CONGRESS
House hopes to defy history in criminal contempt
case against Bannon
The Jan. 6 panel voted Tuesday to hold him in
contempt. Things will get complicated from here.
By KYLE
CHENEY and JOSH GERSTEIN
10/19/2021
01:08 PM EDT
Updated:
10/19/2021 10:16 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/19/jan-6-commission-steve-bannon-criminal-contempt-516233
The House's
push to prosecute Steve Bannon for defying its Jan. 6 investigators relies on a
law that hasn't produced a conviction in decades and could take years to
litigate.
Welcome to
criminal contempt of Congress. It's going to be messy.
Contempt is
one of the House’s only tools to punish witnesses who refuse to cooperate, but
it’s riddled with legal loopholes and ambiguities that could allow Donald
Trump’s allies to bury the Jan. 6 select committee in Byzantine court
challenges — without ever producing new evidence about the former president’s
effort to overturn the 2020 election.
“The
committee has a tough row to hoe,” said former House counsel Stan Brand, who
helped orchestrate the referral of the then-EPA chief to the Justice Department
for criminal contempt of Congress in 1982. “You have no clear, easy path to compliance.”
Advocates
for criminal contempt say that its successful use isn’t measured in completed
prosecutions, but rather in its ability to persuade a target to cooperate. For
example, congressional Democrats say the threat of contempt helped bring former
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former Attorney General William Barr to the
negotiating table last year, after they initially refused to provide documents
and testimony to the House in separate investigations.
But coaxing
cooperation will get complicated with Bannon, whom Jan. 6 investigators say had
crucial communications with Trump in the run-up to the attack on the Capitol.
Bannon has lodged a claim of executive privilege that, no matter how flimsy, is
likely to force the committee into possibly yearslong litigation — that itself
would become intertwined with Trump’s own lawsuit aimed at quashing the select
panel's authority. And Bannon indicated no willingness to deal with the panel
until those legal matters are sorted out.
“There's
not really any way to get this resolved in litigation on the timeline the
committee is operating on,” said Lisa Kern Griffin, a Duke University criminal
law expert.
Once the
House holds Bannon in contempt — a vote planned for Thursday, according to
multiple Democrats familiar with the discussions — DOJ will take over. Jan. 6
committee members have uniformly expressed hope that Attorney General Merrick
Garland will share their urgency in holding Bannon accountable for his defiance
of their subpoena.
Biden added
to Hill Democrats' excitement when he responded to a reporter’s question Friday
saying those who defy the select committee should be prosecuted. DOJ quickly
issued a statement emphasizing that prosecution decisions would be made
independently of the White House.
And,
indeed, despite the left's elation at potential accountability for Bannon,
legal experts say prosecution for contempt is a much tougher call than it
appears.
“Since at
least the Reagan Administration, there has not been a successful prosecution
under the criminal contempt statute,” said Thomas Spulak, another former House
counsel. “Although there may be political alignment, there are institutional considerations
involving DOJ, one of which is whether Garland wants to be drawn into a
continuation of the Trump Administration subpoena battles.”
The Jan. 6
committee laid out its case for criminal contempt of Bannon in a 26-page report
issued Monday night, and the panel voted unanimously to hold Bannon in contempt
in a Tuesday evening vote.
"Mr.
Bannon stands alone in his complete defiance of our subpoena. That’s not
acceptable. No one in this country, no matter how wealthy or how powerful, is
above the law. Left unaddressed, this defiance may encourage others to follow
Mr. Bannon down the same path," said Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.).
“[T]here is
no reasonable argument that Mr. Bannon’s communications with the President
regarding January 6th are the type of matters on which privilege can be
asserted,” the panel wrote in its report. “Also, the Select Committee is
confident that no executive privilege assertion would bar Mr. Bannon’s
testimony regarding his communications directly with the President regarding
January 6th — because the privilege is qualified and could be overcome.”
