to work to find people to carry out its will. When the president seemed like he wanted to take another run at adding a
Citizenship Question<\/a> to the census, after the
Supreme Court<\/a> knocked down his first attempt, they had to collect volunteers from across the department who would be even willing to try defending
Something Like<\/a> that before eventually backing down. Again, somes to, highprofile cases, some very unusual approaches right now. Speaking of highprofile cases, there was a decision yesterday in the ninth circuit that went as close as you can to declaring section 215, the warrantless surveillance authority, unconstitutional. What do you think about that . I thought 215 was in the past. What is happening with that . Joshua i will just refer to josh on that. I saw that the ninth circuit handed down this lengthy opinion yesterday. It does feel like a blast from the past, talking about the telephone metadata program. Such things are still alive to the extent that things collected then, even under a program that butn reoriented since if it is being used in a case, active litigation, the issue still remains. I want to sit down and read that opinion and see what it was. I gather the ninth circuit said this prosecution would not be affected by it but passed out on the locality of the program itself. Karen it also games on the heels of unrelated these two announcements of fisa reforms that attorney general barr put out. Did any of you get a chance to look at those . David i did not look at them in great detail. It iswant to say, i think important for us to realize how
Little People<\/a> trust these surveillance programs, how little they trust the
National Security<\/a> division. This goes back to problems that go beyond the trunkbiden dynamic. I think there is a problem with the fisa process. It is not transparent enough. People dont trust me either. I am the definition of a mainstream journalist. Joshua i trust you, david. David writing this book, i met a lot of committed
Public Servants<\/a> who put in incredible amounts of time into these fisa applications, but what happened with the fbi lawyer, kevin kleinsmith, that is outrageous. There is a need for nsd to look court beingthe fisa a rubber stamp, going back to edward snowden. The ruling yesterday will play into this, as i present in the book, these fears of improper government surveillance, a big brother government that is that isre, a deep state victimizing ordinary americans. Karen what are we to make of the way that the flynn case has become a football being passed back and forth . That is also the kind of thing where people are confused. Case interfere with a you can tell a judge what to do. That seems to many people, when you talk about trust, to violate certain ways in which we expect our courts to operate. Is that incorrect . Joshua i will jump in. Stepping back from thejump in t. There are lots of interesting questions from small to big criminal cases about what is in the discretion of the prosecution versus what the court can weigh in on. Right . Plead he deals, for example, are sort of rife with this sort of difficulty. When it comes to, again, if an agreement is reached between a prosecutor and a defendant and it is brought before a court, is the court obligated to accept that . Right . There are different regimes within different systems in this country, right . The federal system, for example, works differently than where i started, in new york, in the manhattan das office, in terms of how judges look at deals, please, and arrangements that on behalf of clients. In the federal season system you have these 11 c one c please. Pleas will it be in alignment with the guidelines . Right . So, im just saying that there are different regimes for thinking about this that sometimes dont have a clearcut answer. Case, so, with the flynn is there a clearcut answer or is that fitting into what you would describe as the more normal backandforth that we might on what might not understand is the public . Josh i would not want to put a word on it, normal or not, but i dont think its cut and dry in terms of the considerations. Those types of considerations happen all the time, i think. Karen you are saying we are getting a window into our department of justice that maybe we should have knowledge all around about. Making us extremely uncomfortable with the case. Entions in the flynn and i think a lot of people are. And i think of it as an outlier, not as the normal course of events. Josh gelt sir, do you have a sense of that . Joshua i think its important to distinguish what a court might do, which is fraught with all sorts of hard questions. Sunday,judge sullivan a lotng to be confronting of the hard questions that josh is describing so well. What happens in the
Justice Department<\/a> . This strikes me as very worrisome. I guess im close to you on this, karen, insofar as someone who pled guilty twice, as it were, and for whom the justification offered by the
Justice Department<\/a> for abruptly dropping the charges, ive never seen it on any other case. I dont think this
