POLITICS
Top DOJ official drafted resignation email amid
Trump election pressure
The never-sent email, a copy of which was obtained by
POLITICO, highlights the pressures at the department as the former president
tried to overturn his loss.
By BETSY WOODRUFF
SWAN and NICHOLAS WU
08/04/2021
01:41 PM EDT
Updated:
08/04/2021 03:25 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/08/04/doj-official-resignation-trump-election-pressure-502413
In early
January 2021, one top Justice Department official was so concerned that
then-President Donald Trump might fire his acting attorney general that he
drafted an email announcing he and a second top official would resign in
response.
The
official, Patrick Hovakimian, prepared the email announcing his own resignation
and that of the department's second-in-command, Richard Donoghue, as Trump
considered axing acting attorney general Jeff Rosen. At the time, Hovakimian
was an associate deputy attorney general and a senior adviser to Rosen.
But Trump
didn’t fire Rosen, and Hovakimian's draft email — a copy of which was obtained
by POLITICO — remained unsent. The fact that Trump-era DOJ officials went that
far highlights the serious pressures they faced in the waning days of the
administration as the former president tried to overturn his loss in the 2020
election.
“This
evening, after Acting Attorney General Jeff Rosen over the course of the last
week repeatedly refused the President’s direct instructions to utilize the
Department of Justice’s law enforcement powers for improper ends, the President
removed Jeff from the Department,” Hovakimian wrote in his never-sent email.
“PADAG Rich Donoghue and I resign from the Department, effective immediately.”
Hovakimian
then wrote that preserving DOJ’s institutional integrity was Rosen’s top
concern.
“The
decision of whether and when to resign and whether the ends of justice are best
served by resigning is a highly individual question, informed by personal and
family circumstances,” he continued. “Jeff asked me to pass on to each of you
that whatever your own decision, he knows you will adhere always to the highest
standards of justice and act always – and only – in the interests of the United
States.”
Hovakimian
drafted the email on Jan. 3 from the Justice Department’s headquarters after
Rosen and Donoghue departed for a meeting with then-President Trump at the
White House, according to a person familiar with the matter.
His draft
email has not previously been published. Raphael Prober, a partner at Akin Gump
and lawyer for Hovakimian, declined to comment.
The
officials’ threat to resign was first reported by the New York Times, which
said the group of Justice Department officials had taken part in a conference
call organized by Donoghue. The officials had agreed on the call to resign
together if Trump sacked Rosen.
The
Hovakimian letter’s disclosure comes as the House Oversight Committee steps up
its investigation into the tumultuous final weeks of the Trump administration
and Trump’s attempts to pressure the Department of Justice to intervene in the
2020 election. Hovakimian sat for a closed-door, transcribed interview before
the committee’s staff on Tuesday morning, and a Department of Justice memo
cleared the way for others to testify as well.
The House
Oversight committee has obtained a copy of the draft email. A spokesperson for
the panel did not immediately provide comment.
Trump, for
his part, has signaled he will not immediately try to block the officials from
testifying. On Monday, his lawyer Doug Collins sent a letter saying the former
president would not immediately sue to try to block former DOJ officials’
participation in the multiple probes scrutinizing Trump’s last weeks in office.
But
Collins, a former House GOP lawmaker, appeared to walk back the letter in a
Tuesday interview with Fox News where he seemed to suggest former DOJ officials
should refuse to answer some congressional inquiries.
Collins “railed
against the DOJ waiver as ‘political’ and said he hopes the former officials
will withhold any information from Congress that would fall under executive
privilege,” wrote Fox News reporter Tyler Olson.
“The former
president still believes those are privileged communications that are covered
under executive privilege,” Collins said, according to the Fox News article.
It is
unclear what exactly Trump wants from the former DOJ officials and why he
refuses to take legal action to protect communications that he believes should
be covered by executive privilege. Collins did not immediately respond to a
request for comment from POLITICO.
And his
team doesn’t have much time to get their messaging straight. Hovakimian
answered questions from congressional investigators the morning after Collins’
letter went out. Two other former DOJ officials are also scheduled to sit for
interviews with House Oversight in the next two weeks, according to two people
familiar with the committee’s plans.
CORRECTION:
Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this report misstated the year
Patrick Hovakimian drafted the email.

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