Some legal
experts who helped House Democrats argue against criminal contempt charges for
then-IRS official Lois Lerner in 2014 said Bannon’s case is so clear-cut that
it’s worth bringing sanctions against him — even if it doesn’t result in
getting the testimony they’re seeking.
“If such
conduct is not responded to, then what incentive does anyone have ever to obey
a lawful order?” said Sam Buell, a former federal prosecutor who worked on the
government's case against energy giant Enron.
Griffin,
the Duke legal expert, noted that criminal contempt charges could move forward
even if the Jan. 6 committee disbands after the 2022 elections. Though that
move wouldn’t yield testimony, it could still send a message that defying
congressional subpoenas has consequences.
The history
of congressional contempt proceedings is replete with cases that landed on
DOJ'’s doorstep only to be rejected. A Republican-led House’s contempt referral
against Attorney General Eric Holder got refused in 2012, and in 2008 DOJ
argued on behalf of two Bush White House officials fighting a congressional
demand for information.
Brand was
House counsel when lawmakers pursued documents and testimony from then-EPA head
Anne Gorsuch Burford, the mother of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch. But DOJ
argued against the subpoenas on her behalf. The fight ultimately led to her
resignation, after which she cut a deal with the House.
The most
recent charged and convicted criminal contempt of Congress cases occurred in
the 1970s, when Watergate scandal figures G. Gordon Liddy and Richard
Kleindienst were convicted and pleaded guilty, respectively, for refusing to
answer congressional questions. Former CIA Director Richard Helms was given a
suspended sentence and fined $2,000 under the same statute in 1977. Before
that, many of the contempt cases arose from the House Un-American Activities
Committee — and several convictions stemming from those cases were later
overturned because of procedural failures.
Democrats
say Bannon’s conduct is particularly brazen because he is refusing to answer
any of the committee’s questions. Indeed, he declined to show up at all to his
Oct. 14 deposition.
In that
respect, his actions parallel claims from Trump and George W. Bush White House
officials who insisted they had absolute immunity from congressional subpoenas
and did not even have to turn up.
Lawyers say
the Supreme Court’s decision last year over a House demand for Trump’s
financial records has undercut the sweeping privilege claims Trump and Bannon
are making. In that case, the justices unanimously rejected Trump’s claim of
absolute immunity. However, they also set up a complex test for the courts to
apply in congressional subpoena cases — one Trump has already leaned on to
bolster his own lawsuit against the Jan. 6 committee.
Democrats
contend that Trump’s departure from office and the fact that Bannon was only an
informal adviser to Trump on Jan. 6 further undercut the executive privilege
claims, but the courts have not indicated that either of those facts is fatal.
If Bannon
were charged under the misdemeanor contempt statute, prosecutors would have to
prove that Bannon “willfully” defied Congress. That could be difficult to show
since he appears to have legal advice from his own attorney and Trump’s lawyers
that he has valid legal arguments against the subpoena. His lawyer has said
Bannon would comply if ordered to by a court.
Those
mitigating factors could also prompt DOJ to decline to charge him in the first
place.
“The
criminal statute requires proof of the elements of the offense, each and every
one of them, beyond a reasonable doubt,” said Brand. “They're going to have
some interesting conversations inside the U.S. attorney's office. I don't know
which way they'll go.”
On the
other hand, Bannon's privilege claim covering personal and political activities
without any connection to Trump appears particularly flimsy. Prosecutors might
consider Bannon’s refusal to answer those questions so unwarranted that it
invites the criminal charge.
Some
experts — and members of Congress themselves — have looked at the legal
landscape and wondered if it’s time for lawmakers to dust off their most severe
power: inherent contempt. That process allows the House to directly arrest and
fine recalcitrant witnesses, at least initially bypassing the judiciary and
taking matters into their own hands.
Several
Jan. 6 committee members have noted that inherent contempt is on the table,
even though House lawyers have been reluctant to consider it because of the
extreme conflict it would provoke.
“That
hasn’t happened in over 80 years,” said Spulak. “Maybe it’s time to revisit
it.”
Heather
Caygle and Nicholas Wu contributed to this report.
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