Justice Department<\/a> or any future ones could apply it to many other cases, that somehow the materiality element was missing because of the lies flynn told the fbi agents that were asking a question. It seems taken out of thin air and it seems like a ride for one day only. Thats not what justice should be. It should not be one day only, one defendant only. The interventions in these cases dont seem to be a coincidence or random. Y seem to be happening stone, they are happening to flynn. They seem to be happening to people who are personal friends and associates of people who may know damming things about the president and i think there is every reason to worry about that, even if there are all of these hard questions for what the judge should do remain. But at a minimum, personally, the idea that he might hold a hearing, as he intends to, and have the benefit of thinking through the hard questions with the briefing advocate appointed, that strikes me as well within but the federal rules contemplate and that is what the d. C. Circuit judge said. That there wasnt a high bar for them to intervene and shut it down be been happened. That hadnt been met by the
Justice Department<\/a>. So, it delayed what needed to happen in a way that represents the judge being able to do what he is empowered to do . Least ask questions. The federal rules says that a court can dismiss charges with leave. It raises the question of well, is there going to be something . Does a federal judge mean something other than a rubber stamp . At a minimum they might ask questions like why and what led to this conversation. Mean justlar i dont what theory of materiality is being offered up by the court to justify it. What led to this behindthescenes . That is in a sense what the stone case is all about. Just to go back to things that attorney general barr is saying, he got heated in his recent testimony before congress in the change in scenting sentencing recommendations under his watch in the roger stone case. He said look, the judge ultimately landed in the range we recommended, how could i have done everything anything wrong. To me thats a fundamentally wrong view of what the rest of us think has gone awry. The question isnt did the judge settle on a number that happened to fall into what you recommended, the question is why did you change. If the answer is because this is someone we all know the president wanted us to go easy on, thats not equal justice. Karen which kind of raises the elephant in the room, the election. These elections are coming up a few months from today. You referred to the interview yesterday with wolf blitzer in which he said that he didnt know if it was legal or not to vote twice or something of that sort. I think everybody was a little taken aback. It made people wonder why he said it. Sayings the purpose of it . David, i wonder if you, and i know you have, have given thought to what the challenges between the department of justice as it is currently playing itself out and what we are seeing and the election i want to go further than that, im going to ask the others of you to answer this, is there a way for the department of justice to actually help make people relax and trust in the election process . David, first to you. Do you think that this is a problem, the trust in the election coming up, what barr said yesterday, etc. . Increasing hes peoples distrust and anxiety about the vote counts, inflating the chances of fraud. That specific answer, though, where he said maybe you can vote twice, i think thats the moment we have all seen throughout the ,rump years, a cabinet member fearing publicly disagreeing with the president we saw it with dan coats in intelligence hearings. He obviously knows that you cannot vote twice. But the president , again, im going to be very negative about the president here for a minute, but he has created a situation where the top
Law Enforcement<\/a> official in the country, the top intelligence chiefs are afraid of contradicting him in public and that is extraordinary. The intelligence agencies arent even giving testimony to do that. The other way the
Justice Department<\/a> can help or hurt is with dispatch of federal agents that we saw like an event. Clearly, trump wants to do this. This is where, again, bar helped him rhetorically, talking about dominating the streets, law and order, and in the initial days after the george floyd murder, talking about antifa and how they were deeply involved in these protests when they virtually had no cases involving antifa. Josh and josh can talk about this better. The institution should be reassuring, calming the american public. It could take weeks for the election to be decided. You know, the judicial system will work, have confidence in it, give it time, dont rush it. Bar isnt bar isnt doing that barr isnt doing that. Karen are there ways that the department of justice can do said . Avid or should they stay out completely . Go back to where i started, which is that there is a lot of good work that gets done on an institutional basis by career professionals and there has been a long history, again, in this country of folks of all stripes praising career officials. Its interesting, if you look at just any particular news story about a prosecution,
