Opinion: Merrick Garland: Unfounded attacks on the Justice Department must end
Conspiracy theories, falsehoods and threats of violence against DOJ personnel are not normal.
Last week, a California man was convicted of threatening to bomb an FBI field office where hundreds of agents and other employees work. In one of his threats to the FBI, the man wrote: “I can go on a mass murder spree. In fact, it would be very explainable by your actions.”
These heinous threats of violence have become routine in an environment in which the Justice Department is under attack like never before.
In recent weeks, we have seen an escalation of attacks that go far beyond public scrutiny, criticism, and legitimate and necessary oversight of our work. They are baseless, personal and dangerous.
These attacks come in the form of threats to defund particular department investigations, most recently the special counsel’s prosecution of the former president.
[OCS: Why would such a request, made only to Congress as the people’s representatives, be inappropriate given the appearance of massive wrongdoing, including domestic spying on American citizens, withholding or manipulating exculpatory evidence, and selective prosecutions that appear to be deliberate interference with the upcoming presidential election?]
They come in the form of conspiracy theories crafted and spread for the purpose of undermining public trust in the judicial process itself. Those include false claims that a case brought by a local district attorney and resolved by a jury verdict in a state trial was somehow controlled by the Justice Department.
[OCS: It is a fact that most conspiracy theories, so branded by agency personnel and media outlets, have been proven true, and, in fact, worse than originally imagined.
Why is it that the Department of Justice struggles mightily to withhold documents and testimony requested by legitimate Congressional oversight committees?
How is it that a ranking DOJ official resigned his position to become the chief prosecutor in the State case and that Committee and FOIA requests for communications between the State and the DOJ are being denied?]
They come in the form of dangerous falsehoods about the FBI’s law enforcement operations that increase the risks faced by our agents.
[OCS: Knowingly sending armed agents into an area secured and controlled by the United States Secret Service without deconfliction and vetting the individual agents is not a routine “law enforcement operation” and multiplies the risks to agents should they deliberately or inadvertently endanger a federal protectee.]
They come in the form of efforts to bully and intimidate our career public servants by repeatedly and publicly singling them out.
[OCS: While it is common to blame the herd for individual wrongdoing, individuals must be held accountable for their actions—if not officially by the agency, then by Congress and the media. Questioning low-level individuals to reveal wrongdoing by upper-echelon managers is a routine and necessary investigative technique.]
They come in the form of false claims that the department is politicizing its work to somehow influence the outcome of an election. Such claims are often made by those who are themselves attempting to politicize the department’s work to influence the outcome of an election.
[OCS: The DOJ, and other federal agencies, were caught red-handed running a hoax to influence an election (Russia, Russia, Russia), disseminating disinformation to influence an election (Hunter Biden’s laptop), and attempting to influence charges against Hunter Biden (including those violating the Espionage Act) to influence an election by protecting President Biden, and altering transcripts and withholding audio tapes of Biden’s interview to, wait for it, influence an election.
As for others calling out such malfeasance, it is pure projection when you blame the opposition for your own behavior in politicizing the department’s work.]
And media reports indicate there is an ongoing effort to ramp up these attacks against the Justice Department, its work and its employees.
[OCS: As per past practice, certain media outlets lack credibility because they are willing stenographers for departmental propaganda and leaks and cannot be trusted. Chief among them are the New York Times and The Washington Post.]
We will not be intimidated by these attacks. But it is absurd and dangerous that public servants, many of whom risk their lives every day, are being threatened for simply doing their jobs and adhering to the principles that have long guided the Justice Department’s work.
[OCS: You have the guns and jails, so the only intimidation that you really face is being held accountable for your past criminality should there be a regime change in the next election. Perhaps you should explain why the House of Representatives voted 216 to 207 to hold you in contempt of Congress to provide requested information to Congress.]
In my first job at the Justice Department some 45 years ago, I worked on what would become the department’s first edition of the Principles of Federal Prosecution. That set of rules for prosecutors enshrined what every department employee lives by every single day: an unwavering commitment to the fair and impartial application of our laws. That commitment has been sustained by dedicated career professionals who serve across administrations of both political parties.
[OCS: Sounds great, but nobody cares what you did 45 years ago. They care what you are doing months before a presidential election.]
The Justice Department makes decisions about criminal investigations based only on the facts and the law. We do not investigate people because of their last name, their political affiliation, the size of their bank account, where they come from or what they look like. We investigate and prosecute violations of federal law — nothing more, nothing less.
[OCS: This is a lie! I give you former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Joe Biden, and various others who refuse to uphold federal laws.]
We do this not only because of the principles that have long guided our work, but also because we know that our democracy cannot survive without a justice system that ensures the equal protection of law for all its citizens.
[OCS: Your party has done more to destroy democracy than at any other time after the Civil War. You have made a mockery of our Justice system and almost all of the other democratic institutions that activist progressive communist democrats now run.]
The Justice Department will continue to uphold its obligation under the Constitution to fiercely defend the right of all Americans to peacefully express opinions, beliefs and ideas. Disagreements about politics are good for our democracy. They are normal.
[OCS: How do you explain targeting Catholics and parents who complain at school board meetings? How do you ignore domestic terrorist groups like Black Lives Matter and Antifa?]
But using conspiracy theories, falsehoods, violence and threats of violence to affect political outcomes is not normal. The short-term political benefits of those tactics will never make up for the long-term cost to our country.
[OCS: Then tell the DOJ and FBI to quit interfering in our elections before we turn into a banana republic.]
Continued unfounded attacks against the Justice Department’s employees are dangerous for people’s safety. They are dangerous for our democracy. This must stop. <Source>
[OCS: What must stop is the persecution of Donald Trump and the restoration of our judicial system in America.]
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