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William Barr

William Pelham Barr (born May 23, 1950) is an American attorney who served as the United States attorney general in the administration of President George H. W. Bush from 1991 to 1993 and again in the administration of President Donald Trump from 2019 to 2020.

William Barr
Official portrait, 2019
77th and 85th United States Attorney General
In office
February 14, 2019 – December 23, 2020
PresidentDonald Trump
Deputy
Preceded byJeff Sessions
Succeeded byMerrick Garland
In office
November 26, 1991 – January 20, 1993
Acting: August 16, 1991 – November 26, 1991
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush
DeputyGeorge J. Terwilliger III
Preceded byDick Thornburgh
Succeeded byJanet Reno
25th United States Deputy Attorney General
In office
May 26, 1990 – November 26, 1991
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush
Preceded byDonald B. Ayer
Succeeded byGeorge J. Terwilliger III
United States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel
In office
January 20, 1989 – May 26, 1990
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush
Preceded byDouglas Kmiec
Succeeded byJ. Michael Luttig
Personal details
Born
William Pelham Barr

(1950-05-23) May 23, 1950 (age 73)
New York City, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Christine Moynihan
(m. 1973)
Children3
Parents
RelativesStephen Barr (brother)
EducationColumbia University (BA, MA)
George Washington University (JD)
Signature

Born and raised in New York City, Barr was educated at the Horace Mann School, Columbia University, and George Washington University Law School. From 1971 to 1977, Barr was employed by the Central Intelligence Agency. He then served as a law clerk to judge Malcolm Richard Wilkey of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. In the 1980s, Barr worked for the law firm Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge, with one year's work in the White House of the Ronald Reagan administration dealing with legal policies. Before becoming attorney general in 1991, Barr held numerous other posts within the Department of Justice, including leading the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) and serving as deputy attorney general. From 1994 to 2008, Barr did corporate legal work for GTE and its successor company Verizon Communications, which made him a multimillionaire. From 2009 to 2018, Barr served on the board of directors for Time Warner.

Barr is a longtime proponent of the unitary executive theory of nearly unfettered presidential authority over the executive branch of the U.S. government.[1][2][3] In 1989, Barr, as the head of the OLC, justified the U.S. invasion of Panama to arrest Manuel Noriega. As deputy attorney general, Barr authorized an FBI operation in 1991 which freed hostages at the Talladega federal prison. An influential advocate for tougher criminal justice policies, Barr as attorney general in 1992 authored the report The Case for More Incarceration, where he argued for an increase in the United States incarceration rate.[4] Under Barr's advice, President George H. W. Bush in 1992 pardoned six officials involved in the Iran–Contra affair.

Barr became attorney general for the second time in 2019. During his term, he received criticism from many for his handling of several challenges, including his letter on the Mueller report, interventions in the convictions and sentences of former advisors to President Trump, Roger Stone and Michael Flynn,[5][6] his order of the federal government to resume federal executions after 17 years,[7][8] and allegations of political interference in the removal of Geoffrey Berman from his Southern District of New York attorney position in a matter pertaining to the indictment of Turkish bank Halkbank, a bank with close personal ties to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.[9][10] On December 1, 2020, Barr stated FBI and Justice Department investigations found no evidence of irregularities that would have changed the outcome of the presidential election.[11] Barr is the second person to ever serve two non-consecutive terms as U.S. Attorney General, after John J. Crittenden.

Early life and education edit

Barr was born in New York City in 1950. His father, Donald Barr, was an American educator, writer, and Office of Strategic Services (OSS) officer who taught English literature at Columbia University before becoming headmaster of the Dalton School in Manhattan and later the Hackley School in Tarrytown, New York, both members of the Ivy Preparatory School League. Barr's mother, Mary Margaret (née Ahern), also taught at Columbia.[12] Barr's father was raised Jewish but later converted to the Roman Catholic Church. His mother is of Irish Catholic ancestry. Barr was raised as a Catholic.[13][14] Barr was the second of four sons, and his younger brother Stephen Barr is a professor of physics at the University of Delaware.[15]

Barr grew up on New York City's Upper West Side. As a child, he attended a Catholic grammar school, Corpus Christi School, and then the non-sectarian Horace Mann School. After high school, he attended Columbia University, where he majored in government and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1971. Barr was also an active member in the Sigma Nu fraternity. He did two additional years of graduate study at Columbia, receiving a Master of Arts in government and Chinese studies in 1973. While at Columbia, Barr opposed anti-Vietnam War occupation protests by students on campus.[16]

After moving to Washington, D.C., to work as an intelligence analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Barr entered the evening student program at George Washington University Law School. He graduated in 1977 with a Juris Doctor with highest honors.[17][18]

Career edit

Early career edit

 
Barr with President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office in 1983

Barr worked for the CIA from 1971 to 1977 while attending graduate school and law school.[19] He was first hired as a summer intern for two years.[16] During his law school years he was an analyst in the Intelligence Directorate division from 1973 to 1975, and then transitioning to an assistant in the Office of Legislative Counsel and an agency liaison to Congress from 1975 to 1977.[19][20][21]

After graduating from law school in 1977, Barr spent one year as a law clerk to Judge Malcolm Wilkey of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.[22][17] He then joined the law firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge (now Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman) from 1978 to 1982 and again from 1983 to 1989,[22] after serving as Deputy Assistant Director for Legal Policy on the domestic policy staff at the Reagan White House from May 1982 to September 1983.[22][17][23]

Barr has never prosecuted a case.[24][25]

U.S. Department of Justice edit

 
Barr and Dan Quayle watch as President George H. W. Bush signs the Civil Rights Commission Reauthorization Act in the Rose Garden of the White House in 1991.

In 1989, at the beginning of his administration, President George H. W. Bush appointed Barr to the U.S. Department of Justice as Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC), an office which functions as the legal advisor for the President and executive agencies. Barr was known as a strong defender of presidential power.[26] He wrote an advisory opinion justifying the U.S. invasion of Panama and arrest of Manuel Noriega.[26] He wrote legal justifications for the practice of rendition,[27] so that the FBI could enter onto foreign soil without the consent of the host government to apprehend fugitives wanted by the United States government for terrorism or drug-trafficking.[26] Barr declined a congressional request for the full 1989 opinion, but instead provided a document that "summarizes the principal conclusions". Congress subpoenaed the opinion, and its public release after Barr's departure from the Justice Department showed he had omitted significant findings in the opinion from his summary document.[28]

U.S. Deputy Attorney General (1990–1991) edit

In May 1990, Barr was appointed Deputy Attorney General, the official responsible for day-to-day management of the department. According to media reports, Barr was generally praised for his professional management of the department.[29][30][31]

During August 1991, when then-Attorney General Richard Thornburgh resigned to campaign for the Senate, Barr was named Acting Attorney General.[32] Three days after Barr accepted that position, 121 Cuban inmates, awaiting deportation to Cuba, seized nine hostages at the Talladega federal prison. He directed the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team to assault the prison, which resulted in rescuing all hostages without loss of life.[33][34]

U.S. Attorney General (1991–1993) edit

 
Official photo of Barr during his first tenure as Attorney General

First nomination and confirmation edit

It was reported that President Bush was impressed with Barr's management of the hostage crisis; weeks later, Bush nominated him as attorney general.[35]

Barr enjoyed a "sterling reputation" among Republican and Democratic politicians alike.[36] His two-day confirmation hearing was "unusually placid", and he was received well by both Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee.[37] Asked whether he thought a constitutional right to privacy included the right to an abortion, Barr responded that he believed the Constitution was not originally intended to create a right to abortion; that Roe v. Wade was thus wrongly decided; and that abortion should be a "legitimate issue for state legislators".[37] Barr also said at the hearings that Roe v. Wade was "the law of the land" and claimed he did not have "fixed or settled views" on abortion.[38] Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Joe Biden, though disagreeing with Barr, responded that it was the "first candid answer" he had heard from a nominee on a question that witnesses would normally evade; Biden hailed Barr as "a throwback to the days when we actually had attorneys general that would talk to you".[39] Barr was approved unanimously by the Senate Judiciary Committee, was confirmed by voice vote by the full Senate,[40][41] and was sworn in as attorney general on November 26, 1991.[42]

First tenure edit

During his first tenure as AG, media characterized Barr as "a staunch conservative who rarely hesitates to put his hardline views into action".[43][44][45] He was described as affable with a dry, self-deprecating wit.[43][46] The New York Times described the "central theme" of his tenure to be "his contention that violent crime can be reduced only by expanding Federal and state prisons to jail habitual violent offenders".[44] In an effort to prioritize violent crime, Barr reassigned three hundred FBI agents from counterintelligence work to investigations of gang violence. The New York Times called this move "the largest single manpower shift in the bureau's history".[44]

During the 1992 election year, The Wall Street Journal wrote of Barr's work that he "has put a heavy emphasis on attention-grabbing events and pronouncements that may have more to do with presidential election-year politicking than with fighting crime on the streets."[47][48]

The Case for More Incarceration edit

 
The Case for More Incarceration

In 1992, Barr authored a report, The Case for More Incarceration,[49] which argued for an increase in the United States incarceration rate, the creation of a national program to construct more prisons, and the abolition of parole release.[4] Barr argued that incarceration reduced crime, pointing to crime and incarceration rates in 1960, 1970, 1980 and 1990. A 1999 criminology study criticized Barr's analysis, saying "so complex an issue as the relationship between crime and punishment cannot be addressed through so simplistic an analysis as a negative correlation between the two very aggregated time series of crime rates and incarceration rates."[50] University of Minnesota criminologist Michael Tonry said the data in Barr's report was deceptively presented; if Barr had chosen five-year intervals, then the data would not have supported Barr's argument, and if Barr had chosen to look at violent crime specifically (as opposed to all crimes as a category), then the data would not have supported his argument.[51]

Barr said in the report, "The benefits of increased incarceration would be enjoyed disproportionately by black Americans."[51] In the report, Barr approvingly quoted New Mexico Attorney General Hal Stratton, "I don't know anyone [who] goes to prison on their first crime. By the time you go to prison, you are a pretty bad guy."[52] Barr's report influenced the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, which aimed to increase the incarceration rate.[4]

Investigations edit

In October 1991, Barr appointed then-retired Democratic Chicago judge Nicholas Bua as special counsel in the Inslaw scandal. Bua's 1993 report found the Department of Justice guilty of no wrongdoing in the matter.[53]

In October 1992, Barr appointed then retired New Jersey federal judge Frederick B. Lacey to investigate the Department of Justice and the Central Intelligence Agency handling of the Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL) Iraqgate scandal.[54] The appointment came after Democrats called for a special prosecutor during the scandal fearing a "cover-up" by the administration. House Banking Committee Chairman Henry B. González called for Barr's resignation, citing "repeated, clear failures and obstruction" by the Department of Justice in allegedly delaying an investigation of the BNL-Iraqgate case.[55][56] González also called for an independent special counsel investigation.[56]

Bank of Credit and Commerce International edit

In July 1991, regulators in seven countries shut down the Luxembourg-based Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), after investigators uncovered that the decentralized and poorly regulated bank, which was allegedly run by Saudi and possibly Pakistani Intelligence, was involved in fraud and money laundering operations for criminal organizations, corrupt governments, and intelligence agencies. BCCI managed to circumvent Federal Reserve controls to buy the bank holding company First American Bankshares, allowing direct access to American financial institutions.[57] Several sources have alleged that the CIA had been aware of BCCI's activities and its purchase of First American, but since the CIA, DIA, and the NSC utilized BCCI accounts for covert operations and since the Saudi's provided intelligence to the CIA from BCCI's illicit activities (see Safari Club), the CIA worked with Barr to prevent any investigation of BCCI, which was directed by Assistant Attorney General Robert Mueller since 1986 (other sources claim 1983).[58]

After the bank was shut down in 1991, Barr testified in congress that the investigation had "coordination" problems and promised to remedy the issue but other federal prosecutors claim Barr actively thwarted several indictments of BCCI in Florida, when the Customs Service discovered that CenTrust Bank of Miami was a front for BCCI and possibly Saudi Intelligence. The American investigation of BCCI was taken over by Senator John Kerry after discovering the bank during drug trafficking investigations. After becoming impatient with the slow pace and inaction of the Justice Department under Barr, Kerry had the investigation turned over to New York State District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, who managed to extract a plea agreement with BCCI for various criminal violations and the indictment of First American Chairman Clark Clifford.[57]

Phone surveillance program edit

In 1992, Barr launched a surveillance program to gather records of innocent Americans' international phone calls.[59] The purpose of the DEA program was to collect "bulk logs of outgoing international phone calls from the United States to countries deemed to be linked to narcotics trafficking" through "issuing administrative subpoenas to phone companies"[60] According to USA Today, the program "provided a blueprint for far broader phone-data surveillance the government launched after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001".[59] The DoJ inspector general concluded that this program had been launched without a review of its legality and made 16 recommendations including areas relating to subpoena procedures and guidance training materials.[61]

In December 2019, Democratic Senators Ron Wyden and Patrick J. Leahy asked the Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility to investigate Barr for approving the program, accusing Barr of “an illegal, bulk surveillance program” alleging “without conducting any legal analysis”.[62]

Iran-Contra edit

In late 1992, Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh, who had been chosen to investigate the Iran–Contra affair, found documents in the possession of Reagan's former defense secretary, Caspar Weinberger, which Walsh said was "evidence of a conspiracy among the highest-ranking Reagan Administration officials to lie to Congress and the American public".[63][64] Weinberger was set to stand trial on felony charges on January 5, 1993.[63][65] His "indictment said Mr. Weinberger's notes contradicted Mr. Bush's assertions that he had only a fragmentary knowledge of the arms secretly sold to Iran in 1985 and 1986 in exchange for American hostages in Lebanon."[65][64][66] According to Walsh, then-president Bush might have been called as a witness.[67]

On December 24, 1992, during his final month in office, Bush, on the advice of Barr, pardoned Weinberger,[17][68] along with five other administration officials who had been found guilty on charges relating to the Iran–Contra affair.[17][69][70][63] Barr was consulted extensively regarding the pardons, and especially advocated for pardoning Weinberger.[71]

Walsh complained about the move, insinuating that Bush on Barr's advice had used the pardons to avoid testifying and stating that: "The Iran-contra cover-up, which has continued for more than six years, has now been completed."[72] In 2003, he wrote an account of the investigation in his book, Firewall: The Iran-Contra Conspiracy and Cover-Up.

Because of this and Barr's unwillingness to appoint an independent counsel to look into a second scandal known as Iraqgate, New York Times writer William Safire began to refer to Barr as "Coverup-General Barr", accusing Barr of concealing George H. W. Bush's involvement in Iraqgate and the Iran–Contra affair.[73][74] Barr, however, responded that he believed Bush had made the right decision regarding that and he felt people in the case had been treated unfairly.[75] Barr said Walsh was a "head-hunter" who "had completely lost perspective".[2]

Post-Bush career edit

Upon leaving the DOJ in 1993, Barr was appointed by Virginia Governor George Allen to co-chair a commission to implement tougher criminal justice policies and abolish parole in the state.[76][77] Barr has been described as a "leader of the parole-abolition campaign" in Virginia.[78]

After leaving the DOJ, he criticized the Clinton administration for being "soft on crime".[79] Barr expressed his opposition to efforts to end mandatory minimum sentencing.[79] In a 1993 op-ed, he wrote, "The notion that there are sympathetic people out there who become hapless victims of the criminal-justice system and are locked away in federal prison beyond the time they deserve is simply a myth."[80][79] In a 1995 essay, Barr rejected that crime was caused by material factors, such as poverty, arguing instead that crime was caused by immorality: "Spending more money on these material social programs is not going to have an impact on crime, and, if anything, it will exacerbate the problem."[80]

In 1994, Barr became Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the telecommunications company GTE Corporation, where he served for 14 years. During his corporate tenure, Barr directed a successful litigation campaign by the local telephone industry to achieve deregulation by scuttling a series of FCC rules, personally arguing several cases in the federal courts of appeals and the Supreme Court.[81][82] In 2000, when GTE merged with Bell Atlantic to become Verizon Communications, Barr became the general counsel and executive vice president of Verizon until he retired in 2008.[83] Barr became a multimillionaire from working in GTE and Verizon. In 2001, Barr's salary was reportedly $1.5 million.[16]

From 1997 to 2000, Barr served on the Board of Visitors of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg.[84]

In 2009, Barr was briefly of counsel to the firm Kirkland & Ellis. From 2010 until 2017, he advised corporations on government enforcement matters and regulatory litigation; he rejoined Kirkland and Ellis in 2017.[85]

From 2009 to 2018, Barr served on the board of directors for Time Warner.[86]

Comments about the Starr investigation of President Clinton edit

In March 1998, Barr lambasted the Clinton administration for criticizing Independent Counsel Ken Starr's investigation of the Whitewater controversy, which had shifted towards an investigation of an alleged affair between Clinton and Monica Lewinsky.[2] Barr said the criticism appeared "to have the improper purpose of influencing and impeding an ongoing criminal investigation and intimidating possible jurors, witnesses and even investigators".[2]

Comments about the Trump administration edit

During the first two years of the Trump presidency, Barr frequently criticized legal challenges against Trump and investigations into the Trump 2016 campaign and presidency.[87][88]

In 2017, Barr said there was "nothing inherently wrong" with Donald Trump's calls for investigating Hillary Clinton while the two were both running for president. Barr added that an investigation into an alleged Uranium One controversy was more warranted than looking into whether Trump conspired with Russia to influence the 2016 elections.[89] Barr also said in 2017 that he did not think "all this stuff" about incarcerating or prosecuting Hillary Clinton was appropriate to say, but added that "there are things that should be investigated that haven't been investigated," although the FBI began investigating the Clinton Foundation and the related Uranium One matter in 2015, followed by investigations by Republican congressional committees.[90][91][92]

In February 2017, Barr argued Trump was justified in firing Acting Attorney General Sally Yates over her refusal to defend Executive Order 13769.[93]

Barr was publicly critical of the special counsel investigation. In 2017, he faulted Mueller for hiring prosecutors who have contributed to Democratic politicians, saying that his team should have had more "balance", and characterized the obstruction of justice investigation as "asinine" and that it was "taking on the look of an entirely political operation to overthrow the president".[94][95]

In June 2018, Barr sent an unsolicited 20-page memo to senior Justice Department officials. He also provided copies to members of Trump's legal team and discussed it with some of them.[96] In his memo, Barr argued that the Special Counsel should not be investigating Trump for obstruction of justice because Trump's actions, such as firing FBI Director James Comey, were within his powers as head of the executive branch.[97][98][99] He characterized the obstruction investigation as "fatally misconceived" and "grossly irresponsible" and "potentially disastrous" to the executive branch.[100][98] The day after the existence of the memo became known, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said "our decisions are informed by our knowledge of the actual facts of the case, which Mr. Barr didn't have."[101] Democrats later characterized the memo as Barr's "job application" for the attorney general position.[102]

Political donations edit

The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) financially assists Republicans in their Senate election contests; in the seven years from 2009 to 2016, Barr gave six donations to the NRSC totaling $85,400. In a five-month period from October 2018 to February 2019, Barr donated five times (around $10,000 every month) for a total of $51,000. When Barr started donating more frequently to the NRSC, it was uncertain whether then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions would remain in his job. Barr continued donating even after Sessions resigned, and after Trump nominated Barr for Attorney General. The donations stopped after Barr was confirmed by the Senate as attorney general. NRSC refunded Barr $30,000 before his confirmation. Previously in 2017, Barr had said he felt "prosecutors who make political contributions are identifying fairly strongly with a political party."[103]

U.S. Attorney General (2019–2020) edit

Second nomination and confirmation edit

 
Barr is sworn in as Attorney General by Chief Justice John Roberts in 2019.