National Security<\/a> or otherwise, you typically dont see, i will at i would ask david for his perspective on this, you typically dont see the article site the names of the prosecutors, right . Its just prosecutors from this officer this district rot the case. The defendant is typically named in the charges and so forth. But the prosecutors are almost nameless, right . Derive me is where you faith in institutions of government, right . Its not me, its not someone else. Its that the institution itself brought charges that were upheld in a court. There was a jury trial and someone. For those who think that means something in terms of reaffirming the institutions that matter. Josh, turning to you, you get the hard questions, i dont know how this happens. Larocco pointing to the fact that there could be mitigations after the election on a whole bunch of levels in terms of how the voting works, how the voting booth works, what the disinformation is, who knows. Cyber issues. What do you foresee there . How do you think this should be handled . Should it be handled within the
Justice Department<\/a> as some sort of special, whatever, administrative body that is set up . Judicial what do you think . I think the
Justice Department<\/a> should stay out of that. In fact, it is current
Justice Department<\/a> policy not to get involved in any sort of election resolution issues because because resolving an election inevitably means weighing in on one side of the other, directly or indirectly, just by the position adopted. Instead it is the less formal that this
Justice Department<\/a> seems to be using to put a thumb on the scale. Its not that they are actively fire it filing briefs in support of
Trump Campaign<\/a> litigation against drop boxes or mailin voting. I mean that would be abysmal if it were happening, but it is not happening and it shouldnt happen. One hopes it wont. That doesnt change the fact that things that are being said about whether there is some reason to worry about the legitimacy of an election, if mailin ballots have been used in higher numbers, that does its own damage. And thats, thats part of whats interesting about this particular attorney general. Not just the position he took in court. The bully pulpit, the mouthpiece maybe even more political even then what the
Justice Department<\/a> itself is doing day in and day out, working there actual cases or enforcement actions, or the other things that they do. But i do think that the notion of what is being said, how it lines up with what the president , the candidate is saying, and whether things like are timed andort designed to influence how people think about the election. Even the fact that we are referring to a
Durham Report<\/a>. Why is there a
Durham Report<\/a> . Hes an investigator. The charges brought against one fbi lawyer. Why is there a
Durham Report<\/a> . The
Inspector General<\/a> put out a report covering the same territory. We shouldnt even normalize the notion that this is something where a report is a typical last step. Not to mention that bars apparent interpretation of the 60 day and admittedly more norm than policy, something that davids wonderful book, deep state talks about, but the norm of not doing things in the last 60 day window, it seems from bars comments that he regards that is bringing charges against the candidate, whereas i would have thought most of us would have thought of that as doing things to help or hurt a candidate. Those have very, very different scopes. That is where i see this
Justice Department<\/a> actually intersection with intersecting with the campaigns and the election in the coming months. Forgetting whats going to happen in the election, if there was some structural change that could be made to stop the in a of politicization larger sense, can you recommend it . Like, if
Congress Said<\/a> to you or if the powers that be said we are going to reorganize things to make the optics if nothing else look better . What would be the structural change that should be made . Joshua speaking as pieinthesky journalist, i would say that the attorney general doing interviews is good. More interactions with the public and the press from the
National Security<\/a> division, its the pfizer court, if they could beam up more open. This is where now i wont criticize trump. We are facing, you know, the largest crisis of legitimacy for the
Justice Department<\/a>, you know, i think, since watergate. But it began, if trump is taking advantage of the suspicions that are there, in the stone case he talked about the four women in the jury being biased democrats. From my reporting, the president doesnt believe that nonpartisan
Public Service<\/a> exist. He doesnt believe that journalists try to write stories that are down the middle. I will describe this a bit more, but i think
Many Americans<\/a> agree with him and its vital for us to face that. Thinks sure, there are career
Civil Servants<\/a> in the
Justice Department<\/a>, but they like some president s better than others and they work harder for others. He thinks everybody is selfserving and puts a spin on the ball. This is a little bit of him coming out of the new
York Real Estate<\/a> world. Its hurtful, it frustrates me as a journalist that we are all kind of making things up to make ourselves famous. Im sure its infuriating to career prosecutors and
Civil Servants<\/a>, but a lot of americans have always thought that and he is sort of voicing it. I dont have great recommendations here, but i think we are over classifying. Things are generally kept to secret. Covered, josh, i dont know, you might have been in an elevator in manhattan with me [laughter] [laughter]. Morganed the robert office, the da in new york city. Im biased as a journalist, and the u. S. C looking at attorneys in these cases, they think more transparency would help. This is a problem that goes beyond trumps rhetoric. People dont trust of the press. Me too, im guilty. They dont trust the
