Barr to come out swinging on violent crime, Russia probe in first House Judiciary Committee appearance
In his first-ever appearance before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, Attorney General Bill Barr
will condemn the "grave abuses" in the "bogus Russiagate scandal,"
while also highlighting Black-on-Black violence and defending law
enforcement officers in no uncertain terms, according to a transcript of his prepared remarks obtained by Fox News on Monday night. The
attorney general's unusually aggressive posture will be matched by
similarly full-throated arguments from GOP lawmakers on the panel,
including ranking member Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, Fox News is told. "Ever
since I made it clear that I was going to do everything I could to get
to the bottom of the grave abuses involved in the bogus
Russiagate scandal, many of the Democrats on this committee have
attempted to discredit me by conjuring up a narrative that I am simply
the president’s factotum who disposes of criminal cases according to his
instructions," Barr is expected to say at the outset of his remarks.
"Judging from the letter inviting me to this hearing, that appears to be
your agenda today." Barr will go on to deny that Trump has
improperly interfered with any of his decisions, before pointing to
statistics showing progress on racial-justice issues, according to his
prepared remarks. "Police
forces today are far more diverse than ever before; there are both more
Black police chiefs and more Black officers in the ranks," Barr is
expected to say. "Although the death of George Floyd – an unarmed Black
man – at the hands of the police was a shocking event, the fact is that
such events are fortunately quite rare. According to statistics compiled by the Washington Post,
the number of unarmed Black men killed by police so far this year is
eight. The number of unarmed White men killed by police over the same
time period is 11. Some unarmed suspects, moreover, were physically
attacking officers or threatening others at the time they were shot.
And, the overall number of police shootings has been decreasing." At
the same time, the attorney general is expected to say, Black Americans
too often kill each other. "The threat to Black lives posed by crime on
the streets is massively greater than any threat posed by police
misconduct," Barr's remarks read. "The leading cause of death for young
Black males is homicide. Every year approximately 7,500 Black Americans
are victims of homicide, and the vast majority of them – around 90
percent – are killed by other Blacks, mainly by gunfire. Each of those
lives matter." A Democratic counsel to the committee told Fox News
that there will be roughly four-and-a-half to five hours of
questioning, covering topics from civil rights to his alleged
deference to the White House. Barr's appearance is voluntary and not
responsive to any subpoena, and Fox News is told executive privilege has
not been exerted at this time to shield any topics or discussions –
although that could change during the hearing. For Barr, the
remarks will be an opportunity to reinforce his image as a lawman's
lawman. Just before Christmas, he visited New York's One Police Plaza to
meet with New York Police Department brass after a series of suicides
among New York police officers. Later that night, he hosted a thank-you
dinner for hundreds of officers. The NYPD sent two officers from each
precinct, along with some chiefs, the NYPD's commissioner and his chief
deputy. Now
more than perhaps any other time in modern history, law enforcement has
been under sustained assault, as documented by videos and body camera
footage from federal and local officers. An article by The Associated Press on Sunday
documented the harrowing scene inside a Portland federal courthouse,
where rioters have been gathering nightly to fire explosives at the
building. Rioters also have fired lasers into officers' eyes, leading to
apparently permanent eye damage – and none of it, Barr is expected to
say, had anything to do with George Floyd. "Every night for the
past two months, a mob of hundreds of rioters has laid siege to the
federal courthouse and other nearby federal property," Barr will say,
according to the prepared remarks. "The rioters arrive equipped for a
fight, armed with powerful slingshots, tasers, sledgehammers, saws,
knives, rifles, and explosive devices. Inside the courthouse are a
relatively small number of federal law enforcement personnel charged
with a defensive mission: to protect the courthouse, home to Article III
federal judges, from being overrun and destroyed." Barr is
expected to add: "What unfolds nightly around the courthouse cannot
reasonably be called a protest; it is, by any objective measure, an
assault on the government of the United States. In recent nights,
rioters have barricaded the front door of the courthouse, pried plywood
off the windows with crowbars, and thrown commercial-grade fireworks
into the building in an apparent attempt to burn it down with federal
personnel inside." Rioters, Barr will say, have "started fires
outside the building, and then systematically attacked federal law
enforcement officers who attempt to put them out—for example, by pelting
the officers with rocks, frozen water bottles, cans of food, and
balloons filled with fecal matter. A recent video showed a mob
enthusiastically beating a deputy U.S. marshal who was trying to protect
the courthouse – a property of the United States government funded by
this Congress – from further destruction. A number of federal officers
have been injured, including one severely burned by a mortar-style
firework and three who have suffered serious eye injuries and may be
permanently blind. Largely absent from these scenes of destruction are
even superficial attempts by the rioters to connect their actions to
George Floyd's death or any legitimate call for reform."
A federal officer firing crowd-control munitions outside the Mark
O. Hatfield United States Courthouse last week in Portland, Ore. (AP
Photo/Noah Berger)
Democrats, meanwhile, are expected to criticize Barr
for seeking leniency in the sentencing of Trump ally Roger Stone — his
idea alone, he insisted, and a “righteous decision based on the merits.”
The move promoted angry dissent in the Justice Department and the swift
resignation of a well-regarded prosecutor, and though the judge did
impose a sentence shorter than what the trial team had sought, Trump
commuted the sentence anyway. Barr also moved to dismiss the
prosecution of former Trump administration national security adviser
Michael Flynn, a request the Justice Department expected would be simple
but that instead has produced a pitched fight before a federal appeals
court. Barr dropped the Flynn case only after a mountain of striking exculpatory evidence had emerged – including a handwritten note from a top FBI official debating whether the bureau's objective was to "get [Flynn] fired." And,
Barr tried to fire the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, but that didn't go
precisely as planned when U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman refused to step
aside, leaving Berman's deputy in his place instead of the prosecutor
Barr had selected to replace him. Despite the criticism,
acquaintances have insisted that Barr was just being Barr – that he
was motivated not by ambition or anything other than the opportunity to
put his heartfelt beliefs into practice. "He
doesn't have anything to prove from a professional or career
standpoint," said his longtime colleague and friend, attorney Chuck
Cooper. "He's been at the apex of the legal profession for a long time.
And so, in that respect, he's unlike any other attorney general. He's
already ascended to that pinnacle once before." Fox News' Jake Gibson, Brooke Singman and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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