On December 7, 2018, President Donald Trump announced Barr's nomination to succeed Jeff Sessions.[104][105] Michael Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman reported that Trump had sought Barr as chief defense lawyer for Trump regarding the special counsel investigation headed by Robert Mueller after Barr made three positions known. First, Barr supported Trump's firing of Comey on May 9, 2017. Second, he questioned the appointments of some of Mueller's prosecutors due to political donations they had made to the Clinton campaign. Third, he alleged there were conflicts of interest of two appointees to the Special Counsel Team, Jennie Rhee and Bruce Ohr.[106][107][108]

Barr was confirmed as attorney general on February 14, 2019, by a 54–45 near party-line vote, with Sen. Doug Jones (D-AL), Joe Manchin (D-WV), and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) as the three Democrats to vote Yea. Republican senator Rand Paul (R-KY) voted No and Richard Burr (R-NC) did not vote.[109][110] Later that day, Barr was sworn in as the nation's 85th Attorney General by Chief Justice John Roberts in a ceremony at the White House.[111] He is the first person to be appointed to a second non-consecutive term as attorney general since John J. Crittenden in 1850.[112]

Second tenure edit

In May 2019, three months into his tenure as attorney general, the Associated Press characterized Barr as a champion and advocate for Trump.[113] Barr had enthusiastically supported Trump's political agenda, misrepresented aspects of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report, repeated Trump's assertion that those investigating Trump had engaged in spying, defied congressional subpoenas, and refused to give Congress an unredacted version of the Mueller report.[113]

Under Barr's leadership, the Justice Department changed its position on the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Previously the department took the position that the individual mandate provision was unconstitutional, but could be severed from the whole healthcare law. On March 25, the department updated its position to argue that the entire law was unconstitutional.[114] On May 2, the department conducted a filing with the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit to nullify the entire law, arguing that the removal of the provision on individual mandate results in the entire law becoming unconstitutional.[115]

Also in July 2019, Barr reportedly made the decision to not bring federal civil rights charges against New York policeman Daniel Pantaleo for causing the death of Eric Garner. In so doing, he overruled the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, which advocated charging Pantaleo, instead agreeing with Justice Department prosecutors from New York.[116]

On July 25, 2019, Barr ordered the resumption of federal executions.[117]

On July 8, 2019, Barr announced his recusal from the Justice Department's review of the 2008 federal prosecution of American financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.[118] On August 10, 2019, Epstein was found unresponsive in his jail cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC).[119] Barr later announced that Justice Department officials were investigating "serious irregularities" at the Metropolitan Correctional Center.[120]

In mid-August 2019, Barr had a rare face-to-face meeting with Trump and Giuliani associates Joseph diGenova and his wife Victoria Toensing, who since earlier that year represented former Ukrainian prosecutor general Viktor Shokin and pro-Russia Ukrainian oligarch Dmytry Firtash as attorneys. Trump had announced in March 2018 that diGenova and Toensing would join his legal defense team during the Mueller investigation; the appointments were withdrawn days later, though Trump personal attorney Jay Sekulow said they might assist in other legal matters. DiGenova has said he has known Barr for thirty years, as they both worked in the Reagan Justice Department. Since 2014, Firtash had been fighting extradition to the United States under a federal indictment while he was living in Austria after being arrested there and released on $155 million bail, and diGenova and Toensing sought to have Barr drop the charges. Firtash was a middleman for importing Russian natural gas into Ukraine and has said he was installed in that role by Russian organized crime boss Semion Mogilevich; Russian president Vladimir Putin reportedly agreed to the appointment. When he was vice president, Joe Biden had urged Ukraine to eliminate middlemen such as Firtash and to reduce the country's reliance on imports of Russian natural gas. Giuliani had directed associate Lev Parnas to approach Firtash with a recommendation to hire diGenova and Toensing, with the proposition that Firtash could help provide damaging information on Biden, which Parnas's attorney described was "part of any potential resolution to [Firtash's] extradition matter." DiGenova and Toensing obtained a September 2019 statement[121] from Shokin that made false assertions about corruption by Biden. The statement noted that it was prepared "at the request of lawyers acting for Dmitry Firtash ('DF'), for use in legal proceedings in Austria." Giuliani promoted the statement in television appearances as purported evidence of wrongdoing by Biden. Prior to meeting with diGenova and Toensing, Barr had been briefed in detail on the initial Trump–Ukraine scandal whistleblower complaint within the CIA that had been forwarded to the Justice Department, as well as on Giuliani's activities in Ukraine. Barr declined to intervene in the Firtash case. Bloomberg News reported that its sources told them Giuliani's high-profile publicity of the Shokin statement had greatly reduced the chances of the Justice Department dropping the charges against Firtash, as it would appear to be a political quid pro quo.[122]

 
Barr discusses the shooting at Pensacola Naval Air Station, 13 January 2020.

In October 2019, as Trump faced an impeachment inquiry about the Trump-Ukraine scandal, Barr met with Fox Corporation chairman Rupert Murdoch at his Manhattan home. Trump reportedly was angered by a recent Fox News poll showing a majority of Americans supported his impeachment and removal from office, as well as analysis of the scandal by Fox News senior judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano, a previous Trump ally who had argued the president should be impeached. Trump reportedly directed Barr to meet with Murdoch, and it was not immediately known what the men discussed, but CNN media analyst Brian Stelter wrote in his 2020 book about Fox News that silencing Napolitano was among the topics discussed. The meeting was one day after Parnas and Igor Fruman, associates of Trump and Giuliani, were arrested as they prepared to fly to Vienna to arrange an interview between Fox News host Sean Hannity and Shokin, who had made false corruption allegations about Joe Biden, a potential challenger to Trump in the 2020 presidential election.[123][124][125][126]

In December 2019, Barr said that communities that do not show the "respect and support that law enforcement deserves ... might find themselves without the police protection they need."[127] Barr dropped the Department of Justice's case against the police officer who killed Eric Garner in 2014.[16]

In February 2020, Senator Lindsey Graham stated that the Justice Department "is receiving information coming out of the Ukraine from" Rudy Giuliani, a personal lawyer to president Donald Trump. Graham had learned from Barr that "they've created a process that Rudy could give information and they would see if it's verified." A day later, Barr confirmed Graham's account, stating that he had "established an intake process" for information on Ukraine, including from Giuliani, while citing an "obligation to have an open door" policy on receiving information. Giuliani has claimed to have information of improprieties regarding Ukraine for Joe Biden (a former vice president, later a 2020 presidential candidate) and his son Hunter Biden. Giuliani himself is reportedly being investigated by the Justice Department, with two of his associates having been arrested.[128][129][130]

Barr has made commentary about social and religious issues in speeches and television appearances. In an October 2019 address at the University of Notre Dame, Barr asserted that "militant secularists" had been attacking Judeo-Christian values for five decades, stating, "This is not decay. This is organized destruction. Secular forces and their allies have marshaled all the forces of mass communication, popular culture, the entertainment industry, and academia, in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values."[131]

Barr has sometimes supported controversial or false statements made by Trump.[132]

On September 21, 2020, Barr joined Advisor Ivanka Trump, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, First Lady Marty Kemp, and Tim Tebow in Atlanta to announce $100 million in grant funding for victims of human trafficking.[133]

On December 21, 2020, Barr announced federal charges against Mohammed Abouagela Masud for building the bomb that destroyed Pan Am Flight 103. Barr had taken an interest in solving that case, both during and between his tenures as attorney general.[134]

In May 2021, federal judge Beryl Howell unsealed documents showing that in November 2020 the Barr DOJ persuaded a grand jury to subpoena Twitter for information to identify who operated a parody Twitter account, @NunesAlt, that mocked Republican congressman and ardent Trump ally Devin Nunes. Twitter was also issued a gag order in the matter. Challenging the subpoena, the company noted Nunes's history of litigation and argued that the subpoena appeared to be a government attempt to aid his efforts to retaliate against his critics, and violated the First Amendment. The DOJ cited 18USC§875(c)[135] that prohibits threats, but did not provide any examples of threats to Twitter attorneys. CNN reported that investigators sought information about several online accounts relating to threats against senator Mitch McConnell. The DOJ withdrew the subpoena one week after Twitter challenged it to Howell, who oversees federal grand juries, in March 2021.[136][137][138][139] Prior to Barr's second tenure, the Trump Justice Department in 2017 and 2018 subpoenaed metadata from the iCloud accounts of at least a dozen individuals associated with the House Intelligence Committee, including that of ranking Democratic member Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell, and family members, to investigate leaks to the press about contacts between Trump associates and Russia.[140][141]

Mueller investigation and report edit

On January 14, 2019, a day before Barr's confirmation hearing for attorney general, Barr sent written testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding the eventual final Mueller report, saying "it is very important that the public and Congress be informed of the results of the special counsel's work ... For that reason, my goal will be to provide as much transparency as I can consistent with the law."[142][143]

Upon taking office, Barr refused calls to recuse himself from overseeing the Mueller investigation, despite his June 2018 memo arguing that the special counsel had no right to investigate Trump.[97][98]

On March 22, 2019, Mueller concluded his special counsel investigation and gave the final report to Barr.[144]

On March 24, Barr submitted a four-page letter to Congress describing what he said were the report's principal conclusions: first, that the Special Counsel did not establish conspiracy or coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia's efforts to interfere with the 2016 election; and second, that the Special Counsel made no decision as to whether to prosecute Trump for obstruction of justice, quoting "while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him." Barr stated that the Special Counsel's decision "leaves it to" Barr to decide if Trump obstructed justice. Barr and Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein themselves concluded that the evidence "is not sufficient to establish" obstruction of justice by Trump, and made the decision not to press the charge.[145][146][147][148][149]

According to federal judge Amy Berman Jackson, the Barr letter which declined to charge Trump, and a Justice Department memo purportedly containing advice to Barr that Trump should not be charged, were "being written by the very same people at the very same time". Jackson also stated that email evidence showed that the Barr letter was "the priority, and it is getting completed first" ahead of the advice memo.[150][151]

On March 25, Mueller reportedly wrote a letter to Barr, as described in The New York Times as "expressing his and his team's concerns that the attorney general had inadequately portrayed their conclusions".[152] In USA Today it was described that Mueller "expressed his differences with Barr".[153]

On March 27, Mueller sent Barr another letter describing his concerns of Barr's letter to Congress and the public on March 24. In it, Mueller complained that the summary "did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance" of the Special Counsel's probe, adding, "There is now public confusion about critical aspects of the results of our investigation. This threatens to undermine a central purpose for which the Department appointed the Special Counsel: to assure full public confidence in the outcome of the investigations."[154] Both before and after the release of Barr's summary, Mueller repeatedly tried to get Barr to release the report's introductions and executive summaries. Mueller's March 27 letter also stated that he had earlier sent a March 25 letter to Barr.[155]

Mueller's March 27 letter prompted Barr to call Mueller on March 28. Barr clarified on the intention of his letter both in his phone call with Mueller and in another letter to Congress that his letter had not been intended to be a summary of the report, but rather a description of the principal findings of the report.[156][154]

On April 9, Barr appeared in a congressional hearing before the House. There, Representative Charlie Crist described media reports that "members of the special counsel's team are frustrated at some level with the limited information included in your March 24 letter, that it does not adequately or accurately portray the [Mueller] report's findings." Crist asked Barr: "Do you know what they are referencing with that?" Barr replied: "No, I don't."[157][158] On April 10, Attorney General Barr appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee. Senator Chris Van Hollen asked Barr regarding obstruction: "Did Bob Mueller support your conclusion?" Barr replied: "I don't know whether Bob Mueller supported my conclusion."[157][158]

The Department of Justice released a redacted version of the special counsel's report in the morning of April 18, 2019.[159][160] After the release of the full report, fact-checkers and news outlets characterized Barr's initial letter as a deliberate mischaracterization of the Mueller Report and its conclusions.[161][162][163][164][165][166] The New York Times reported instances in which the Barr letter omitted information and quoted sentence fragments out of context in ways that significantly altered the Mueller findings, including:[161]

  • A sentence fragment described only one possible motive for Trump to obstruct justice, while the Mueller report listed other possible motives.
  • Omission of words and a full sentence that twice suggested there was knowing and complicit behavior between the Trump campaign and Russians that stopped short of coordination
  • Omission of language that indicated Trump could be subject to indictment after leaving office, to suggest that Trump was cleared in full

According to the Associated Press, Barr misrepresented the report in several ways, saying the report gave no indication that Congress could make a determination on obstruction of justice (the report specifically stated "that Congress may apply obstruction laws") and that "these reports are not supposed to be made public" (when DOJ regulations give the AG wide authority in releasing reports such as this one).[167] Barr falsely claimed in his summary of the report that "the White House fully cooperated with the Special Counsel's investigation."[168] The Washington Post fact-checker described Barr's claim as "astonishing"[162] and PolitiFact said it was "false".[168] In actuality, Trump declined to grant the Special Counsel an in-person interview, and the Special Counsel report characterized Trump's written responses to interview questions as "inadequate".[168] The report also documented numerous instances where Trump tried to either impede or end the Special Counsel investigation, analyzing each in terms of the three factors necessary for a criminal charge of obstruction.[168][169][170][failed verification]

During a press conference, Barr said Mueller's report contained "substantial evidence" that Trump was "frustrated and angered" because of his belief that the "investigation was undermining his presidency, propelled by his political opponents, and fueled by illegal leaks"; however, the report gave no indication that Trump's frustrations with the investigation would mitigate obstructing behavior.[155][171][172] Barr also said it would not be criminal obstruction of justice for a president to instruct a staffer to lie to investigators about the president's actions,[173] and suggested a president could legally terminate an investigation into himself if he was being "falsely accused".[174]

On May 8, 2019, the House Judiciary Committee voted along party lines to hold Barr in contempt of congress for failing to comply with a subpoena which requested the full and unredacted Mueller Report.[175] The matter then fell to the House of Representatives at-large for a contempt of Congress vote.[176] The Justice Department took the position that disclosure of the unredacted Mueller Report would require the department to violate "the law, court rules and court orders" as well as grand jury secrecy rules.[175]

During May 1, 2019, testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Barr stated he accepted Mueller's interpretation of the law that was applied in the Report. However, in a May 30 CBS News interview, Barr said he had applied his own interpretation of the law and took the position that obstruction laws cannot apply to presidents who abuse their official powers to impede an investigation for a corrupt reason. Barr elaborated: "As a matter of law ... we didn't agree with the legal analysis – a lot of the legal analysis in the report. It did not reflect the views of the department."[177][178]

In March 2020, Reggie Walton, a federal district judge originally appointed by President George W. Bush, criticized Barr's characterizations of the Mueller report as "distorted" and "misleading". Walton made his comments while presiding over a lawsuit on whether the Mueller report should be released without redactions. As Walton saw it, Barr's "lack of candor" undermined Barr's "credibility and, in turn, the department's" arguments before the court. Walton had concerns that Barr may have made a "calculated attempt to influence public discourse" in favor of President Trump by establishing "a one-sided narrative" about the report contrary to the report's findings. Walton questioned if the report's redactions were actually "self-serving" to avoid conflict with Barr's statements, and if the Justice Department used "post-hoc rationalizations" to defend Barr. Thus, Walton decided to personally review the redacted material to check if the redactions were justified.[179][180] On September 3, Walton ruled that the redaction of FBI reports of witness interviews was proper.[181] On September 30, he ruled the DOJ had violated federal law by redacting some portions of the Mueller report and ordered them to be released before the November election.[182]

 
The March 24, 2019 Office of Legal Counsel memo.