Justice Department<\/a>, particularly the
National Security<\/a> division. Josh, what do you think . Given the
National Security<\/a> division, a large part of it being
National Security<\/a> classified information, is there a way to make it more transparent or is that just a pipe dream on davids part . I dont think its a pipe dream at all. I was there for a piece of that story and i think some folks on the call were therefore larger chapters of it. When i was there, there was a sense that, you know, it was still figuring out some of the mandates, right . And again, theres a complicated relationship not just between them and the attorneys, but with all u. S. Attorneys offices in some respect. You have that dynamic. You certainly have the dynamic of classification and over classification, which can present real challenges, right . We do all this work in the name of the people. You know, classification is required in certain instances and in certain instances there over classification area classification. Generally anyone would be open to that interpretation, i would say. Going back to what david said, a general statement, not just doj, you could say this for a lot of institutions of government, the public view is low, right . Of a lot of our institutions. Centerng back to 100 street, one of the things i learned there is that you want to see similarly situated people treated in the same way. Right . Similarly situated defendants to be treated in a similar fashion. I think the closer you get to that norm, we are talking about norms here in some regard, the institution is bolstered. Toen i want to turn a bit the future and ask a few questions about what we might expect. Offbeat, but i have to ask it because i am who i am. If hyden is president , im curious what will happen at guantanamo or to guantanamo. The
New York Times<\/a> reporter
Carol Rosenberg<\/a> has been told by the
Biden Campaign<\/a> that mr. Biden continues to support closing the detention center. Josh, you were there when obama tried to close the detention center. That plan is still probably on paper. Do you think thats possible . Could biden do this . Or is this a nonstarter . Josh i hope its possible, but it will take a change of political will in congress. As you were kind enough to say, i put a lot of hours alongside many, many other people in theng to first produce detainee population as much as possible consistent with security and humane treatment obligations. And then to develop a plan that was developed presented in early 2016 to congress of what conference of closure would look like. Those going toe the military
Justice System<\/a> continuing to go through that system, extraordinarily slow as it has been. Criminal whom prosecution in civilian court might still be a possibility, have that go forward. And to the extent that there is still some number of detainees, those final ones being held on u. S. Soil, a step that not everyone likes but that frankly would be the only feasible path to closure. But even that wasnt feasible in the political sense. To do those things, in fact to bring any detainees to u. S. Soil would require a change in law that only congress can provide and it would take a willingness to acknowledge that those sorts of individuals can be held wayrely on u. S. Soil the that some extraordinarily dangerous people are already held securely on u. S. Soil at lowercost. Ldly it strikes me as very much a political problem at this point. That yes there is legal , even logistical complexity in terms of what the facilities would need to look like. The biggest obstacle right now is the politics on capitol hill. Karen does anyone you know have any sense about whether this is important to a possible
President Biden<\/a> . Joshua all we know is that he was part of an administration where there was from day one a focus on this. Famously a day one executive order, even if closure didnt happen on the timetable that was hoped for. The work didnt stop. Right to the end, in fact, there were detainee transfers at the very end. The effort put in by that administration, the
Obama Biden Administration<\/a> around guantanamo was extraordinary. I think it speaks to the effort made to reduce the population as much as possible and create at least a comprehensive pathway for the closing of the facilities that congress facilitated. David, any thoughts on this . 3 i think it will be harder even more, partially because of troubles in my business, the media, and we have a crisis of information in this country, the web has grown even more important. Anyone who wants to argue to close guantanamo, there will be more false
Information Online<\/a> about the danger that each foreign detainee represents. We are living in two different realities and again, its not just
