DC lawyers’ disciplinary board says ex-DOJ official Jeffrey Clark lied in his attempts to overturn 2020 election
By Katelyn Polantz, CNN Reporter, Crime and Justice
Former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark, whom Donald Trump wanted to install as attorney general so he could use the department to help him overturn the 2020 election, violated his professional code of conduct, the disciplinary office governing lawyers in Washington, DC, said.
The DC disciplinary counsel, Hamilton Fox, said Clark was dishonest and attempted to interfere with the administration of justice after the 2020 election, according to the ethics complaint that Fox’s office made public on Friday.
The findings and suggestion of “appropriate discipline” will be weighed by ethics officials and the DC Court of Appeals before Clark would be disciplined, which could potentially include disbarment.
Clark has also been a focus of the Justice Department’s investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election, with federal investigators searching his home as part of that investigation in June.
An attorney for Clark did not immediately respond a request for comment.
Fox alleged that Clark intended to make a false statement to Georgia officials by saying that the Justice Department found “significant concerns” that could impact the election after November 2020, that the Justice Department was interested in a special legislative session in the state, and that the Department was involved in a lawsuit challenging the election in Fulton County, Georgia.
Those statements were all false, Fox wrote.
“The Department was aware of no allegations of election fraud in Georgia that would have affected the results of the presidential election,” Fox wrote on Friday. And, “the Department had no involvement in the Fulton County [court] case and was not concerned by its lack of progress.”
Clark wanted to make these statements to Georgia officials in a letter, with Justice Department letterhead, but was blocked by his bosses, then-acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and his then-deputy Richard Donoghue, who gave public testimony on Clark’s plot in a January 6 committee hearing in June.
Clark met with the House select committee investigating the January 6 US Capitol attack in February but pleaded the Fifth Amendment during his deposition.
Donoghue also testified before the committee that Trump wanted to appoint Clark as the acting attorney general. The plan, however, was ultimately stopped when Donoghue, Rosen and the head of the Office of Legal Counsel Steven Engel all threatened to resign.
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