In May 2021, federal judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that a March 24, 2019 Department of Justice memo[183] must be published without redactions.[184] Previously in April 2019, Barr said that his decision to not charge Trump was made "in consultation with the Office of Legal Counsel and other department lawyers". In this lawsuit, the Department of Justice argued that since Barr relied on the advice of this memo to make his decision, this memo should not be published unredacted. Jackson rejected this argument after reviewing the unredacted memo, stating that Barr could not have made the decision on the memo's advice, because the unredacted memo showed that the decision had already been made not to charge Trump. In addition, according to Jackson, the unredacted memo indicated that Barr did not have legitimate authority to make a prosecution decision regarding Trump. Jackson concluded that Barr had been "disingenuous" to Congress in 2019, and that the Department of Justice had been "disingenuous to this court" regarding their "decision-making process".[151][184][185]

Spygate edit

In April 2019, Barr stated that he thought "spying did occur" against the Trump 2016 presidential campaign.[186] The remark echoed unsubstantiated claims made by Trump and his supporters that the Trump campaign had been unfairly targeted or spied on by the FBI; Trump described it as an "attempted coup".[187][186][188][189][190] There is no evidence that government officials engaged in "spying" on the Trump campaign.[188] Barr later said he was not sure what spying had occurred and he did clarify what he meant by "spying".[186] He also said he had no evidence of wrong-doing.[186][189] Democrats criticized Barr's statement as "incendiary", saying the statement was intended to please Trump and that the statement lacked credibility following Barr's misrepresentation of the Mueller report in March 2019.[186][188][189] Barr said he thought there was not "any pejorative connotation at all" to the term spying.[191] At the time, Barr said he would not launch an investigation into the origins of the FBI probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election.[188]

FBI officials denied Barr's claims about spying.[192] FBI Director Christopher A. Wray said he was unaware of any illegal surveillance by the FBI; he rejected the description of "spying".[193] Subsequently, Trump retweeted a far-right pundit who said the FBI had "no leadership" and that Wray was "protecting the same gang that tried to overthrow the president in an illegal coup".[194] Trump said Wray's statement was "ridiculous".[194] Former FBI Director James Comey rebutted Barr, saying "The FBI doesn't spy. The FBI investigates."[187]

In May 2019, Barr asserted, "Government power was used to spy on American citizens."[191] Barr did not identify the specific actions prior to the 2016 election that he considered spying.[191]

Contempt of Congress edit

On May 1, 2019, Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd told the House Oversight Committee that Barr had instructed Justice Department official John Gore to refuse a subpoena to testify in front of the committee. The committee subpoenaed Gore over the Trump administration's efforts to add a question on citizenship to the 2020 United States Census. The reason for the refusal was that the committee's decision to not allow a Justice Department lawyer to accompany Gore during testimony violated "the confidentiality interests of the Executive Branch" (though a separate room was permitted).[195] In early June the House Oversight Committee moved to hold Barr in contempt of congress for defying a subpoena regarding the efforts to add a citizenship question to the census.[196] In July 2019, the House of Representatives voted 230–198 to hold Barr (and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross) in criminal contempt of Congress, after they failed to produce documents as April 2019 congressional subpoenas mandated. The documents, on the planned (and eventually scrapped) citizenship question in the 2020 census, were withheld due to a "deliberative process" and "attorney-client communications", according to the Justice Department. President Trump also asserted executive privilege over the documents to withhold them from Congress. Only once prior has a sitting Cabinet member been held in criminal contempt of Congress (Eric Holder in 2012). The House instructed the Justice Department to prosecute Barr, but the Department refused.[197][198]

Origins of the Russia investigation edit

Also in May 2019, Barr appointed John Durham, the U.S. attorney in Connecticut, to oversee a DOJ probe into the origins of the FBI investigation into Russian interference.[194] The origins of the probe were already being investigated by the Justice Department's inspector general and by U.S. attorney John Huber, who was appointed in 2018 by Jeff Sessions.[194] Democrats criticized the decision, with Senator Patrick Leahy saying, "Ordering a third meritless investigation at the request of Trump is beneath the office he holds."[194] Trump ordered the intelligence community to cooperate with Barr's inquiry and granted Barr unprecedented full authority to declassify any intelligence information related to the matter.[199][200][201][202][203] In April 2020, Barr asserted the FBI investigation had been opened "without any basis".[204]

 
Bill Barr with Donald Trump, 2019.

In September 2019, Barr was reported to have been contacting foreign governments to ask for help in this inquiry, including personally traveling to the United Kingdom and Italy to seek information. At Barr's request Trump phoned the prime minister of Australia to request his cooperation.[205][206] Barr sought information related to a conspiracy theory that had circulated among Trump allies in conservative media asserting Joseph Mifsud was a Western intelligence operative who was allegedly directed to entrap Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos in order to establish a false predicate for the FBI to open an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. On October 2, 2019, Senator Lindsey Graham, a staunch Trump supporter and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, wrote a letter to the leaders of Britain, Australia and Italy, asserting as fact that both Mifsud and Australian diplomat Alexander Downer had been directed to contact Papadopoulos. Joe Hockey, the Australian ambassador to the United States, sharply rejected Graham's characterization of Downer.[207][208] A former Italian government official told The Washington Post in October 2019 that during a meeting the previous month, Italian intelligence services told Barr they had "no connections, no activities, no interference" in the matter; Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte later affirmed this.[209][210] One British official with knowledge of Barr's requests observed, "it is like nothing we have come across before, they are basically asking, in quite robust terms, for help in doing a hatchet job on their own intelligence services."[211] The Washington Post reported on November 22, 2019, that the Justice Department inspector general had aggressively investigated the allegation that Mifsud had been directed to entrap Papadopoulos, but found it was without merit. The Post also reported the inspector general found the opening of the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane investigation was legally and factually predicated.[212] The Post subsequently reported in December 2019 that Barr disagreed with the inspector general's conclusion that there was adequate evidence for the FBI to open its investigation.[213] The Post also reported in December 2019 that the inspector general asked Durham and several American intelligence agencies if there was evidence of a setup by American intelligence, but they replied there was none.[214]

On October 24, 2019, two sources told The New York Times that the Durham inquiry had been elevated to a criminal investigation.[215] The Times reported on November 22 that the Justice Department inspector general had made a criminal referral to Durham regarding Kevin Clinesmith, an FBI attorney who had altered an email during the process of acquiring a wiretap warrant renewal on Carter Page, and that referral appeared to be at least part of the reason Durham's investigation was elevated to criminal status.[216] Barr rejected criticism by Democrats in Congress that the transitioned investigation was designed to provide support to Trump during his impeachment inquiry in the Trump-Ukraine scandal.[217][218] On August 14, 2020, Clinesmith pleaded guilty to a felony violation of altering an email used to maintain Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants, having added the phrase "not a 'source'" to the original email.[219][220] Carter Page had a prior operational relationship with the CIA from 2008 to 2013.[221]

In November 2019, Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded his investigation into the origins of the 2016 Russia probe, concluding that the investigation was not tainted by "political bias or improper motivation", and that the initial information gathered "was sufficient to predicate the investigation" given the "low threshold" for opening an investigation. Barr rejected the conclusions of the report, declaring that the investigation was started "on the thinnest of suspicions that, in [his] view, were insufficient to justify the steps taken". This also contradicted FBI director Chris Wray, who interpreted Horowitz's findings as the investigation having "appropriate predication and authorization".[222][223]

In December 2019, Barr claimed in an interview with NBC News that the Russia investigation was "completely baseless" and said he believed the FBI's investigation may have been conducted in "bad faith".[224] Barr also refused to refute the debunked conspiracy theory of Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election during the interview.[224][225] In a subsequent interview on Fox News, Barr asserted, "the president bore the burden of probably one of the greatest conspiracy theories – baseless conspiracy theories – in American political history," despite the recent inspector general report debunking several conspiracy theories Trump and his allies had promoted.[226][227][228][229]

In January 2020, Barr prohibited the start of counterintelligence investigations related to presidential campaigns unless both the attorney general and head of the FBI signed off on those investigations.[230]

Barr defended Trump's April 2020 firing of intelligence community inspector general Michael K. Atkinson. Atkinson was the inspector general who sought to get the Trump administration to the disclose the Ukraine scandal whistleblower complaint to Congress. In defense of the firing, Barr allegedly made numerous false claims about Atkinson's actions during his tenure.[231]

On May 18, 2020, Barr commented on prior investigations into potential collusion between Trump and Russia stating: "What happened to the president in the 2016 election and throughout the first two years of his administration was abhorrent ... it was a grave injustice and it was unprecedented in American history ... the law enforcement and intelligence apparatus of this country were involved in advancing a false and utterly baseless Russian collusion narrative against this president."[5][6]

Barr hinted in June 2020 that the Durham investigation would produce results regarding the "complete collapse of the Russiagate scandal" before the end of the summer.[232] In July he told a Congressional committee that the results of the investigation could be released before the election, despite an informal Justice Department rule limiting release of such information.[233] In August, Trump in public comments appeared to be getting impatient for the investigation to produce more prosecutions and suggesting that his opinion of Barr will be negatively influenced if it does not.[233] As summer ended there were reports that Barr was pressing for the Durham investigation to release its report. Colleagues of Durham have said they believe he is under pressure to produce something before the election. A top aide in the investigation quietly resigned on September 10; she gave no reason, but colleagues said she was concerned about political pressure from Barr.[234] On September 18, 2020, four chairs of Democratic committees asked the DOJ inspector general to open an emergency investigation because "We are concerned by indications that Attorney General Barr might depart from longstanding DOJ principles to take public action related to U.S. Attorney Durham's investigation that could impact the presidential election," adding that Barr's public comments may have already violated that policy.[235]

On November 2, 2020, the day before the presidential election, New York magazine reported that:

... there has been no evidence found, after 18 months of investigation, to support Barr's claims that Trump was targeted by politically biased Obama officials to prevent his election. (The probe remains ongoing.) In fact, the sources said, the Durham investigation has so far uncovered no evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden or Barack Obama, or that they were even involved with the Russia investigation. There 'was no evidence ... not even remotely ... indicating Obama or Biden did anything wrong,' as one person put it.[236]

Intervention in cases of Trump associates edit

 
Barr with Joe Grogan (left) and Ivanka Trump (right), in 2020.

In the spring of 2019, Barr reportedly attempted to undermine the conviction of Trump fixer Michael Cohen for campaign finance violations, detailed The New York Times in June 2020. Barr reportedly raised doubts multiple times about the validity of the charges against Cohen, including requesting the Office of Legal Counsel to draft a memo with legal arguments which could have helped Cohen's case. Barr's efforts were reportedly stemmed by the prosecutors of the Southern District of New York. Ultimately, Cohen's conviction was not changed.[237]

In February 2020, President Trump directly referenced Barr in the Justice Department's intercession in recommending a lighter sentence for Trump's associate and old friend Roger Stone. Trump's tweet stated: "Congratulations to Attorney General Bill Barr for taking charge of a case that was totally out of control and perhaps should not have even been brought." Initially, four career prosecutors had recommended that Stone serve a jail term of between seven and nine years. A Trump tweet followed: "Cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!" – after which the department recommended an unspecified jail term. The department claimed that this later decision was made without consulting the White House. The prosecutors resigned from the case as a result, with one choosing to leave the department.[238][239]

Barr affirmed that he had made the decision in the Stone case to change the sentencing memo. Barr said Trump had not asked him to step in, but noted that Trump's tweets and public comments make it impossible for the attorney general to do his job. "I think it's time to stop the tweeting about Department of Justice criminal cases," Barr said.[240][241] Barr's rebuke of Trump's use of Twitter for interference in DOJ matters were seen as a rare departure from his usual unwavering support of the president. Barr's comments followed criticism of the department for its poor handling of the sentencing of Roger Stone after DOJ actions seen as favorable to Trump and his allies.[242][243] Days later, a bipartisan group of more than 2,000 former DOJ employees signed a letter calling for Barr's resignation.[244][245] while the Federal Judges Association of over a thousand federal jurists called an emergency meeting for February 18 to discuss their concerns about the intervention of Trump and Justice Department officials in politically sensitive cases.[246] Despite Barr's rebuke of Trump, days later the president resumed denouncing the prosecutors, the judge, and the jury foreperson in the Stone case, while acknowledging that his comments made Barr's job harder.[247] After granting several pardons, Trump also labeled himself as the country's "chief law enforcement officer", a description usually reserved for the attorney general.[248]

Additionally in February 2020, Barr declared that there would be a review of the criminal case of Michael Flynn, the former National Security Advisor to Trump, who had pled guilty in 2017 to lying to the FBI about his contacts with a Russian ambassador. Flynn later attempted to withdraw his guilty plea, and had not been sentenced yet.[249][250] Barr chose St. Louis's chief federal prosecutor, Jeffrey Jensen, to conduct the review. Jensen himself was nominated by Trump for the St. Louis position.[250] Trump had publicly called for the charges to be dropped against Flynn. In late April or early May, Jensen recommended to Barr that the charges be dropped.[251]

The Justice Department announced in May 2020 that the charges against Flynn would be dropped, with Jensen stating that Barr had agreed with his recommendation.[251] Shortly after, Barr was asked in a media interview if given that Flynn "admitted lying to the FBI. Does the fact remain that he lied?" Barr replied that "people sometimes plead to things that turn out not to be crimes ... the Department of Justice is not persuaded that this was material to any legitimate counterintelligence investigation. So it was not a crime." Barr denied that he was carrying out the president's agenda on this case, stating that he was "doing the law's bidding". He also said that from this case, he wanted to show Americans that "there's only one standard of justice," instead of two standards of justice.[252]

Between Trump's election and inauguration, Flynn had phone conversations with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak that were incidentally intercepted by American intelligence in the course of routine surveillance of Russian agents. Among other topics, Flynn discussed sanctions imposed on Russia by the Obama administration for Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. Per policy regarding American persons, Flynn's identity was masked before accounts of his conversations were distributed to high-level Obama administration officials. Some officials, notably national security advisor Susan Rice, were so concerned by the accounts that they requested Flynn's identity be unmasked, per procedure. After the unmasking was reported by the press, Trump and his allies insisted it was evidence the Obama administration was spying on him and his associates for political purposes. In May 2020, Barr spokesperson Kerri Kupec announced on the program of Fox News host Sean Hannity that Barr had appointed U.S. attorney John Bash to investigate. She also stated that John Durham, whom Barr had appointed to investigate the origins of the FBI Crossfire Hurricane investigation, had also been examining the unmasking issue. The Bash investigation was quietly closed five months later, with no public announcement or report, reportedly finding nothing improper. Bash's 52-page report, previously classified top secret, was released in May 2022. Bash wrote he had found no evidence that any unmasking requests were made for any political or otherwise improper reasons during the 2016 election period or the ensuing presidential transition.[253][254][255]

Barr's firing of Geoffrey Berman was widely condemned,[256] given that the Southern District of New York was actively pursuing criminal investigations into several persons and companies associated with President Donald Trump and The Trump Organization.[257][237] Barr's conduct was seen as sacrificing the independence of the Department of Justice to protect Trump and his allies.[258] For these reasons, numerous groups have called for Barr's resignation, including the New York City Bar Association.[259]

Ethics complaints edit

On October 3, 2019, Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr. filed ethics complaints against Barr with the District of Columbia Bar and Virginia Bar associations.[260] On February 14, 2020, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed an ethics complaint against Barr with the Department of Justice Office of Professional Responsibility and Office of the Inspector General, accusing Barr of "violating several Justice Department rules, guidelines and procedures".[261] On July 22, 2020, a group of 27 "legal ethics experts and former government lawyers", including four former presidents of the District of Columbia Bar, also filed a complaint against Barr with the District of Columbia Bar.[262][263] A bar association may take years to investigate an ethics complaint filed against a lawyer.[262] If the District of Columbia Bar concludes that a lawyer has violated any of its Rules of Professional Conduct, that lawyer may be sanctioned in one of several ways, including admonition, suspension, and disbarment.[264]

Halkbank Investigation and the firing of Geoffrey Berman edit

In June 2019, in violation of Department of Justice policy, Barr pressured Berman, then the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, to drop an investigation into close allies of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan involved with the Turkish bank Halkbank.[10] The bank and the individuals in question were alleged to have broken U.S. sanctions on Iran, funnelling billions of dollars to Iran and helping fund its nuclear ambitions.[10] Barr's demand followed a concerted pressure campaign by Erdogan and his close associates, including his son-in-law, Turkish Finance Minister Berat Albayrak, and Mehmet Ali Yalcindag, a Trump family friend involved in developing the Trump towers in Turkey;[10] Erdogan himself personally insisted to President Trump that the Halkbank investigation be shut down on at least two occasions, November 1, 2018, at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires, and on a telephone call on December 14, 2018.[10] According to former National Security Adviser John Bolton, a first-hand witness of many of the events in question, this sequence of events "does look like obstruction of justice".[10]

In mid-June 2020, Barr announced that Geoffrey Berman, the court-appointed United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), "is stepping down". Berman's office had been investigating both Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and Trump's inaugural committee, as well as conducting a wider investigation into Trump's company and his associates after successfully prosecuting Michael Cohen, another personal lawyer of Trump.[265] CNN also reported that Berman had prosecuted Halkbank despite Barr's attempt to try to avoid charges for the Turkish state-owned bank, after Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan requested Trump to help drop the charges.[266][9][267][268] Simultaneously, Barr announced that at his recommendation, Trump had appointed Craig Carpenito as the interim SDNY U.S. Attorney, in a departure from the tradition of a career prosecutor from SDNY taking the interim role. Also concurrently, Barr said that Trump would nominate Jay Clayton for the permanent role of SDNY U.S. Attorney.[266][9] Within a day, Berman said that he actually had "not resigned, and have no intention of resigning". Berman also said that he only learned of his supposed departure from Barr's public announcement.[9][267] Barr then informed Berman that Trump had fired Berman at Barr's request. Barr did not give a reason for Berman's firing. As a result of the firing, the deputy SDNY U.S. Attorney, Audrey Strauss, would become the interim SDNY U.S. Attorney. With this, Berman agreed to leave. Meanwhile, the Senate indicated it would not confirm Clayton as the permanent replacement.[268][267]

In a late Friday night statement on June 19, 2020, Barr stated that Berman was resigning and being replaced by Jay Clayton, citing Berman's behavior in the Halkbank episode as a primary reason for his removal.[10] Berman learned of this through press reports and declined to resign; the next day, Barr asked Trump to fire Berman, which he promptly did. Berman was replaced by his deputy, Audrey Strauss.[269] In November 2019, The Wall Street Journal reported Trump personal attorney Rudy Giuliani figured in an SDNY investigation into multiple possible felonies.[270]

George Floyd protests edit

 
Barr joined Trump on his visit to St. John's Episcopal Church in June 2020.