President Trump<\/a>. Thinkat is and i congress has been a huge problem in all the issues we are talking about. The need for legislation across the board, cybercrime and privacy. Im hoping that the election will be cathartic. Frankly i hope that one of the two wins decisively and i hope that people ask people except the results. Thats the goal of the democracy, right . Blow off steam and have a new consensus every four years but the pandemic shows us that we are having trouble agreeing on basic facts in this society. How many people are dying, do you need to wear a mask or not . Clearly guantanamo will be even harder. Karen i always think one town of moz going to close, by the way. Just so you know, im hopeful about it. But my question to all of you is that is, in a biden administration, do you have a sense of who might be a candidate for attorney general . I cant say i do. I will say this about how biden has talked about the
Justice Department<\/a>, he has been asked to this question in a couple different permutations of what approach would you take to potentially investigating and prosecuting this, or how would you go at that. He says some variant of i look forward to having nothing directed to do with it and leaving that hand work in the hands of the
Justice Department<\/a> and it strikes me as such the right answer and such a return to norms. They have been broken before, as davids book articulates so well and as he has said in the course of this conversation. There were trends here. We cant take treat the william barr
Justice Department<\/a> is just popping up without a basis of trends in the public, trends of disinformation, trends in politics. Theres a story behind this that wont go away when the
Trump Administration<\/a> comes to an end, whenever that is, but the idea that the
Justice Department<\/a> , it not prosecution being the row of the
Justice Department<\/a>, i love that answer from him. Karen do you think that is possible . It seems as though there has not been much daylight between any of the attorney generals and their president s in recent history. Do you really think its possible . Joshua i do very much think its possible. I dont want to overstate it. Some people sometimes people refer to a no contact policy between the white house and the
Justice Department<\/a>. Thats a misnomer. Its a policy of restricted contact for particular channels. If you hear about a highprofile terrorism suspect, you want the nash the rest of the
National Security<\/a> apparatus to know that. This could lead to attacks on embassies, u. S. Soil, or military bases. It would be foolish not to have some people know about it. But you have to have a reason and do it through the right channel. Similarly, economic espionage, it has huge diplomatic ramifications for partners if in fact defendants are, for example, members of the chinese pla, which has happened. It would be foolish not to coordinate that. But there has to be a reason and a responsible way of doing that and by and large this should be left to the
Justice Department<\/a>. Its only those complex incidents and cases that lead to a backandforth with the white house. We want the
Justice Department<\/a> to be more law than politics. 3 i would love to see a republican federal judge from missouri, a person like william webster, who was chosen to be fbi director, not political or a major figure in the
Obama Administration<\/a>, to restore confidence in the
Justice Department<\/a>. In the 1970s, leaving the webster church, john tower, that generation faced a same crisis to legitimacy that we face. They and acted reforms that restored credibility to the
Justice Department<\/a> and our government evolved. Thats the kind of bold, nonpartisan appointment then needs to be made to restore confidence in the
Justice Department<\/a> and
National Security<\/a> division. Karen tell us about the future. Josh im going back to summing that david said that caught my mind, going back to pure
National Security<\/a> thinking, a lot of things, karen, especially true to the work you have done at the center right a lot of things that were top of mind, talking about guantanamo and the issues there, in some regards they had become settled. Everyone knows the positions, everyone knows the issues. I think that this is what you were saying, josh, a little bit. If you are following
National Security<\/a> in this country, regardless of the side you are on, you know what the issues are regarding guantanamo. David, what you said that i found interesting was how can you translate those issues . The terminology is settled, generally speaking, to the way that we talk about things . To the way information is shared . To the way that we think about which,eat environment, which, which has changed dramatically again, thinking about certain cyber threats. To me thats interesting. How do those issues or conversations get updated for the moment we are in. I dont know the answer to that. But it has given me something to again, how, right . Do we think about the moment we are in and these issues with regards to
National Security<\/a> . For me thats good food for thought. Karen and maybe we should think about the moment we are gonna be in as well. Seems to me that every time we think about something where things are moving so fast, potential threats are moving so fast, as we discovered with covid, part of that become sort of guessing. Particularly in the
National Security<\/a> sphere. We are coming to the end of our time, or we are at the end of our time, but we always end our events with a question. Which is what gives you hope that we are going to work this all out . David, im going to start with you. Theres a huge opportunity in terms of
