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October 17, 2017

Judiciary Democrats Call on DOJ to Produce Documents That May Show Coordination with Trump Voter Fraud Commission

‘If these communications concern ongoing or contemplated cases or investigations in the Civil Rights Division, they could violate the Administration’s policy limiting contacts between the White House and the Department’

Washington, DC – Recently revealed court records suggest the Department of Justice coordinated with President Donald Trump’s Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, which has sought sensitive voter roll data on the majority of the voting public and conducted highly partisan hearings based on discredited allegations of voter fraud.  Today, all Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee signed a letter, led by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), pushing the Justice Department to produce documents described in the court records that show such coordination is taking place.  The Senators’ letter follows a similar request to the Justice Department in late September that has gone unanswered.

At the beginning of the month, in a court case between the Commission and the civil rights group Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Commission produced an index of hundreds of Commission-related documents being withheld by the Department.  Entries on the list “appear to show that the Department was coordinating with the Commission about data collection and other voting issues,” the Senators write.

“If these communications concern ongoing or contemplated cases or investigations in the Civil Rights Division, they could violate the Administration’s policy limiting contacts between the White House and the Department,” the Senators continue.  “Full disclosure of these documents is necessary for Congress to provide appropriate oversight on this issue.”

In March, former Justice Department Civil Rights Division staffer J. Christopher Adams, the Heritage Foundation’s Hans von Spakovsky, and Kansas Secretary of State and Commission Vice Chair Kris Kobach called for ridding the Civil Rights Division of “ideological rot.”  They proposed doing so by stripping career attorneys of hiring and firing authority and vesting that authority with Trump political appointees.  In June, the Commission and the Chief of the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division sent letters on the same day to state election officials seeking voter roll information.

Full text of the Senators’ letter is below.  A PDF copy is available here. 

October 17, 2017

The Honorable Jeff Sessions

Attorney General

U.S. Department of Justice

950 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, D.C. 20530

The Honorable Rod Rosenstein

Deputy Attorney General

U.S. Department of Justice

950 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, D.C. 20530

The Honorable Rachel Brand

Associate Attorney General

U.S. Department of Justice

950 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, D.C. 20530

The Honorable John Gore

Acting Assistant Attorney General

Civil Rights Division

U.S. Department of Justice

950 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, D.C. 20530

Dear Attorney General Sessions, Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein, Associate Attorney General Brand, and Acting Assistant Attorney General Gore:

We write to follow up on our previous inquiries regarding the Department of Justice’s (“DOJ”) involvement with the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity (“the Commission”).

On July 11, we wrote to request information regarding DOJ’s June 28 letter to forty-four states requesting information about state-level procedures for maintaining voter registration lists.  We wrote again on September 26, regarding documents that showed DOJ leadership’s apparent role in selecting the members of the Commission.  We have not yet received responses to these letters.

Since then, additional documents have come to light evidencing the Department’s involvement with the Commission’s workings.  This is concerning, particularly in light of another recent court production showing Commission Vice Chair Kris Kobach’s plans to dismantle the National Voter Registration Act.[1]  As we have written before, it would be a low moment for the Department to have been a facilitator of Mr. Kobach’s efforts to suppress voter access by perpetuating the myth of widespread voter fraud. 

In litigation against the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Commission recently produced a Vaughn index to justify withholding from FOIA production hundreds of Commission-related documents.[2]  While we have reasons to question the Commission’s bases for those non-disclosures even in the context of private party litigation, FOIA exemptions are not a basis for the executive branch to shield documents from Congressional oversight.  From the Vaughn index, it is clear that the Department is in possession of, and indeed has already collected, documents responsive to our earlier requests.

These include at least the following entries on the Commission’s Vaughn index:

  • May 15, 2017:  “email exchange re: Chicago board of election” (DOJ official to Commissioner Christy McCormick) (#541)
  • June 15, 2017:  “email about setting up a time to speak”  (Andrew Kossack, the Commission’s designated federal officer, to DOJ official) (#687)
  • July 5-6, 2017:  “email exchange discussing voting issue with attachment” (DOJ Official to McCormick) (#544)
  • Aug. 1-2, 2017:  “email chain and planner setting a time for a call” (Kossack to Department of Homeland Security Official and Staff, DOJ) (#738 & 741)
  • Aug. 22, 2017:  “email re: collecting data from non-state entities” (Kossack to DOJ) (#748)
  • Sept. 5, 2017:  “email forwarding link to news article” (DOJ official to McCormick) (#564)
  • Sept. 6, 11, 2017:  “emails exchange discussing Chicago voting issue” (Third party to McCormick, DOJ official) (#565)
  • Sept. 15, 2017: “email exchange re: sending materials for litigation index” (Kossack to DOJ, King) (#343)
  • Undated:  Litigation documents and emails with DOJ (#778)

While some of these entries might be related to the Department’s representation of the Commission in litigation, other entries appear to show that the Department was coordinating with the Commission about data collection and other voting issues.  If these communications concern ongoing or contemplated cases or investigations in the Civil Rights Division, they could violate the Administration’s policy limiting contacts between the White House and the Department.[3]  Full disclosure of these documents is necessary for Congress to provide appropriate oversight on this issue. 

The Vaughn index shows the Department has records of these communications in its possession and should be able to produce them to us without further delay.  Accordingly, we respectfully ask that the Department immediately produce records of any and all communications between Department of Justice or Civil Rights Division leadership[4] and the White House, the Office of the Vice President, the White House Counsel’s Office, the Commission, or any of the Commission’s members or representatives, regarding the Commission or its work, either before or after its formation.

We also repeat our request that the Department respond immediately to the outstanding requests in our above-referenced July 11, 2017 and September 26, 2017 letters.

###


[1] Sam Levine, Kris Kobach Proposed Weakening Key Federal Voting Protections In Trump Meeting, The Huffington Post, Oct. 5, 2017, at http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_598dcd41e4b08a247273eb29.

[2] https://www.scribd.com/document/360511302/Vaughn-Index#

[3] Memo from Donald F. McGahn II, Counsel to the President, to All White House Staff, Communications Restrictions with Personnel at the Department of Justice, January 27, 2017.

[4] Including Attorney General Sessions, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand, former Acting Associate Attorney General/current Principal Deputy Associate Attorney General Jesse Panuccio, former Acting Assistant Attorney General Tom Wheeler, Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore, or any other political appointee in the Department.

Press Contact

Meaghan McCabe, (202) 224-2921
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