In early June 2020, according to reporting by The Washington Post and Fox News, Barr personally ordered that the streets around Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C. should be cleared so that Trump, Barr and other administration officials could stage a photo op in front of St. John's Church. At the time, the streets were occupied by peaceful protesters as part of the George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C.; Barr's order resulted in federal law enforcement officers rushing protesters, and employing smoke canisters, pepper balls, riot shields, and batons against the protesters.[8][271] Barr reacted to the incident by falsely claiming that pepper balls (used by law enforcement on protesters) were not chemical irritants (pepper balls contain pelargonic acid vanillylamide, a chemical irritant; while the product's manufacturer, and the Justice Department, both consider pepper balls a chemical irritant).[272] On August 4, 2020, Barr and presidential adviser Ivanka Trump, and special advisor Heather Fischer announced the $35 million in grant awards to support victims of human trafficking at a White House event. During the roundtable, Barr became emotional and partly covered his face with his hand as survivors of human trafficking told their stories.[273] In August 2020, he invoked qualified immunity before a federal court to protect himself from liability in a lawsuit regarding the Lafayette Square incident.[274] A report by the U.S. Department of the Interior Office of Inspector General (OIG), released in June 2021, concluded that the clearing of the park by the Park Police and other forces was part of a plan to install "antiscale fencing" and had not been done so that Trump could stage a photo op in front of St. John's Church.[275] The OIG report stated that OIG "cannot assess whether" Barr's visit to the park or any planned movement by Trump "influenced the Secret Service's actions, including its early deployment on to H Street."[276]

In an August 2020 appearance on Fox News, Barr asserted that Black Lives Matter is "a revolutionary group that is interested in some form of socialism, communism. They're essentially Bolsheviks. Their tactics are fascistic." Barr equated the movement with antifa, characterizing that loose collective as "highly organized" and claiming "the media doesn't take footage of what's happening" at George Floyd protests. He also claimed that liberals are intent on "tearing down the system" and that the Democratic party was only "interested in total victory. It's a secular religion. It's a substitute for a religion."[277] Barr had in June 2020 blamed antifa for orchestrating the George Floyd protests, but analysis by The New York Times found that no one arrested for serious federal crimes at the protests had been linked to antifa.[278] Homeland Security Department secretary Chad Wolf said in September 2020 that he and Barr had discussed arresting leaders of antifa and the Black Lives Matter movement.[279] The Wall Street Journal reported in September 2020 that Barr told federal prosecutors to consider charging violent protestors with plotting to overthrow the US government.[280][281]

In an August 2020 interview, Trump claimed that a plane full of "thugs in dark uniforms", implying antifa, had recently flown from one unidentified city to another with the intention of fomenting riots. His claim appeared to be based on months-old social media rumors.[282][283] Two days later, Barr asserted he knew that antifa activists "are flying around the country" and "we are following them".[284] Despite assertions of the threat posed by antifa from Trump, Barr and others, the Department of Homeland Security reported in October 2020 that white supremacists posed the top domestic terrorism threat, which FBI director Christopher Wray confirmed in March 2021, noting the bureau had elevated the threat to the same level as ISIS.[285] The DHS report did not mention antifa.[279][286][287]

On September 3, 2020, Trump ordered Barr to identify "anarchist jurisdictions", stating in a memorandum, "It is imperative that the federal government review the use of federal funds by jurisdictions that permit anarchy, violence, and destruction in America's cities."[288] Days later, Barr designated New York City, Seattle and Portland, Oregon as such jurisdictions, suggesting they should lose their federal funding because, "We cannot allow federal tax dollars to be wasted when the safety of the citizenry hangs in the balance."[289] Barr redirected federal homeland security and law enforcement resources to dealing with antifa, whereas the career law enforcement officials had long since concluded that the major domestic terrorism threat came from the far right.[290]

2020 presidential election edit

As Attorney General, Barr sowed doubt about the integrity of the 2020 election.[291] In a September 2020 interview, Barr falsely asserted the Justice Department had indicted a Texas man for fraudulently completing 1,700 mail-in ballots. There was no such indictment, and the matter actually involved a series of errors by election officials during a county election, rather than fraud.[292][293][294] Barr also repeated a claim that foreign adversaries could flood the country with counterfeit ballots to disrupt the election, a threat that experts characterized as nearly impossible to execute.[295][296] Senior American intelligence officials have said there was no evidence any foreign powers intended to manipulate mail-in voting.[297] The day after Barr's interview, the Department of Homeland Security issued an intelligence bulletin warning that Russia is using social media and other venues to promote false claims that mail voting will lead to widespread fraud, in order "to undermine public trust in the electoral process".[298] In a subsequent September 2020 interview, Barr stated that mail-in voting meant "we're back in the business of selling and buying votes" including "outright coercion, paying off a postman, here's a few hundred dollars, give me some of your ballots".[299] On October 1, 2020, more than 1,600 former DOJ attorneys signed an open letter stating, "we fear that Attorney General Barr intends to use the DOJ's vast law enforcement powers to undermine our most fundamental democratic value: free and fair elections."[300]

In September 2020, Barr asserted liberals were "projecting", referring to "all this bullshit about how the president is going to stay in office and seize power? I've never heard of any of that crap. I mean, I'm the attorney general. I would think I would have heard about it." During both the 2016 and 2020 campaigns, Trump was noncommittal when asked if he would accept election results showing he had lost. Days after Barr's remarks, Trump was asked if he would commit to a peaceful transition of power if he lost the 2020 election, to which he replied, "Well, we'll have to see what happens. You know that I've been complaining very strongly about the ballots. And the ballots are a disaster. Get rid of the ballots and you'll have a very peaceful – there won't be a transfer, frankly. There will be a continuation."[301][302][299][303] In the days after his electoral defeat, Trump and his legal team led by Rudy Giuliani pursued an aggressive effort to overturn the results with dozens of lawsuits and numerous false and unsubstantiated assertions revolving around an international communist conspiracy, rigged voting machines and polling place fraud to claim the election had been stolen from Trump.[304][305][306][307][308]

After Joe Biden won the 2020 election and Trump refused to concede, baseless claims of voting fraud circulated.[309] Barr sent a memo to DOJ prosecutors authorizing them to investigate "vote tabulation irregularities" before voting results had been certified, a reversal of long-standing department policy. Richard Pilger, director of the Election Crimes Branch at the DOJ Criminal Division, stepped down from that position in protest hours later.[310] Four days later, sixteen assistant U.S. attorneys of the Branch wrote Barr a letter urging him to rescind the memo because it "thrusts career prosecutors into partisan politics".[311] Barr later told a journalist that he had always expected Trump's electoral loss and never expected that Trump's fraud claims would have merit: "My suspicion all the way along was that there was nothing there. It was all bullshit." However, he asserted that because he expected Trump to ask him for details, he informally investigated to educate himself.[312] Some asserted Barr's statements during the campaign suggested otherwise and that he was now attempting to rehabilitate his reputation.[313][314][315] Barr waited until December 1, 2020, to state that the Justice Department "has not uncovered evidence of widespread voter fraud that would change the outcome of the 2020 presidential election".[11] Trump was angered by the announcement and the fact that Durham had not released any findings prior to the election.[316] Trump was also angered by news that Barr had followed Justice Department policy by not disclosing during the campaign that Joe Biden's son Hunter had since 2018 been under criminal investigation, initially on suspicion of money laundering but later for tax matters.[316][317][318] On December 14, 2020, Trump announced on Twitter that Barr was stepping down from his post on December 23.[319] After a pro-Trump mob stormed the U.S. Capitol after being incited by Trump, Barr said Trump had committed a "betrayal of his office".[320]

Resignation edit

On December 14, 2020, Trump announced via Twitter that Barr would be resigning from his post as attorney general, effective December 23.[321] Barr further confirmed his resignation in a letter to Trump on the same day.[322] In summarizing his tenure, Katie Benner of The New York Times wrote that "Barr brought the Justice Department closer to the White House than any attorney general in a half-century ... Barr made decisions that dovetailed precisely with Mr. Trump’s wishes and the demands of his political allies."[323] CNN summarized his tenure similarly, "Barr repeatedly and unapologetically prioritized Trump's political goals while furthering his own vision of expansive presidential power."[324] Ryan Lucas of NPR described Barr as "one of Trump's most loyal and effective defenders".[325] As examples of Barr's actions on behalf of Trump, these critics pointed to the fact that Barr made frequent false claims about the integrity of mail-in voting leading up to the 2020 election, misleadingly summarized Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in the 2016 election,[324][325] harshly criticized those who had investigated Trump,[324] meddled in criminal prosecutions of Trump allies,[326] and ordered the use of force on peaceful protestors across the street from the White House during the George Floyd protests so that President Trump could have a photo op at nearby St. John's Church."[324][325]

Post-DOJ career edit

In 2022, it was reported that Barr would launch a law and consulting firm with former Facebook general counsel Ted Ullyot.[327]

Comments on failed Sussmann prosecution edit

On June 1, 2022, Barr was interviewed on Fox News about the verdict in the failed prosecution of Michael Sussman. He continued to defend Trump by repeating debunked "Russiagate" conspiracy theories about the origins of the Russia investigation by stating that the case against Sussmann "crystallized the central role played by the Hillary campaign in launching, as a dirty trick, the whole Russiagate collusion narrative." The Washington Post noted that the Justice Department traditionally seeks to avoid impugning individuals who are not charged with crimes, and the DOJ is not involved in exposing political "dirty tricks" that have not been found unlawful. Barr also asserted Durham "exposed really dreadful behavior by the supervisors in the FBI, the senior ranks of the FBI, who knowingly use this information to start an investigation of Trump," though the Sussmann case did not relate to how the FBI Crossfire Hurricane investigation began. Although Barr appointed Durham to investigate possible FBI wrongdoing in opening Crossfire Hurricane, Durham's prosecution of Sussmann portrayed the FBI as a victim, rather than a perpetrator, of wrongdoing.[328][329][330]

January 6 committee testimony edit

Barr testified to the House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack behind closed doors on June 2, 2022. Portions of his videotaped testimony were presented during the committee's public hearings days later. Barr testified that before resigning as attorney general, he had told president Trump that allegations of election fraud were "bullshit." At times during his testimony he could not control his laughter at the absurdity of some fraud allegations, such as the Italygate theory that satellites controlled from Italy had flipped votes from Trump to Biden, and that former Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez had orchestrated an election fraud scheme, despite having died seven years earlier. Barr testified Trump never gave "an indication of interest in what the actual facts were," adding the president had "become detached from reality if he really believes this stuff."[331][332]

Investigation into Trump's handling of presidential documents edit

Barr has supported the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago and its investigation into the handling of presidential documents by Trump after his presidency, and dismissed Trump's calls for a special master to be appointed.[333]

Criticism edit

On December 11, 2019, former Attorney General Eric Holder, who had served under President Obama, wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post claiming William Barr is "unfit to be attorney general"[334] for his "naked partisan[ship]", "attempts to vilify the president's critics", his attacks on the inspector general and his comments on ongoing investigations.[334]

In a December 2019 opinion piece, former FBI director, CIA director and federal judge William Webster wrote of "a dire threat to the rule of law in the country I love". Webster asserted that "the integrity of the institutions that protect our civil order are, tragically, under assault," writing that "aspersions cast upon [FBI employees] by the president and my longtime friend, Attorney General William P. Barr, are troubling in the extreme."[335][336] Since 2005, Webster had served as the chair of the Homeland Security Advisory Council.

Sixty-five law professors and faculty from George Washington University Law School, Barr's alma mater, wrote in a June 2020 letter that he had "failed to fulfill his oath of office to 'support and defend the Constitution of the United States'". They wrote that Barr's actions as attorney general "have undermined the rule of law, breached constitutional norms, and damaged the integrity and traditional independence of his office and of the Department of Justice".[337]

During a June 2020 House Judiciary Committee testimony, Donald Ayer, a former deputy attorney general for whom Barr worked during the George H. W. Bush presidency, asserted that Barr "poses the greatest threat, in my lifetime, to our rule of law and to public trust in it".[338] Three months later, Ayer claimed Barr "is on a mission to install the president as an autocrat".[339]

In January 2022, it is reported that the House select committee investigating the January 6 Capitol attack held conversations with Barr about the Trump administration's approach to compromise the integrity of the 2020 election, specifically about the potential coordination between the Justice Department and the Defense Department.[340]

Political positions edit

 
Barr with Senator Mitt Romney in February 2019

A lifelong Republican, Barr takes an expansive view of executive powers and supports "law and order" policies.[341] Considered an establishment Republican at the time of his confirmation, Barr gained a reputation as someone loyal to Trump and his policies during his second tenure as attorney general.[341] His efforts to support the sitting president politically during his DOJ office tenure have been viewed as the most strenuous since those of another law-and-order Attorney General, John N. Mitchell.[342]

Immigration edit

As Deputy Attorney General, Barr – together with others at the Department of Justice – successfully led the effort for the withdrawal of a proposed Department of Health and Human Services rule that would have allowed people with HIV/AIDS into the United States.[343] He also advocated the use of Guantanamo Bay to prevent Haitian refugees and HIV infected individuals from claiming asylum in the United States.[70] According to Vox in December 2018, Barr supported an aggressive "law and order" agenda on immigration as attorney general in the Bush Administration.[344]

Death penalty edit

Barr supports the death penalty, arguing that it reduces crime. He advocated a Bush-backed bill that would have expanded the types of crime that could be punished by execution. In a 1991 op-ed in The New York Times, Barr argued that death row inmates' ability to challenge their sentences should be limited to avoid cases dragging on for years: "This lack of finality devastates the criminal justice system. It diminishes the deterrent effect of state criminal laws, saps state prosecutorial resources and continually reopens the wounds of victims and survivors."[345][346]

On July 25, 2019, Barr announced that the United States federal government would resume its use of capital punishment under his leadership, after nearly two decades without an execution. Barr ordered the Department of Justice to adopt a new lethal injection protocol, consisting of a single drug (pentobarbital), and ordered execution dates to be set for five inmates in December 2019 and January 2020.[347] On July 14, 2020, Daniel Lewis Lee became the first death row inmate executed by the federal government since 2003.[348] Twelve more individuals were executed by the Trump administration.[349] No administration in 120 years had overseen as many executions.[349] Barr has been attributed as playing a key role in the administration's use of execution in prisons.[350]

Social issues edit

Abortion edit

In 1991, Barr said he believed the framers of the Constitution did not originally intend to create a right to abortion, that Roe v. Wade was thus wrongly decided, and that abortion should be a "legitimate issue for state legislators".[37] However, Barr said during his 1991 confirmation hearings that Roe was "the law of the land" and that he did not have "fixed or settled views" on the subject.[38]

After Roe was overturned, Barr suggested that a special counsel may be necessary to investigate the leak of the ruling and that the leaker may face criminal charges.[351][352]

Drug policy edit

Barr supports a federal ban on marijuana.[353] However, he has stated that the discrepancy between federal and state law is suboptimal, and that if a uniform federal ban on marijuana could not be achieved, then he would support the STATES Act on marijuana legalization.[353] "I think it's a mistake to back off on marijuana ... However, if we want a federal approach, if we want states to have their own laws, then let's get there and let's get there the right way." Barr also said DOJ policy should align with congressional legislation.[354]

2016 election edit

Barr donated $55,000 to a political action committee that backed Jeb Bush during the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries and $2,700 to Donald Trump during the general election campaign.[355]

Executive powers edit

Barr is a proponent of the unitary executive theory, which holds that the President has broad executive powers.[3][291][356][357][358] Prior to joining the Trump administration, he argued that the president has "complete authority to start or stop a law enforcement proceeding".[3]

Race relations edit

In June 2020, amid the George Floyd protests against racism and police brutality, Barr said he rejected the view "that the law enforcement system is systemically racist".[359] In a CNN news interview in September 2020, Barr denied that systemic racism plays a role in police shootings of unarmed African American men and called such shootings by white police officers "very rare".[360] Derek Chauvin, the officer who murdered Floyd, was willing to agree to third-degree murder and serve more than ten years in prison. Barr rejected a plea deal.[361]

In September 2020, Barr suggested bringing sedition charges against disruptive looters and rioters, a legal tool that is rarely used by the United States government.[362] Sedition charges are normally reserved for those who "conspire to overthrow, put down, or to destroy by force the Government of the United States", according to (18 U.S.C. § 2384). Such suggestions have brought fears that Barr is politicizing the U.S. Justice Department and, if enacted, would mean that the Justice Department could prosecute individuals based on political speech.[363]

China edit

In July 2020, Barr condemned large American tech companies, such as Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and Apple,[364] and Hollywood studios, accusing them of "kowtowing" to the Chinese Communist Party for the sake of profits. He said that "Hollywood now regularly censors its own movies to appease the Chinese Communist Party, the world's most powerful violator of human rights."[365]