National Security<\/a> for political consensus about privacy and surveillance. I think the farleft and the farright, you may not like either of them, between rand paul and ron wyden, thats an opportunity i dont know if
Workable Solutions<\/a> are there or if transparency is just pieinthesky. Im optimistic. Past generations have faced these kinds of crises of legitimacy. If we are transparent and we enact reforms and go with nonpartisanship, you know, i think we can come out of this stronger. Im optimistic. Not all the time, but im optimistic. Nonpartisanship is what im taking away from that in part. Interesting. Josh larocco . Josh i will end where i started, which is some faith in the institutional governments that we have in this country. You know, thats my experience and its what i bring to the table of this discussion. Seen it, just having upfront. Folks of all backgrounds, stripes, you know, coming to the table to do their job. I was talking to a friend of mine who had a long career in government who said that you know, most people get up, they go to the office, put their foot in front of them and try to do the best job they can, worried about their kids, their mortgage, worried about what they are doing that weekend. I think thats an important tradition that we have here. That people are going to their career positions. That raises something else, how much has the covid age, sitting at home and not having the regularity of our lives that you just referred to, how has it made us focus on things in amy maybe more anxiety ridden way than we might have done . It is talking about changes, a very changed environment from ,hich to view the world outside youre protected home space. A final word of hope from you, joshua galatzer mark joshua if you will let me get away with it, i would like to say two. The first one really goes back to the point that josh began us with talking about and has rightly emphasized throughout the conversation. The backbone of our government, for all that we talk about the political, the good and the damage it can do, the backbone are the
Public Servants<\/a>, the military officers and intelligence officers. This will sound like a funny thing to find good news in, but the arrests and charges against steve bannon, i dont have particular glee or lack thereof and seeing him charge, but think about that. People had to work hours, days, weeks at the investigatory and legal levels knowing that they were going to rollout charges against steve bannon. They have seen what has happened to other people, lime prosecutors even, who have targetingother cases
Close Associates<\/a> of
President Trump<\/a>. People who have been overruled, forced off cases. They still follow those investigatory leads. ,ts not bannon getting charged its that people did exactly what josh was talking about, they went in they did their job and a fearsome fraught political environment. An important part of that story, but an overlooked one. The other thing is that people are talking about the law in ways that people didnt use to. Having to talk about the hatch act a lot at a party is a sign that something bad has happened, but they are, they are talking about the hatch act and why in that case we have the ethics of law and policy to act as guardrails. If that conversation about the hatch act or the impoundment act during the impeachment process, if those conversations speak to a thirst for law, in a sense, to understand it and recommit ourselves to the area we need to as a country, its good news. I think you kind of nailed it, there is a lot of attention to the law and an awful lot or questioning of how firm can the law hold. So its, yes, we should all be in the end result, looks justke it, it and fair, but right now we are overme kind of turmoil that. Thank you, gentlemen, so much for this conversation. I will have you back after the thank you all in the , future rejoining events that are many, check us out on our website, where you can see a full list of events, daily, weekly publications, podcasts, online forums, and whatever else on the site might interest you. Thank you so much, everybody, for joining us. We will see you next time. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] [captions
Copyright National<\/a> cable satellite corp. 2020] dr. Anthony fauci talks with
Judy Woodruff<\/a> about the
Science Behind<\/a> the covid19 pandemic and the frontline response. Live coverage begins at 1 p. M. Eastern. Doctors and
Public Health<\/a> officials discuss whether we are at it to turning point for the pandemic, you can watch that live starting at 2 p. M. Eastern here on cspan. Coming up this evening,
President Trump<\/a> was on the campaign trail to winstonsalem, north carolina. You can watch those comments live here on cspan at 7 p. M. Eastern and you can catch it live on cspan. Org or listen with the free cspan radio app. Bidens record is a shameful roll call of the most catastrophic trails and blunders in our lifetime","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia803200.us.archive.org\/9\/items\/CSPAN_20200908_150100_Discussion_on_Justice_Dept._Mission__Intersection_with_Politics\/CSPAN_20200908_150100_Discussion_on_Justice_Dept._Mission__Intersection_with_Politics.thumbs\/CSPAN_20200908_150100_Discussion_on_Justice_Dept._Mission__Intersection_with_Politics_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240716T12:35:10+00:00"}