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Jack Smith to Testify at Public Hearing01/22 06:08
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republican lawmakers are poised to grill former Justice
Department special counsel Jack Smith on Thursday at a congressional hearing
that's expected to focus fresh attention on two criminal investigations that
shadowed Donald Trump during his 2024 presidential campaign.
Smith testified behind closed doors last month but returns to the House
Judiciary Committee for a public hearing likely to divide along starkly
partisan lines between Republican lawmakers looking to undermine the former
Justice Department official and Democrats hoping to elicit new and damaging
testimony about Trump's conduct.
Smith will tell lawmakers that he stands behind his decision as special
counsel to bring charges against Trump in separate cases accusing the
Republican of conspiring to overturn the 2020 presidential election after he
lost to Democrat Joe Biden and hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago
estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
"Our investigation developed proof beyond a reasonable doubt that President
Trump engaged in criminal activity," Smith will say, according to a copy of his
opening statement obtained by The Associated Press. "If asked whether to
prosecute a former president based on the same facts today, I would do so
regardless of whether that president was a Republican or a Democrat."
"No one should be above the law in our country, and the law required that he
be held to account. So that is what I did," Smith will say.
The hearing is unfolding against the backdrop of an ongoing Trump
administration retribution campaign targeting the investigators who scrutinized
the Republican president. The Justice Department has fired lawyers and other
employees who worked with Smith, and an independent watchdog agency responsible
for enforcing a law against partisan political activity by federal employees
said last summer that it had opened an investigation into him.
"In my opinion, these people are the best of public servants, our country
owes them a debt of gratitude, and we are all less safe because many of these
experienced and dedicated law enforcement professionals have been fired," Smith
said of the terminated members of his team.
Smith was appointed in 2022 by Biden's Justice Department to oversee
investigations into Trump. Both investigations produced indictments against
Trump, but the cases were abandoned by Smith and his team after Trump won back
the White House because of longstanding Justice Department legal opinions that
say sitting presidents cannot be indicted.
The hearing will be led by Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the Republican chairman
of the House Judiciary Committee, who told reporters on Wednesday that he
regards Smith's investigations as the "culmination of that whole effort to stop
President Trump from getting to the White House."
"Tomorrow he'll be there in a public setting so the country can see that
this was no different than all the other lawfare weaponization of government
going after President Trump," Jordan said, advancing a frequent talking point
from Trump, who pleaded not guilty in both cases and denied wrongdoing.
At the private deposition last month, Smith vigorously rejected Republican
suggestions that his investigation was motivated by politics or was meant to
derail Trump's presidential candidacy. He said the evidence placed Trump's
actions squarely at the heart of a criminal conspiracy to undo the election he
lost to Biden as well as the Jan. 6, 2021, riot by a mob of his supporters at
the U.S. Capitol.
"The evidence here made clear that President Trump was by a large measure
the most culpable and most responsible person in this conspiracy," Smith said.
"These crimes were committed for his benefit. The attack that happened at the
Capitol, part of this case, does not happen without him. The other
co-conspirators were doing this for his benefit."
Smith is also expected to face questions about his team's analysis of phone
records belonging to more than half a dozen Republican members of Congress who
were in touch with the president on the afternoon of Jan. 6, 2021. The records
contained data about the participants on the calls and how long they lasted but
not their contents.
It is unlikely that Smith will share new information Thursday about his
classified documents investigation. A report his team prepared on its findings
remains sealed by order of a Trump-appointed judge in Florida, Aileen Cannon,
and Trump's lawyers this week asked the court to permanently block its release.
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