Personal life edit

Barr has been married to Christine Moynihan Barr since 1973.[16] She holds a master's degree in library science, and together they have three daughters:[366] Mary Barr Daly, Patricia Barr Straughn,[367] and Margaret (Meg) Barr.[14] Their eldest daughter, Mary, born 1977 or 1978, was a senior Justice Department official who oversaw the department's anti-opioid and addiction efforts; Patricia, born 1981 or 1982, was counsel for the House Agriculture Committee; and Meg, born 1984 or 1985, is a former Washington prosecutor and cancer survivor (of recurrent Hodgkin's lymphoma), was counsel for Republican Senator Mike Braun of Indiana.[14]

In February 2019, as their father awaited Senate confirmation for his appointment as attorney general, Mary left her post at the Department of Justice as the Trump Administration's point woman on the opioid crisis and took a position at the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), the Treasury Department's financial crimes unit.[368] Her husband, however, continued to work in the Justice Department's National Security Division.[369] Around the same time Mary left the Department of Justice, Tyler McGaughey, the husband of her youngest sister, left the U.S. Attorney's office in Alexandria, Virginia, to join the White House Counsel's office.[368]

Barr is a Roman Catholic and is a member of the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast. Barr served from 2014 to 2017 on the board of the Catholic Information Center (CIC) of the Archdiocese of Washington, an Opus Dei center and nexus of politically connected Catholics on K Street.[80] Opus Dei has denied that Barr is a member.[370]

However, his views in favor of the death penalty were criticised by the Jesuit magazine America.[371][372]

Barr is an avid bagpiper. He began playing at age eight and has performed competitively in Scotland with a major American pipe band. At one time, Barr was a member of the City of Washington Pipe Band.[43] During a US Attorneys’ National Conference on June 26, 2019, Barr surprised attendees by standing up in the middle of an NYPD Emerald Society performance, and joined them in playing Scotland the Brave with a bagpipe.[373]

Barr is the brother of Stephen Barr, a physics professor at the University of Delaware.[15]

Barr and Robert Mueller have known each other since the 1980s and are said to be good friends. Mueller attended the weddings of two of Barr's daughters, and their wives attend Bible study together.[374]

Honors edit

In 1992, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws (LL.D) by George Washington University.[375]

Bibliography edit

  • — (2022). One Damn Thing After Another: Memoirs of an Attorney General. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-06-315860-3.[376]

See also edit

References edit

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william, barr, other, people, named, disambiguation, bill, barr, redirects, here, confused, with, bill, burr, william, baer, lawyer, william, pelham, barr, born, 1950, american, attorney, served, united, states, attorney, general, administration, president, ge. For other people named William Barr see William Barr disambiguation Bill Barr redirects here Not to be confused with Bill Burr or William Baer lawyer William Pelham Barr born May 23 1950 is an American attorney who served as the United States attorney general in the administration of President George H W Bush from 1991 to 1993 and again in the administration of President Donald Trump from 2019 to 2020 William BarrOfficial portrait 201977th and 85th United States Attorney GeneralIn office February 14 2019 December 23 2020PresidentDonald TrumpDeputyRod Rosenstein Ed O Callaghan acting Jeffrey A RosenPreceded byJeff SessionsSucceeded byMerrick GarlandIn office November 26 1991 January 20 1993Acting August 16 1991 November 26 1991PresidentGeorge H W BushDeputyGeorge J Terwilliger IIIPreceded byDick ThornburghSucceeded byJanet Reno25th United States Deputy Attorney GeneralIn office May 26 1990 November 26 1991PresidentGeorge H W BushPreceded byDonald B AyerSucceeded byGeorge J Terwilliger IIIUnited States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal CounselIn office January 20 1989 May 26 1990PresidentGeorge H W BushPreceded byDouglas KmiecSucceeded byJ Michael LuttigPersonal detailsBornWilliam Pelham Barr 1950 05 23 May 23 1950 age 73 New York City U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseChristine Moynihan m 1973 wbr Children3ParentsDonald Barr Mary Margaret AhernRelativesStephen Barr brother EducationColumbia University BA MA George Washington University JD SignatureWilliam Barr s voice source source William Barr speaks at a press conference on the George Floyd protestsRecorded June 5 2020Born and raised in New York City Barr was educated at the Horace Mann School Columbia University and George Washington University Law School From 1971 to 1977 Barr was employed by the Central Intelligence Agency He then served as a law clerk to judge Malcolm Richard Wilkey of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit In the 1980s Barr worked for the law firm Shaw Pittman Potts amp Trowbridge with one year s work in the White House of the Ronald Reagan administration dealing with legal policies Before becoming attorney general in 1991 Barr held numerous other posts within the Department of Justice including leading the Office of Legal Counsel OLC and serving as deputy attorney general From 1994 to 2008 Barr did corporate legal work for GTE and its successor company Verizon Communications which made him a multimillionaire From 2009 to 2018 Barr served on the board of directors for Time Warner Barr is a longtime proponent of the unitary executive theory of nearly unfettered presidential authority over the executive branch of the U S government 1 2 3 In 1989 Barr as the head of the OLC justified the U S invasion of Panama to arrest Manuel Noriega As deputy attorney general Barr authorized an FBI operation in 1991 which freed hostages at the Talladega federal prison An influential advocate for tougher criminal justice policies Barr as attorney general in 1992 authored the report The Case for More Incarceration where he argued for an increase in the United States incarceration rate 4 Under Barr s advice President George H W Bush in 1992 pardoned six officials involved in the Iran Contra affair Barr became attorney general for the second time in 2019 During his term he received criticism from many for his handling of several challenges including his letter on the Mueller report interventions in the convictions and sentences of former advisors to President Trump Roger Stone and Michael Flynn 5 6 his order of the federal government to resume federal executions after 17 years 7 8 and allegations of political interference in the removal of Geoffrey Berman from his Southern District of New York attorney position in a matter pertaining to the indictment of Turkish bank Halkbank a bank with close personal ties to Recep Tayyip Erdogan 9 10 On December 1 2020 Barr stated FBI and Justice Department investigations found no evidence of irregularities that would have changed the outcome of the presidential election 11 Barr is the second person to ever serve two non consecutive terms as U S Attorney General after John J Crittenden Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 U S Department of Justice 2 3 U S Deputy Attorney General 1990 1991 2 4 U S Attorney General 1991 1993 2 4 1 First nomination and confirmation 2 4 2 First tenure 2 4 3 The Case for More Incarceration 2 4 4 Investigations 2 4 5 Bank of Credit and Commerce International 2 4 6 Phone surveillance program 2 4 7 Iran Contra 2 5 Post Bush career 2 5 1 Comments about the Starr investigation of President Clinton 2 5 2 Comments about the Trump administration 2 5 3 Political donations 2 6 U S Attorney General 2019 2020 2 6 1 Second nomination and confirmation 2 6 2 Second tenure 2 6 3 Mueller investigation and report 2 6 4 Spygate 2 6 5 Contempt of Congress 2 6 6 Origins of the Russia investigation 2 6 7 Intervention in cases of Trump associates 2 6 8 Ethics complaints 2 6 9 Halkbank Investigation and the firing of Geoffrey Berman 2 6 10 George Floyd protests 2 6 11 2020 presidential election 2 6 12 Resignation 2 7 Post DOJ career 2 7 1 Comments on failed Sussmann prosecution 2 7 2 January 6 committee testimony 2 7 3 Investigation into Trump s handling of presidential documents 2 8 Criticism 3 Political positions 3 1 Immigration 3 2 Death penalty 3 3 Social issues 3 3 1 Abortion 3 3 2 Drug policy 3 4 2016 election 3 5 Executive powers 3 6 Race relations 3 7 China 4 Personal life 5 Honors 6 Bibliography 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editBarr was born in New York City in 1950 His father Donald Barr was an American educator writer and Office of Strategic Services OSS officer who taught English literature at Columbia University before becoming headmaster of the Dalton School in Manhattan and later the Hackley School in Tarrytown New York both members of the Ivy Preparatory School League Barr s mother Mary Margaret nee Ahern also taught at Columbia 12 Barr s father was raised Jewish but later converted to the Roman Catholic Church His mother is of Irish Catholic ancestry Barr was raised as a Catholic 13 14 Barr was the second of four sons and his younger brother Stephen Barr is a professor of physics at the University of Delaware 15 Barr grew up on New York City s Upper West Side As a child he attended a Catholic grammar school Corpus Christi School and then the non sectarian Horace Mann School After high school he attended Columbia University where he majored in government and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1971 Barr was also an active member in the Sigma Nu fraternity He did two additional years of graduate study at Columbia receiving a Master of Arts in government and Chinese studies in 1973 While at Columbia Barr opposed anti Vietnam War occupation protests by students on campus 16 After moving to Washington D C to work as an intelligence analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency CIA Barr entered the evening student program at George Washington University Law School He graduated in 1977 with a Juris Doctor with highest honors 17 18 Career editEarly career edit nbsp Barr with President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office in 1983Barr worked for the CIA from 1971 to 1977 while attending graduate school and law school 19 He was first hired as a summer intern for two years 16 During his law school years he was an analyst in the Intelligence Directorate division from 1973 to 1975 and then transitioning to an assistant in the Office of Legislative Counsel and an agency liaison to Congress from 1975 to 1977 19 20 21 After graduating from law school in 1977 Barr spent one year as a law clerk to Judge Malcolm Wilkey of the U S Court of Appeals for the D C Circuit 22 17 He then joined the law firm of Shaw Pittman Potts amp Trowbridge now Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman from 1978 to 1982 and again from 1983 to 1989 22 after serving as Deputy Assistant Director for Legal Policy on the domestic policy staff at the Reagan White House from May 1982 to September 1983 22 17 23 Barr has never prosecuted a case 24 25 U S Department of Justice edit nbsp Barr and Dan Quayle watch as President George H W Bush signs the Civil Rights Commission Reauthorization Act in the Rose Garden of the White House in 1991 In 1989 at the beginning of his administration President George H W Bush appointed Barr to the U S Department of Justice as Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel OLC an office which functions as the legal advisor for the President and executive agencies Barr was known as a strong defender of presidential power 26 He wrote an advisory opinion justifying the U S invasion of Panama and arrest of Manuel Noriega 26 He wrote legal justifications for the practice of rendition 27 so that the FBI could enter onto foreign soil without the consent of the host government to apprehend fugitives wanted by the United States government for terrorism or drug trafficking 26 Barr declined a congressional request for the full 1989 opinion but instead provided a document that summarizes the principal conclusions Congress subpoenaed the opinion and its public release after Barr s departure from the Justice Department showed he had omitted significant findings in the opinion from his summary document 28 U S Deputy Attorney General 1990 1991 edit In May 1990 Barr was appointed Deputy Attorney General the official responsible for day to day management of the department According to media reports Barr was generally praised for his professional management of the department 29 30 31 During August 1991 when then Attorney General Richard Thornburgh resigned to campaign for the Senate Barr was named Acting Attorney General 32 Three days after Barr accepted that position 121 Cuban inmates awaiting deportation to Cuba seized nine hostages at the Talladega federal prison He directed the FBI s Hostage Rescue Team to assault the prison which resulted in rescuing all hostages without loss of life 33 34 U S Attorney General 1991 1993 edit nbsp Official photo of Barr during his first tenure as Attorney GeneralFirst nomination and confirmation edit It was reported that President Bush was impressed with Barr s management of the hostage crisis weeks later Bush nominated him as attorney general 35 Barr enjoyed a sterling reputation among Republican and Democratic politicians alike 36 His two day confirmation hearing was unusually placid and he was received well by both Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee 37 Asked whether he thought a constitutional right to privacy included the right to an abortion Barr responded that he believed the Constitution was not originally intended to create a right to abortion that Roe v Wade was thus wrongly decided and that abortion should be a legitimate issue for state legislators 37 Barr also said at the hearings that Roe v Wade was the law of the land and claimed he did not have fixed or settled views on abortion 38 Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Joe Biden though disagreeing with Barr responded that it was the first candid answer he had heard from a nominee on a question that witnesses would normally evade Biden hailed Barr as a throwback to the days when we actually had attorneys general that would talk to you 39 Barr was approved unanimously by the Senate Judiciary Committee was confirmed by voice vote by the full Senate 40 41 and was sworn in as attorney general on November 26 1991 42 First tenure edit During his first tenure as AG media characterized Barr as a staunch conservative who rarely hesitates to put his hardline views into action 43 44 45 He was described as affable with a dry self deprecating wit 43 46 The New York Times described the central theme of his tenure to be his contention that violent crime can be reduced only by expanding Federal and state prisons to jail habitual violent offenders 44 In an effort to prioritize violent crime Barr reassigned three hundred FBI agents from counterintelligence work to investigations of gang violence The New York Times called this move the largest single manpower shift in the bureau s history 44 During the 1992 election year The Wall Street Journal wrote of Barr s work that he has put a heavy emphasis on attention grabbing events and pronouncements that may have more to do with presidential election year politicking than with fighting crime on the streets 47 48 The Case for More Incarceration edit nbsp The Case for More IncarcerationIn 1992 Barr authored a report The Case for More Incarceration 49 which argued for an increase in the United States incarceration rate the creation of a national program to construct more prisons and the abolition of parole release 4 Barr argued that incarceration reduced crime pointing to crime and incarceration rates in 1960 1970 1980 and 1990 A 1999 criminology study criticized Barr s analysis saying so complex an issue as the relationship between crime and punishment cannot be addressed through so simplistic an analysis as a negative correlation between the two very aggregated time series of crime rates and incarceration rates 50 University of Minnesota criminologist Michael Tonry said the data in Barr s report was deceptively presented if Barr had chosen five year intervals then the data would not have supported Barr s argument and if Barr had chosen to look at violent crime specifically as opposed to all crimes as a category then the data would not have supported his argument 51 Barr said in the report The benefits of increased incarceration would be enjoyed disproportionately by black Americans 51 In the report Barr approvingly quoted New Mexico Attorney General Hal Stratton I don t know anyone who goes to prison on their first crime By the time you go to prison you are a pretty bad guy 52 Barr s report influenced the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 which aimed to increase the incarceration rate 4 Investigations edit In October 1991 Barr appointed then retired Democratic Chicago judge Nicholas Bua as special counsel in the Inslaw scandal Bua s 1993 report found the Department of Justice guilty of no wrongdoing in the matter 53 In October 1992 Barr appointed then retired New Jersey federal judge Frederick B Lacey to investigate the Department of Justice and the Central Intelligence Agency handling of the Banca Nazionale del Lavoro BNL Iraqgate scandal 54 The appointment came after Democrats called for a special prosecutor during the scandal fearing a cover up by the administration House Banking Committee Chairman Henry B Gonzalez called for Barr s resignation citing repeated clear failures and obstruction by the Department of Justice in allegedly delaying an investigation of the BNL Iraqgate case 55 56 Gonzalez also called for an independent special counsel investigation 56 Bank of Credit and Commerce International edit In July 1991 regulators in seven countries shut down the Luxembourg based Bank of Credit and Commerce International BCCI after investigators uncovered that the decentralized and poorly regulated bank which was allegedly run by Saudi and possibly Pakistani Intelligence was involved in fraud and money laundering operations for criminal organizations corrupt governments and intelligence agencies BCCI managed to circumvent Federal Reserve controls to buy the bank holding company First American Bankshares allowing direct access to American financial institutions 57 Several sources have alleged that the CIA had been aware of BCCI s activities and its purchase of First American but since the CIA DIA and the NSC utilized BCCI accounts for covert operations and since the Saudi s provided intelligence to the CIA from BCCI s illicit activities see Safari Club the CIA worked with Barr to prevent any investigation of BCCI which was directed by Assistant Attorney General Robert Mueller since 1986 other sources claim 1983 58 After the bank was shut down in 1991 Barr testified in congress that the investigation had coordination problems and promised to remedy the issue but other federal prosecutors claim Barr actively thwarted several indictments of BCCI in Florida when the Customs Service discovered that CenTrust Bank of Miami was a front for BCCI and possibly Saudi Intelligence The American investigation of BCCI was taken over by Senator John Kerry after discovering the bank during drug trafficking investigations After becoming impatient with the slow pace and inaction of the Justice Department under Barr Kerry had the investigation turned over to New York State District Attorney Robert Morgenthau who managed to extract a plea agreement with BCCI for various criminal violations and the indictment of First American Chairman Clark Clifford 57 Phone surveillance program edit In 1992 Barr launched a surveillance program to gather records of innocent Americans international phone calls 59 The purpose of the DEA program was to collect bulk logs of outgoing international phone calls from the United States to countries deemed to be linked to narcotics trafficking through issuing administrative subpoenas to phone companies 60 According to USA Today the program provided a blueprint for far broader phone data surveillance the government launched after the terrorist attacks of Sept 11 2001 59 The DoJ inspector general concluded that this program had been launched without a review of its legality and made 16 recommendations including areas relating to subpoena procedures and guidance training materials 61 In December 2019 Democratic Senators Ron Wyden and Patrick J Leahy asked the Justice Department s Office of Professional Responsibility to investigate Barr for approving the program accusing Barr of an illegal bulk surveillance program alleging without conducting any legal analysis 62 Iran Contra edit In late 1992 Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh who had been chosen to investigate the Iran Contra affair found documents in the possession of Reagan s former defense secretary Caspar Weinberger which Walsh said was evidence of a conspiracy among the highest ranking Reagan Administration officials to lie to Congress and the American public 63 64 Weinberger was set to stand trial on felony charges on January 5 1993 63 65 His indictment said Mr Weinberger s notes contradicted Mr Bush s assertions that he had only a fragmentary knowledge of the arms secretly sold to Iran in 1985 and 1986 in exchange for American hostages in Lebanon 65 64 66 According to Walsh then president Bush might have been called as a witness 67 On December 24 1992 during his final month in office Bush on the advice of Barr pardoned Weinberger 17 68 along with five other administration officials who had been found guilty on charges relating to the Iran Contra affair 17 69 70 63 Barr was consulted extensively regarding the pardons and especially advocated for pardoning Weinberger 71 Walsh complained about the move insinuating that Bush on Barr s advice had used the pardons to avoid testifying and stating that The Iran contra cover up which has continued for more than six years has now been completed 72 In 2003 he wrote an account of the investigation in his book Firewall The Iran Contra Conspiracy and Cover Up Because of this and Barr s unwillingness to appoint an independent counsel to look into a second scandal known as Iraqgate New York Times writer William Safire began to refer to Barr as Coverup General Barr accusing Barr of concealing George H W Bush s involvement in Iraqgate and the Iran Contra affair 73 74 Barr however responded that he believed Bush had made the right decision regarding that and he felt people in the case had been treated unfairly 75 Barr said Walsh was a head hunter who had completely lost perspective 2 Post Bush career edit Upon leaving the DOJ in 1993 Barr was appointed by Virginia Governor George Allen to co chair a commission to implement tougher criminal justice policies and abolish parole in the state 76 77 Barr has been described as a leader of the parole abolition campaign in Virginia 78 After leaving the DOJ he criticized the Clinton administration for being soft on crime 79 Barr expressed his opposition to efforts to end mandatory minimum sentencing 79 In a 1993 op ed he wrote The notion that there are sympathetic people out there who become hapless victims of the criminal justice system and are locked away in federal prison beyond the time they deserve is simply a myth 80 79 In a 1995 essay Barr rejected that crime was caused by material factors such as poverty arguing instead that crime was caused by immorality Spending more money on these material social programs is not going to have an impact on crime and if anything it will exacerbate the problem 80 In 1994 Barr became Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the telecommunications company GTE Corporation where he served for 14 years During his corporate tenure Barr directed a successful litigation campaign by the local telephone industry to achieve deregulation by scuttling a series of FCC rules personally arguing several cases in the federal courts of appeals and the Supreme Court 81 82 In 2000 when GTE merged with Bell Atlantic to become Verizon Communications Barr became the general counsel and executive vice president of Verizon until he retired in 2008 83 Barr became a multimillionaire from working in GTE and Verizon In 2001 Barr s salary was reportedly 1 5 million 16 From 1997 to 2000 Barr served on the Board of Visitors of the College of William amp Mary in Williamsburg 84 In 2009 Barr was briefly of counsel to the firm Kirkland amp Ellis From 2010 until 2017 he advised corporations on government enforcement matters and regulatory litigation he rejoined Kirkland and Ellis in 2017 85 From 2009 to 2018 Barr served on the board of directors for Time Warner 86 Comments about the Starr investigation of President Clinton edit In March 1998 Barr lambasted the Clinton administration for criticizing Independent Counsel Ken Starr s investigation of the Whitewater controversy which had shifted towards an investigation of an alleged affair between Clinton and Monica Lewinsky 2 Barr said the criticism appeared to have the improper purpose of influencing and impeding an ongoing criminal investigation and intimidating possible jurors witnesses and even investigators 2 Comments about the Trump administration edit nbsp On April 18 2019 a redacted version of Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election was released to the public During the first two years of the Trump presidency Barr frequently criticized legal challenges against Trump and investigations into the Trump 2016 campaign and presidency 87 88 In 2017 Barr said there was nothing inherently wrong with Donald Trump s calls for investigating Hillary Clinton while the two were both running for president Barr added that an investigation into an alleged Uranium One controversy was more warranted than looking into whether Trump conspired with Russia to influence the 2016 elections 89 Barr also said in 2017 that he did not think all this stuff about incarcerating or prosecuting Hillary Clinton was appropriate to say but added that there are things that should be investigated that haven t been investigated although the FBI began investigating the Clinton Foundation and the related Uranium One matter in 2015 followed by investigations by Republican congressional committees 90 91 92 In February 2017 Barr argued Trump was justified in firing Acting Attorney General Sally Yates over her refusal to defend Executive Order 13769 93 Barr was publicly critical of the special counsel investigation In 2017 he faulted Mueller for hiring prosecutors who have contributed to Democratic politicians saying that his team should have had more balance and characterized the obstruction of justice investigation as asinine and that it was taking on the look of an entirely political operation to overthrow the president 94 95 In June 2018 Barr sent an unsolicited 20 page memo to senior Justice Department officials He also provided copies to members of Trump s legal team and discussed it with some of them 96 In his memo Barr argued that the Special Counsel should not be investigating Trump for obstruction of justice because Trump s actions such as firing FBI Director James Comey were within his powers as head of the executive branch 97 98 99 He characterized the obstruction investigation as fatally misconceived and grossly irresponsible and potentially disastrous to the executive branch 100 98 The day after the existence of the memo became known Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said our decisions are informed by our knowledge of the actual facts of the case which Mr Barr didn t have 101 Democrats later characterized the memo as Barr s job application for the attorney general position 102 Political donations edit The National Republican Senatorial Committee NRSC financially assists Republicans in their Senate election contests in the seven years from 2009 to 2016 Barr gave six donations to the NRSC totaling 85 400 In a five month period from October 2018 to February 2019 Barr donated five times around 10 000 every month for a total of 51 000 When Barr started donating more frequently to the NRSC it was uncertain whether then Attorney General Jeff Sessions would remain in his job Barr continued donating even after Sessions resigned and after Trump nominated Barr for Attorney General The donations stopped after Barr was confirmed by the Senate as attorney general NRSC refunded Barr 30 000 before his confirmation Previously in 2017 Barr had said he felt prosecutors who make political contributions are identifying fairly strongly with a political party 103 U S Attorney General 2019 2020 edit Second nomination and confirmation edit nbsp Barr is sworn in as Attorney General by Chief Justice John Roberts in 2019 On December 7 2018 President Donald Trump announced Barr s nomination to succeed Jeff Sessions 104 105 Michael Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman reported that Trump had sought Barr as chief defense lawyer for Trump regarding the special counsel investigation headed by Robert Mueller after Barr made three positions known First Barr supported Trump s firing of Comey on May 9 2017 Second he questioned the appointments of some of Mueller s prosecutors due to political donations they had made to the Clinton campaign Third he alleged there were conflicts of interest of two appointees to the Special Counsel Team Jennie Rhee and Bruce Ohr 106 107 108 Barr was confirmed as attorney general on February 14 2019 by a 54 45 near party line vote with Sen Doug Jones D AL Joe Manchin D WV and Kyrsten Sinema D AZ as the three Democrats to vote Yea Republican senator Rand Paul R KY voted No and Richard Burr R NC did not vote 109 110 Later that day Barr was sworn in as the nation s 85th Attorney General by Chief Justice John Roberts in a ceremony at the White House 111 He is the first person to be appointed to a second non consecutive term as attorney general since John J Crittenden in 1850 112 Second tenure edit In May 2019 three months into his tenure as attorney general the Associated Press characterized Barr as a champion and advocate for Trump 113 Barr had enthusiastically supported Trump s political agenda misrepresented aspects of Special Counsel Robert Mueller s report repeated Trump s assertion that those investigating Trump had engaged in spying defied congressional subpoenas and refused to give Congress an unredacted version of the Mueller report 113 Under Barr s leadership the Justice Department changed its position on the Affordable Care Act ACA Previously the department took the position that the individual mandate provision was unconstitutional but could be severed from the whole healthcare law On March 25 the department updated its position to argue that the entire law was unconstitutional 114 On May 2 the department conducted a filing with the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit to nullify the entire law arguing that the removal of the provision on individual mandate results in the entire law becoming unconstitutional 115 Also in July 2019 Barr reportedly made the decision to not bring federal civil rights charges against New York policeman Daniel Pantaleo for causing the death of Eric Garner In so doing he overruled the Justice Department s Civil Rights Division which advocated charging Pantaleo instead agreeing with Justice Department prosecutors from New York 116 On July 25 2019 Barr ordered the resumption of federal executions 117 On July 8 2019 Barr announced his recusal from the Justice Department s review of the 2008 federal prosecution of American financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein 118 On August 10 2019 Epstein was found unresponsive in his jail cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center MCC 119 Barr later announced that Justice Department officials were investigating serious irregularities at the Metropolitan Correctional Center 120 In mid August 2019 Barr had a rare face to face meeting with Trump and Giuliani associates Joseph diGenova and his wife Victoria Toensing who since earlier that year represented former Ukrainian prosecutor general Viktor Shokin and pro Russia Ukrainian oligarch Dmytry Firtash as attorneys Trump had announced in March 2018 that diGenova and Toensing would join his legal defense team during the Mueller investigation the appointments were withdrawn days later though Trump personal attorney Jay Sekulow said they might assist in other legal matters DiGenova has said he has known Barr for thirty years as they both worked in the Reagan Justice Department Since 2014 Firtash had been fighting extradition to the United States under a federal indictment while he was living in Austria after being arrested there and released on 155 million bail and diGenova and Toensing sought to have Barr drop the charges Firtash was a middleman for importing Russian natural gas into Ukraine and has said he was installed in that role by Russian organized crime boss Semion Mogilevich Russian president Vladimir Putin reportedly agreed to the appointment When he was vice president Joe Biden had urged Ukraine to eliminate middlemen such as Firtash and to reduce the country s reliance on imports of Russian natural gas Giuliani had directed associate Lev Parnas to approach Firtash with a recommendation to hire diGenova and Toensing with the proposition that Firtash could help provide damaging information on Biden which Parnas s attorney described was part of any potential resolution to Firtash s extradition matter DiGenova and Toensing obtained a September 2019 statement 121 from Shokin that made false assertions about corruption by Biden The statement noted that it was prepared at the request of lawyers acting for Dmitry Firtash DF for use in legal proceedings in Austria Giuliani promoted the statement in television appearances as purported evidence of wrongdoing by Biden Prior to meeting with diGenova and Toensing Barr had been briefed in detail on the initial Trump Ukraine scandal whistleblower complaint within the CIA that had been forwarded to the Justice Department as well as on Giuliani s activities in Ukraine Barr declined to intervene in the Firtash case Bloomberg News reported that its sources told them Giuliani s high profile publicity of the Shokin statement had greatly reduced the chances of the Justice Department dropping the charges against Firtash as it would appear to be a political quid pro quo 122 nbsp Barr discusses the shooting at Pensacola Naval Air Station 13 January 2020 In October 2019 as Trump faced an impeachment inquiry about the Trump Ukraine scandal Barr met with Fox Corporation chairman Rupert Murdoch at his Manhattan home Trump reportedly was angered by a recent Fox News poll showing a majority of Americans supported his impeachment and removal from office as well as analysis of the scandal by Fox News senior judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano a previous Trump ally who had argued the president should be impeached Trump reportedly directed Barr to meet with Murdoch and it was not immediately known what the men discussed but CNN media analyst Brian Stelter wrote in his 2020 book about Fox News that silencing Napolitano was among the topics discussed The meeting was one day after Parnas and Igor Fruman associates of Trump and Giuliani were arrested as they prepared to fly to Vienna to arrange an interview between Fox News host Sean Hannity and Shokin who had made false corruption allegations about Joe Biden a potential challenger to Trump in the 2020 presidential election 123 124 125 126 In December 2019 Barr said that communities that do not show the respect and support that law enforcement deserves might find themselves without the police protection they need 127 Barr dropped the Department of Justice s case against the police officer who killed Eric Garner in 2014 16 In February 2020 Senator Lindsey Graham stated that the Justice Department is receiving information coming out of the Ukraine from Rudy Giuliani a personal lawyer to president Donald Trump Graham had learned from Barr that they ve created a process that Rudy could give information and they would see if it s verified A day later Barr confirmed Graham s account stating that he had established an intake process for information on Ukraine including from Giuliani while citing an obligation to have an open door policy on receiving information Giuliani has claimed to have information of improprieties regarding Ukraine for Joe Biden a former vice president later a 2020 presidential candidate and his son Hunter Biden Giuliani himself is reportedly being investigated by the Justice Department with two of his associates having been arrested 128 129 130 Barr has made commentary about social and religious issues in speeches and television appearances In an October 2019 address at the University of Notre Dame Barr asserted that militant secularists had been attacking Judeo Christian values for five decades stating This is not decay This is organized destruction Secular forces and their allies have marshaled all the forces of mass communication popular culture the entertainment industry and academia in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values 131 Barr has sometimes supported controversial or false statements made by Trump 132 On September 21 2020 Barr joined Advisor Ivanka Trump Georgia Governor Brian Kemp First Lady Marty Kemp and Tim Tebow in Atlanta to announce 100 million in grant funding for victims of human trafficking 133 On December 21 2020 Barr announced federal charges against Mohammed Abouagela Masud for building the bomb that destroyed Pan Am Flight 103 Barr had taken an interest in solving that case both during and between his tenures as attorney general 134 In May 2021 federal judge Beryl Howell unsealed documents showing that in November 2020 the Barr DOJ persuaded a grand jury to subpoena Twitter for information to identify who operated a parody Twitter account NunesAlt that mocked Republican congressman and ardent Trump ally Devin Nunes Twitter was also issued a gag order in the matter Challenging the subpoena the company noted Nunes s history of litigation and argued that the subpoena appeared to be a government attempt to aid his efforts to retaliate against his critics and violated the First Amendment The DOJ cited 18USC 875 c 135 that prohibits threats but did not provide any examples of threats to Twitter attorneys CNN reported that investigators sought information about several online accounts relating to threats against senator Mitch McConnell The DOJ withdrew the subpoena one week after Twitter challenged it to Howell who oversees federal grand juries in March 2021 136 137 138 139 Prior to Barr s second tenure the Trump Justice Department in 2017 and 2018 subpoenaed metadata from the iCloud accounts of at least a dozen individuals associated with the House Intelligence Committee including that of ranking Democratic member Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell and family members to investigate leaks to the press about contacts between Trump associates and Russia 140 141 Mueller investigation and report edit Further information Mueller special counsel investigation and Mueller Report On January 14 2019 a day before Barr s confirmation hearing for attorney general Barr sent written testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding the eventual final Mueller report saying it is very important that the public and Congress be informed of the results of the special counsel s work For that reason my goal will be to provide as much transparency as I can consistent with the law 142 143 Upon taking office Barr refused calls to recuse himself from overseeing the Mueller investigation despite his June 2018 memo arguing that the special counsel had no right to investigate Trump 97 98 On March 22 2019 Mueller concluded his special counsel investigation and gave the final report to Barr 144 On March 24 Barr submitted a four page letter to Congress describing what he said were the report s principal conclusions first that the Special Counsel did not establish conspiracy or coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia s efforts to interfere with the 2016 election and second that the Special Counsel made no decision as to whether to prosecute Trump for obstruction of justice quoting while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime it also does not exonerate him Barr stated that the Special Counsel s decision leaves it to Barr to decide if Trump obstructed justice Barr and Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein themselves concluded that the evidence is not sufficient to establish obstruction of justice by Trump and made the decision not to press the charge 145 146 147 148 149 According to federal judge Amy Berman Jackson the Barr letter which declined to charge Trump and a Justice Department memo purportedly containing advice to Barr that Trump should not be charged were being written by the very same people at the very same time Jackson also stated that email evidence showed that the Barr letter was the priority and it is getting completed first ahead of the advice memo 150 151 On March 25 Mueller reportedly wrote a letter to Barr as described in The New York Times as expressing his and his team s concerns that the attorney general had inadequately portrayed their conclusions 152 In USA Today it was described that Mueller expressed his differences with Barr 153 On March 27 Mueller sent Barr another letter describing his concerns of Barr s letter to Congress and the public on March 24 In it Mueller complained that the summary did not fully capture the context nature and substance of the Special Counsel s probe adding There is now public confusion about critical aspects of the results of our investigation This threatens to undermine a central purpose for which the Department appointed the Special Counsel to assure full public confidence in the outcome of the investigations 154 Both before and after the release of Barr s summary Mueller repeatedly tried to get Barr to release the report s introductions and executive summaries Mueller s March 27 letter also stated that he had earlier sent a March 25 letter to Barr 155 Mueller s March 27 letter prompted Barr to call Mueller on March 28 Barr clarified on the intention of his letter both in his phone call with Mueller and in another letter to Congress that his letter had not been intended to be a summary of the report but rather a description of the principal findings of the report 156 154 On April 9 Barr appeared in a congressional hearing before the House There Representative Charlie Crist described media reports that members of the special counsel s team are frustrated at some level with the limited information included in your March 24 letter that it does not adequately or accurately portray the Mueller report s findings Crist asked Barr Do you know what they are referencing with that Barr replied No I don t 157 158 On April 10 Attorney General Barr appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee Senator Chris Van Hollen asked Barr regarding obstruction Did Bob Mueller support your conclusion Barr replied I don t know whether Bob Mueller supported my conclusion 157 158 The Department of Justice released a redacted version of the special counsel s report in the morning of April 18 2019 159 160 After the release of the full report fact checkers and news outlets characterized Barr s initial letter as a deliberate mischaracterization of the Mueller Report and its conclusions 161 162 163 164 165 166 The New York Times reported instances in which the Barr letter omitted information and quoted sentence fragments out of context in ways that significantly altered the Mueller findings including 161 A sentence fragment described only one possible motive for Trump to obstruct justice while the Mueller report listed other possible motives Omission of words and a full sentence that twice suggested there was knowing and complicit behavior between the Trump campaign and Russians that stopped short of coordination Omission of language that indicated Trump could be subject to indictment after leaving office to suggest that Trump was cleared in fullAccording to the Associated Press Barr misrepresented the report in several ways saying the report gave no indication that Congress could make a determination on obstruction of justice the report specifically stated that Congress may apply obstruction laws and that these reports are not supposed to be made public when DOJ regulations give the AG wide authority in releasing reports such as this one 167 Barr falsely claimed in his summary of the report that the White House fully cooperated with the Special Counsel s investigation 168 The Washington Post fact checker described Barr s claim as astonishing 162 and PolitiFact said it was false 168 In actuality Trump declined to grant the Special Counsel an in person interview and the Special Counsel report characterized Trump s written responses to interview questions as inadequate 168 The report also documented numerous instances where Trump tried to either impede or end the Special Counsel investigation analyzing each in terms of the three factors necessary for a criminal charge of obstruction 168 169 170 failed verification During a press conference Barr said Mueller s report contained substantial evidence that Trump was frustrated and angered because of his belief that the investigation was undermining his presidency propelled by his political opponents and fueled by illegal leaks however the report gave no indication that Trump s frustrations with the investigation would mitigate obstructing behavior 155 171 172 Barr also said it would not be criminal obstruction of justice for a president to instruct a staffer to lie to investigators about the president s actions 173 and suggested a president could legally terminate an investigation into himself if he was being falsely accused 174 On May 8 2019 the House Judiciary Committee voted along party lines to hold Barr in contempt of congress for failing to comply with a subpoena which requested the full and unredacted Mueller Report 175 The matter then fell to the House of Representatives at large for a contempt of Congress vote 176 The Justice Department took the position that disclosure of the unredacted Mueller Report would require the department to violate the law court rules and court orders as well as grand jury secrecy rules 175 During May 1 2019 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee Barr stated he accepted Mueller s interpretation of the law that was applied in the Report However in a May 30 CBS News interview Barr said he had applied his own interpretation of the law and took the position that obstruction laws cannot apply to presidents who abuse their official powers to impede an investigation for a corrupt reason Barr elaborated As a matter of law we didn t agree with the legal analysis a lot of the legal analysis in the report It did not reflect the views of the department 177 178 In March 2020 Reggie Walton a federal district judge originally appointed by President George W Bush criticized Barr s characterizations of the Mueller report as distorted and misleading Walton made his comments while presiding over a lawsuit on whether the Mueller report should be released without redactions As Walton saw it Barr s lack of candor undermined Barr s credibility and in turn the department s arguments before the court Walton had concerns that Barr may have made a calculated attempt to influence public discourse in favor of President Trump by establishing a one sided narrative about the report contrary to the report s findings Walton questioned if the report s redactions were actually self serving to avoid conflict with Barr s statements and if the Justice Department used post hoc rationalizations to defend Barr Thus Walton decided to personally review the redacted material to check if the redactions were justified 179 180 On September 3 Walton ruled that the redaction of FBI reports of witness interviews was proper 181 On September 30 he ruled the DOJ had violated federal law by redacting some portions of the Mueller report and ordered them to be released before the November election 182 nbsp The March 24 2019 Office of Legal Counsel memo In May 2021 federal judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that a March 24 2019 Department of Justice memo 183 must be published without redactions 184 Previously in April 2019 Barr said that his decision to not charge Trump was made in consultation with the Office of Legal Counsel and other department lawyers In this lawsuit the Department of Justice argued that since Barr relied on the advice of this memo to make his decision this memo should not be published unredacted Jackson rejected this argument after reviewing the unredacted memo stating that Barr could not have made the decision on the memo s advice because the unredacted memo showed that the decision had already been made not to charge Trump In addition according to Jackson the unredacted memo indicated that Barr did not have legitimate authority to make a prosecution decision regarding Trump Jackson concluded that Barr had been disingenuous to Congress in 2019 and that the Department of Justice had been disingenuous to this court regarding their decision making process 151 184 185 Spygate edit In April 2019 Barr stated that he thought spying did occur against the Trump 2016 presidential campaign 186 The remark echoed unsubstantiated claims made by Trump and his supporters that the Trump campaign had been unfairly targeted or spied on by the FBI Trump described it as an attempted coup 187 186 188 189 190 There is no evidence that government officials engaged in spying on the Trump campaign 188 Barr later said he was not sure what spying had occurred and he did clarify what he meant by spying 186 He also said he had no evidence of wrong doing 186 189 Democrats criticized Barr s statement as incendiary saying the statement was intended to please Trump and that the statement lacked credibility following Barr s misrepresentation of the Mueller report in March 2019 186 188 189 Barr said he thought there was not any pejorative connotation at all to the term spying 191 At the time Barr said he would not launch an investigation into the origins of the FBI probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election 188 FBI officials denied Barr s claims about spying 192 FBI Director Christopher A Wray said he was unaware of any illegal surveillance by the FBI he rejected the description of spying 193 Subsequently Trump retweeted a far right pundit who said the FBI had no leadership and that Wray was protecting the same gang that tried to overthrow the president in an illegal coup 194 Trump said Wray s statement was ridiculous 194 Former FBI Director James Comey rebutted Barr saying The FBI doesn t spy The FBI investigates 187 In May 2019 Barr asserted Government power was used to spy on American citizens 191 Barr did not identify the specific actions prior to the 2016 election that he considered spying 191 Contempt of Congress edit On May 1 2019 Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd told the House Oversight Committee that Barr had instructed Justice Department official John Gore to refuse a subpoena to testify in front of the committee The committee subpoenaed Gore over the Trump administration s efforts to add a question on citizenship to the 2020 United States Census The reason for the refusal was that the committee s decision to not allow a Justice Department lawyer to accompany Gore during testimony violated the confidentiality interests of the Executive Branch though a separate room was permitted 195 In early June the House Oversight Committee moved to hold Barr in contempt of congress for defying a subpoena regarding the efforts to add a citizenship question to the census 196 In July 2019 the House of Representatives voted 230 198 to hold Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in criminal contempt of Congress after they failed to produce documents as April 2019 congressional subpoenas mandated The documents on the planned and eventually scrapped citizenship question in the 2020 census were withheld due to a deliberative process and attorney client communications according to the Justice Department President Trump also asserted executive privilege over the documents to withhold them from Congress Only once prior has a sitting Cabinet member been held in criminal contempt of Congress Eric Holder in 2012 The House instructed the Justice Department to prosecute Barr but the Department refused 197 198 Origins of the Russia investigation edit Main article Durham special counsel investigation Also in May 2019 Barr appointed John Durham the U S attorney in Connecticut to oversee a DOJ probe into the origins of the FBI investigation into Russian interference 194 The origins of the probe were already being investigated by the Justice Department s inspector general and by U S attorney John Huber who was appointed in 2018 by Jeff Sessions 194 Democrats criticized the decision with Senator Patrick Leahy saying Ordering a third meritless investigation at the request of Trump is beneath the office he holds 194 Trump ordered the intelligence community to cooperate with Barr s inquiry and granted Barr unprecedented full authority to declassify any intelligence information related to the matter 199 200 201 202 203 In April 2020 Barr asserted the FBI investigation had been opened without any basis 204 nbsp Bill Barr with Donald Trump 2019 In September 2019 Barr was reported to have been contacting foreign governments to ask for help in this inquiry including personally traveling to the United Kingdom and Italy to seek information At Barr s request Trump phoned the prime minister of Australia to request his cooperation 205 206 Barr sought information related to a conspiracy theory that had circulated among Trump allies in conservative media asserting Joseph Mifsud was a Western intelligence operative who was allegedly directed to entrap Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos in order to establish a false predicate for the FBI to open an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections On October 2 2019 Senator Lindsey Graham a staunch Trump supporter and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee wrote a letter to the leaders of Britain Australia and Italy asserting as fact that both Mifsud and Australian diplomat Alexander Downer had been directed to contact Papadopoulos Joe Hockey the Australian ambassador to the United States sharply rejected Graham s characterization of Downer 207 208 A former Italian government official told The Washington Post in October 2019 that during a meeting the previous month Italian intelligence services told Barr they had no connections no activities no interference in the matter Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte later affirmed this 209 210 One British official with knowledge of Barr s requests observed it is like nothing we have come across before they are basically asking in quite robust terms for help in doing a hatchet job on their own intelligence services 211 The Washington Post reported on November 22 2019 that the Justice Department inspector general had aggressively investigated the allegation that Mifsud had been directed to entrap Papadopoulos but found it was without merit The Post also reported the inspector general found the opening of the FBI s Crossfire Hurricane investigation was legally and factually predicated 212 The Post subsequently reported in December 2019 that Barr disagreed with the inspector general s conclusion that there was adequate evidence for the FBI to open its investigation 213 The Post also reported in December 2019 that the inspector general asked Durham and several American intelligence agencies if there was evidence of a setup by American intelligence but they replied there was none 214 On October 24 2019 two sources told The New York Times that the Durham inquiry had been elevated to a criminal investigation 215 The Times reported on November 22 that the Justice Department inspector general had made a criminal referral to Durham regarding Kevin Clinesmith an FBI attorney who had altered an email during the process of acquiring a wiretap warrant renewal on Carter Page and that referral appeared to be at least part of the reason Durham s investigation was elevated to criminal status 216 Barr rejected criticism by Democrats in Congress that the transitioned investigation was designed to provide support to Trump during his impeachment inquiry in the Trump Ukraine scandal 217 218 On August 14 2020 Clinesmith pleaded guilty to a felony violation of altering an email used to maintain Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act FISA warrants having added the phrase not a source to the original email 219 220 Carter Page had a prior operational relationship with the CIA from 2008 to 2013 221 In November 2019 Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded his investigation into the origins of the 2016 Russia probe concluding that the investigation was not tainted by political bias or improper motivation and that the initial information gathered was sufficient to predicate the investigation given the low threshold for opening an investigation Barr rejected the conclusions of the report declaring that the investigation was started on the thinnest of suspicions that in his view were insufficient to justify the steps taken This also contradicted FBI director Chris Wray who interpreted Horowitz s findings as the investigation having appropriate predication and authorization 222 223 In December 2019 Barr claimed in an interview with NBC News that the Russia investigation was completely baseless and said he believed the FBI s investigation may have been conducted in bad faith 224 Barr also refused to refute the debunked conspiracy theory of Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election during the interview 224 225 In a subsequent interview on Fox News Barr asserted the president bore the burden of probably one of the greatest conspiracy theories baseless conspiracy theories in American political history despite the recent inspector general report debunking several conspiracy theories Trump and his allies had promoted 226 227 228 229 In January 2020 Barr prohibited the start of counterintelligence investigations related to presidential campaigns unless both the attorney general and head of the FBI signed off on those investigations 230 Barr defended Trump s April 2020 firing of intelligence community inspector general Michael K Atkinson Atkinson was the inspector general who sought to get the Trump administration to the disclose the Ukraine scandal whistleblower complaint to Congress In defense of the firing Barr allegedly made numerous false claims about Atkinson s actions during his tenure 231 On May 18 2020 Barr commented on prior investigations into potential collusion between Trump and Russia stating What happened to the president in the 2016 election and throughout the first two years of his administration was abhorrent it was a grave injustice and it was unprecedented in American history the law enforcement and intelligence apparatus of this country were involved in advancing a false and utterly baseless Russian collusion narrative against this president 5 6 Barr hinted in June 2020 that the Durham investigation would produce results regarding the complete collapse of the Russiagate scandal before the end of the summer 232 In July he told a Congressional committee that the results of the investigation could be released before the election despite an informal Justice Department rule limiting release of such information 233 In August Trump in public comments appeared to be getting impatient for the investigation to produce more prosecutions and suggesting that his opinion of Barr will be negatively influenced if it does not 233 As summer ended there were reports that Barr was pressing for the Durham investigation to release its report Colleagues of Durham have said they believe he is under pressure to produce something before the election A top aide in the investigation quietly resigned on September 10 she gave no reason but colleagues said she was concerned about political pressure from Barr 234 On September 18 2020 four chairs of Democratic committees asked the DOJ inspector general to open an emergency investigation because We are concerned by indications that Attorney General Barr might depart from longstanding DOJ principles to take public action related to U S Attorney Durham s investigation that could impact the presidential election adding that Barr s public comments may have already violated that policy 235 On November 2 2020 the day before the presidential election New York magazine reported that there has been no evidence found after 18 months of investigation to support Barr s claims that Trump was targeted by politically biased Obama officials to prevent his election The probe remains ongoing In fact the sources said the Durham investigation has so far uncovered no evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden or Barack Obama or that they were even involved with the Russia investigation There was no evidence not even remotely indicating Obama or Biden did anything wrong as one person put it 236 Intervention in cases of Trump associates edit nbsp Barr with Joe Grogan left and Ivanka Trump right in 2020 In the spring of 2019 Barr reportedly attempted to undermine the conviction of Trump fixer Michael Cohen for campaign finance violations detailed The New York Times in June 2020 Barr reportedly raised doubts multiple times about the validity of the charges against Cohen including requesting the Office of Legal Counsel to draft a memo with legal arguments which could have helped Cohen s case Barr s efforts were reportedly stemmed by the prosecutors of the Southern District of New York Ultimately Cohen s conviction was not changed 237 In February 2020 President Trump directly referenced Barr in the Justice Department s intercession in recommending a lighter sentence for Trump s associate and old friend Roger Stone Trump s tweet stated Congratulations to Attorney General Bill Barr for taking charge of a case that was totally out of control and perhaps should not have even been brought Initially four career prosecutors had recommended that Stone serve a jail term of between seven and nine years A Trump tweet followed Cannot allow this miscarriage of justice after which the department recommended an unspecified jail term The department claimed that this later decision was made without consulting the White House The prosecutors resigned from the case as a result with one choosing to leave the department 238 239 Barr affirmed that he had made the decision in the Stone case to change the sentencing memo Barr said Trump had not asked him to step in but noted that Trump s tweets and public comments make it impossible for the attorney general to do his job I think it s time to stop the tweeting about Department of Justice criminal cases Barr said 240 241 Barr s rebuke of Trump s use of Twitter for interference in DOJ matters were seen as a rare departure from his usual unwavering support of the president Barr s comments followed criticism of the department for its poor handling of the sentencing of Roger Stone after DOJ actions seen as favorable to Trump and his allies 242 243 Days later a bipartisan group of more than 2 000 former DOJ employees signed a letter calling for Barr s resignation 244 245 while the Federal Judges Association of over a thousand federal jurists called an emergency meeting for February 18 to discuss their concerns about the intervention of Trump and Justice Department officials in politically sensitive cases 246 Despite Barr s rebuke of Trump days later the president resumed denouncing the prosecutors the judge and the jury foreperson in the Stone case while acknowledging that his comments made Barr s job harder 247 After granting several pardons Trump also labeled himself as the country s chief law enforcement officer a description usually reserved for the attorney general 248 Additionally in February 2020 Barr declared that there would be a review of the criminal case of Michael Flynn the former National Security Advisor to Trump who had pled guilty in 2017 to lying to the FBI about his contacts with a Russian ambassador Flynn later attempted to withdraw his guilty plea and had not been sentenced yet 249 250 Barr chose St Louis s chief federal prosecutor Jeffrey Jensen to conduct the review Jensen himself was nominated by Trump for the St Louis position 250 Trump had publicly called for the charges to be dropped against Flynn In late April or early May Jensen recommended to Barr that the charges be dropped 251 The Justice Department announced in May 2020 that the charges against Flynn would be dropped with Jensen stating that Barr had agreed with his recommendation 251 Shortly after Barr was asked in a media interview if given that Flynn admitted lying to the FBI Does the fact remain that he lied Barr replied that people sometimes plead to things that turn out not to be crimes the Department of Justice is not persuaded that this was material to any legitimate counterintelligence investigation So it was not a crime Barr denied that he was carrying out the president s agenda on this case stating that he was doing the law s bidding He also said that from this case he wanted to show Americans that there s only one standard of justice instead of two standards of justice 252 Between Trump s election and inauguration Flynn had phone conversations with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak that were incidentally intercepted by American intelligence in the course of routine surveillance of Russian agents Among other topics Flynn discussed sanctions imposed on Russia by the Obama administration for Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections Per policy regarding American persons Flynn s identity was masked before accounts of his conversations were distributed to high level Obama administration officials Some officials notably national security advisor Susan Rice were so concerned by the accounts that they requested Flynn s identity be unmasked per procedure After the unmasking was reported by the press Trump and his allies insisted it was evidence the Obama administration was spying on him and his associates for political purposes In May 2020 Barr spokesperson Kerri Kupec announced on the program of Fox News host Sean Hannity that Barr had appointed U S attorney John Bash to investigate She also stated that John Durham whom Barr had appointed to investigate the origins of the FBI Crossfire Hurricane investigation had also been examining the unmasking issue The Bash investigation was quietly closed five months later with no public announcement or report reportedly finding nothing improper Bash s 52 page report previously classified top secret was released in May 2022 Bash wrote he had found no evidence that any unmasking requests were made for any political or otherwise improper reasons during the 2016 election period or the ensuing presidential transition 253 254 255 Barr s firing of Geoffrey Berman was widely condemned 256 given that the Southern District of New York was actively pursuing criminal investigations into several persons and companies associated with President Donald Trump and The Trump Organization 257 237 Barr s conduct was seen as sacrificing the independence of the Department of Justice to protect Trump and his allies 258 For these reasons numerous groups have called for Barr s resignation including the New York City Bar Association 259 Ethics complaints edit On October 3 2019 Rep Bill Pascrell Jr filed ethics complaints against Barr with the District of Columbia Bar and Virginia Bar associations 260 On February 14 2020 Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed an ethics complaint against Barr with the Department of Justice Office of Professional Responsibility and Office of the Inspector General accusing Barr of violating several Justice Department rules guidelines and procedures 261 On July 22 2020 a group of 27 legal ethics experts and former government lawyers including four former presidents of the District of Columbia Bar also filed a complaint against Barr with the District of Columbia Bar 262 263 A bar association may take years to investigate an ethics complaint filed against a lawyer 262 If the District of Columbia Bar concludes that a lawyer has violated any of its Rules of Professional Conduct that lawyer may be sanctioned in one of several ways including admonition suspension and disbarment 264 Halkbank Investigation and the firing of Geoffrey Berman edit In June 2019 in violation of Department of Justice policy Barr pressured Berman then the U S Attorney for the Southern District of New York to drop an investigation into close allies of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan involved with the Turkish bank Halkbank 10 The bank and the individuals in question were alleged to have broken U S sanctions on Iran funnelling billions of dollars to Iran and helping fund its nuclear ambitions 10 Barr s demand followed a concerted pressure campaign by Erdogan and his close associates including his son in law Turkish Finance Minister Berat Albayrak and Mehmet Ali Yalcindag a Trump family friend involved in developing the Trump towers in Turkey 10 Erdogan himself personally insisted to President Trump that the Halkbank investigation be shut down on at least two occasions November 1 2018 at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires and on a telephone call on December 14 2018 10 According to former National Security Adviser John Bolton a first hand witness of many of the events in question this sequence of events does look like obstruction of justice 10 In mid June 2020 Barr announced that Geoffrey Berman the court appointed United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York SDNY is stepping down Berman s office had been investigating both Trump s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and Trump s inaugural committee as well as conducting a wider investigation into Trump s company and his associates after successfully prosecuting Michael Cohen another personal lawyer of Trump 265 CNN also reported that Berman had prosecuted Halkbank despite Barr s attempt to try to avoid charges for the Turkish state owned bank after Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan requested Trump to help drop the charges 266 9 267 268 Simultaneously Barr announced that at his recommendation Trump had appointed Craig Carpenito as the interim SDNY U S Attorney in a departure from the tradition of a career prosecutor from SDNY taking the interim role Also concurrently Barr said that Trump would nominate Jay Clayton for the permanent role of SDNY U S Attorney 266 9 Within a day Berman said that he actually had not resigned and have no intention of resigning Berman also said that he only learned of his supposed departure from Barr s public announcement 9 267 Barr then informed Berman that Trump had fired Berman at Barr s request Barr did not give a reason for Berman s firing As a result of the firing the deputy SDNY U S Attorney Audrey Strauss would become the interim SDNY U S Attorney With this Berman agreed to leave Meanwhile the Senate indicated it would not confirm Clayton as the permanent replacement 268 267 In a late Friday night statement on June 19 2020 Barr stated that Berman was resigning and being replaced by Jay Clayton citing Berman s behavior in the Halkbank episode as a primary reason for his removal 10 Berman learned of this through press reports and declined to resign the next day Barr asked Trump to fire Berman which he promptly did Berman was replaced by his deputy Audrey Strauss 269 In November 2019 The Wall Street Journal reported Trump personal attorney Rudy Giuliani figured in an SDNY investigation into multiple possible felonies 270 George Floyd protests edit nbsp Barr joined Trump on his visit to St John s Episcopal Church in June 2020 In early June 2020 according to reporting by The Washington Post and Fox News Barr personally ordered that the streets around Lafayette Square Washington D C should be cleared so that Trump Barr and other administration officials could stage a photo op in front of St John s Church At the time the streets were occupied by peaceful protesters as part of the George Floyd protests in Washington D C Barr s order resulted in federal law enforcement officers rushing protesters and employing smoke canisters pepper balls riot shields and batons against the protesters 8 271 Barr reacted to the incident by falsely claiming that pepper balls used by law enforcement on protesters were not chemical irritants pepper balls contain pelargonic acid vanillylamide a chemical irritant while the product s manufacturer and the Justice Department both consider pepper balls a chemical irritant 272 On August 4 2020 Barr and presidential adviser Ivanka Trump and special advisor Heather Fischer announced the 35 million in grant awards to support victims of human trafficking at a White House event During the roundtable Barr became emotional and partly covered his face with his hand as survivors of human trafficking told their stories 273 In August 2020 he invoked qualified immunity before a federal court to protect himself from liability in a lawsuit regarding the Lafayette Square incident 274 A report by the U S Department of the Interior Office of Inspector General OIG released in June 2021 concluded that the clearing of the park by the Park Police and other forces was part of a plan to install antiscale fencing and had not been done so that Trump could stage a photo op in front of St John s Church 275 The OIG report stated that OIG cannot assess whether Barr s visit to the park or any planned movement by Trump influenced the Secret Service s actions including its early deployment on to H Street 276 In an August 2020 appearance on Fox News Barr asserted that Black Lives Matter is a revolutionary group that is interested in some form of socialism communism They re essentially Bolsheviks Their tactics are fascistic Barr equated the movement with antifa characterizing that loose collective as highly organized and claiming the media doesn t take footage of what s happening at George Floyd protests He also claimed that liberals are intent on tearing down the system and that the Democratic party was only interested in total victory It s a secular religion It s a substitute for a religion 277 Barr had in June 2020 blamed antifa for orchestrating the George Floyd protests but analysis by The New York Times found that no one arrested for serious federal crimes at the protests had been linked to antifa 278 Homeland Security Department secretary Chad Wolf said in September 2020 that he and Barr had discussed arresting leaders of antifa and the Black Lives Matter movement 279 The Wall Street Journal reported in September 2020 that Barr told federal prosecutors to consider charging violent protestors with plotting to overthrow the US government 280 281 In an August 2020 interview Trump claimed that a plane full of thugs in dark uniforms implying antifa had recently flown from one unidentified city to another with the intention of fomenting riots His claim appeared to be based on months old social media rumors 282 283 Two days later Barr asserted he knew that antifa activists are flying around the country and we are following them 284 Despite assertions of the threat posed by antifa from Trump Barr and others the Department of Homeland Security reported in October 2020 that white supremacists posed the top domestic terrorism threat which FBI director Christopher Wray confirmed in March 2021 noting the bureau had elevated the threat to the same level as ISIS 285 The DHS report did not mention antifa 279 286 287 On September 3 2020 Trump ordered Barr to identify anarchist jurisdictions stating in a memorandum It is imperative that the federal government review the use of federal funds by jurisdictions that permit anarchy violence and destruction in America s cities 288 Days later Barr designated New York City Seattle and Portland Oregon as such jurisdictions suggesting they should lose their federal funding because We cannot allow federal tax dollars to be wasted when the safety of the citizenry hangs in the balance 289 Barr redirected federal homeland security and law enforcement resources to dealing with antifa whereas the career law enforcement officials had long since concluded that the major domestic terrorism threat came from the far right 290 2020 presidential election edit See also Attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election As Attorney General Barr sowed doubt about the integrity of the 2020 election 291 In a September 2020 interview Barr falsely asserted the Justice Department had indicted a Texas man for fraudulently completing 1 700 mail in ballots There was no such indictment and the matter actually involved a series of errors by election officials during a county election rather than fraud 292 293 294 Barr also repeated a claim that foreign adversaries could flood the country with counterfeit ballots to disrupt the election a threat that experts characterized as nearly impossible to execute 295 296 Senior American intelligence officials have said there was no evidence any foreign powers intended to manipulate mail in voting 297 The day after Barr s interview the Department of Homeland Security issued an intelligence bulletin warning that Russia is using social media and other venues to promote false claims that mail voting will lead to widespread fraud in order to undermine public trust in the electoral process 298 In a subsequent September 2020 interview Barr stated that mail in voting meant we re back in the business of selling and buying votes including outright coercion paying off a postman here s a few hundred dollars give me some of your ballots 299 On October 1 2020 more than 1 600 former DOJ attorneys signed an open letter stating we fear that Attorney General Barr intends to use the DOJ s vast law enforcement powers to undermine our most fundamental democratic value free and fair elections 300 In September 2020 Barr asserted liberals were projecting referring to all this bullshit about how the president is going to stay in office and seize power I ve never heard of any of that crap I mean I m the attorney general I would think I would have heard about it During both the 2016 and 2020 campaigns Trump was noncommittal when asked if he would accept election results showing he had lost Days after Barr s remarks Trump was asked if he would commit to a peaceful transition of power if he lost the 2020 election to which he replied Well we ll have to see what happens You know that I ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots And the ballots are a disaster Get rid of the ballots and you ll have a very peaceful there won t be a transfer frankly There will be a continuation 301 302 299 303 In the days after his electoral defeat Trump and his legal team led by Rudy Giuliani pursued an aggressive effort to overturn the results with dozens of lawsuits and numerous false and unsubstantiated assertions revolving around an international communist conspiracy rigged voting machines and polling place fraud to claim the election had been stolen from Trump 304 305 306 307 308 After Joe Biden won the 2020 election and Trump refused to concede baseless claims of voting fraud circulated 309 Barr sent a memo to DOJ prosecutors authorizing them to investigate vote tabulation irregularities before voting results had been certified a reversal of long standing department policy Richard Pilger director of the Election Crimes Branch at the DOJ Criminal Division stepped down from that position in protest hours later 310 Four days later sixteen assistant U S attorneys of the Branch wrote Barr a letter urging him to rescind the memo because it thrusts career prosecutors into partisan politics 311 Barr later told a journalist that he had always expected Trump s electoral loss and never expected that Trump s fraud claims would have merit My suspicion all the way along was that there was nothing there It was all bullshit However he asserted that because he expected Trump to ask him for details he informally investigated to educate himself 312 Some asserted Barr s statements during the campaign suggested otherwise and that he was now attempting to rehabilitate his reputation 313 314 315 Barr waited until December 1 2020 to state that the Justice Department has not uncovered evidence of widespread voter fraud that would change the outcome of the 2020 presidential election 11 Trump was angered by the announcement and the fact that Durham had not released any findings prior to the election 316 Trump was also angered by news that Barr had followed Justice Department policy by not disclosing during the campaign that Joe Biden s son Hunter had since 2018 been under criminal investigation initially on suspicion of money laundering but later for tax matters 316 317 318 On December 14 2020 Trump announced on Twitter that Barr was stepping down from his post on December 23 319 After a pro Trump mob stormed the U S Capitol after being incited by Trump Barr said Trump had committed a betrayal of his office 320 Resignation edit On December 14 2020 Trump announced via Twitter that Barr would be resigning from his post as attorney general effective December 23 321 Barr further confirmed his resignation in a letter to Trump on the same day 322 In summarizing his tenure Katie Benner of The New York Times wrote that Barr brought the Justice Department closer to the White House than any attorney general in a half century Barr made decisions that dovetailed precisely with Mr Trump s wishes and the demands of his political allies 323 CNN summarized his tenure similarly Barr repeatedly and unapologetically prioritized Trump s political goals while furthering his own vision of expansive presidential power 324 Ryan Lucas of NPR described Barr as one of Trump s most loyal and effective defenders 325 As examples of Barr s actions on behalf of Trump these critics pointed to the fact that Barr made frequent false claims about the integrity of mail in voting leading up to the 2020 election misleadingly summarized Special Counsel Robert Mueller s report on Russian interference in the 2016 election 324 325 harshly criticized those who had investigated Trump 324 meddled in criminal prosecutions of Trump allies 326 and ordered the use of force on peaceful protestors across the street from the White House during the George Floyd protests so that President Trump could have a photo op at nearby St John s Church 324 325 Post DOJ career edit In 2022 it was reported that Barr would launch a law and consulting firm with former Facebook general counsel Ted Ullyot 327 Comments on failed Sussmann prosecution edit On June 1 2022 Barr was interviewed on Fox News about the verdict in the failed prosecution of Michael Sussman He continued to defend Trump by repeating debunked Russiagate conspiracy theories about the origins of the Russia investigation by stating that the case against Sussmann crystallized the central role played by the Hillary campaign in launching as a dirty trick the whole Russiagate collusion narrative The Washington Post noted that the Justice Department traditionally seeks to avoid impugning individuals who are not charged with crimes and the DOJ is not involved in exposing political dirty tricks that have not been found unlawful Barr also asserted Durham exposed really dreadful behavior by the supervisors in the FBI the senior ranks of the FBI who knowingly use this information to start an investigation of Trump though the Sussmann case did not relate to how the FBI Crossfire Hurricane investigation began Although Barr appointed Durham to investigate possible FBI wrongdoing in opening Crossfire Hurricane Durham s prosecution of Sussmann portrayed the FBI as a victim rather than a perpetrator of wrongdoing 328 329 330 January 6 committee testimony edit Barr testified to the House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack behind closed doors on June 2 2022 Portions of his videotaped testimony were presented during the committee s public hearings days later Barr testified that before resigning as attorney general he had told president Trump that allegations of election fraud were bullshit At times during his testimony he could not control his laughter at the absurdity of some fraud allegations such as the Italygate theory that satellites controlled from Italy had flipped votes from Trump to Biden and that former Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez had orchestrated an election fraud scheme despite having died seven years earlier Barr testified Trump never gave an indication of interest in what the actual facts were adding the president had become detached from reality if he really believes this stuff 331 332 Investigation into Trump s handling of presidential documents edit Main article FBI investigation into Donald Trump s handling of presidential documents Barr has supported the FBI search of Mar a Lago and its investigation into the handling of presidential documents by Trump after his presidency and dismissed Trump s calls for a special master to be appointed 333 Criticism edit This article s criticism or controversy section may compromise the article s neutrality Please help rewrite or integrate negative information to other sections through discussion on the talk page December 2020 On December 11 2019 former Attorney General Eric Holder who had served under President Obama wrote an op ed in The Washington Post claiming William Barr is unfit to be attorney general 334 for his naked partisan ship attempts to vilify the president s critics his attacks on the inspector general and his comments on ongoing investigations 334 In a December 2019 opinion piece former FBI director CIA director and federal judge William Webster wrote of a dire threat to the rule of law in the country I love Webster asserted that the integrity of the institutions that protect our civil order are tragically under assault writing that aspersions cast upon FBI employees by the president and my longtime friend Attorney General William P Barr are troubling in the extreme 335 336 Since 2005 Webster had served as the chair of the Homeland Security Advisory Council Sixty five law professors and faculty from George Washington University Law School Barr s alma mater wrote in a June 2020 letter that he had failed to fulfill his oath of office to support and defend the Constitution of the United States They wrote that Barr s actions as attorney general have undermined the rule of law breached constitutional norms and damaged the integrity and traditional independence of his office and of the Department of Justice 337 During a June 2020 House Judiciary Committee testimony Donald Ayer a former deputy attorney general for whom Barr worked during the George H W Bush presidency asserted that Barr poses the greatest threat in my lifetime to our rule of law and to public trust in it 338 Three months later Ayer claimed Barr is on a mission to install the president as an autocrat 339 In January 2022 it is reported that the House select committee investigating the January 6 Capitol attack held conversations with Barr about the Trump administration s approach to compromise the integrity of the 2020 election specifically about the potential coordination between the Justice Department and the Defense Department 340 Political positions edit nbsp Barr with Senator Mitt Romney in February 2019A lifelong Republican Barr takes an expansive view of executive powers and supports law and order policies 341 Considered an establishment Republican at the time of his confirmation Barr gained a reputation as someone loyal to Trump and his policies during his second tenure as attorney general 341 His efforts to support the sitting president politically during his DOJ office tenure have been viewed as the most strenuous since those of another law and order Attorney General John N Mitchell 342 Immigration edit As Deputy Attorney General Barr together with others at the Department of Justice successfully led the effort for the withdrawal of a proposed Department of Health and Human Services rule that would have allowed people with HIV AIDS into the United States 343 He also advocated the use of Guantanamo Bay to prevent Haitian refugees and HIV infected individuals from claiming asylum in the United States 70 According to Vox in December 2018 Barr supported an aggressive law and order agenda on immigration as attorney general in the Bush Administration 344 Death penalty edit Barr supports the death penalty arguing that it reduces crime He advocated a Bush backed bill that would have expanded the types of crime that could be punished by execution In a 1991 op ed in The New York Times Barr argued that death row inmates ability to challenge their sentences should be limited to avoid cases dragging on for years This lack of finality devastates the criminal justice system It diminishes the deterrent effect of state criminal laws saps state prosecutorial resources and continually reopens the wounds of victims and survivors 345 346 On July 25 2019 Barr announced that the United States federal government would resume its use of capital punishment under his leadership after nearly two decades without an execution Barr ordered the Department of Justice to adopt a new lethal injection protocol consisting of a single drug pentobarbital and ordered execution dates to be set for five inmates in December 2019 and January 2020 347 On July 14 2020 Daniel Lewis Lee became the first death row inmate executed by the federal government since 2003 348 Twelve more individuals were executed by the Trump administration 349 No administration in 120 years had overseen as many executions 349 Barr has been attributed as playing a key role in the administration s use of execution in prisons 350 Social issues edit Abortion edit In 1991 Barr said he believed the framers of the Constitution did not originally intend to create a right to abortion that Roe v Wade was thus wrongly decided and that abortion should be a legitimate issue for state legislators 37 However Barr said during his 1991 confirmation hearings that Roe was the law of the land and that he did not have fixed or settled views on the subject 38 After Roe was overturned Barr suggested that a special counsel may be necessary to investigate the leak of the ruling and that the leaker may face criminal charges 351 352 Drug policy edit Barr supports a federal ban on marijuana 353 However he has stated that the discrepancy between federal and state law is suboptimal and that if a uniform federal ban on marijuana could not be achieved then he would support the STATES Act on marijuana legalization 353 I think it s a mistake to back off on marijuana However if we want a federal approach if we want states to have their own laws then let s get there and let s get there the right way Barr also said DOJ policy should align with congressional legislation 354 2016 election edit Barr donated 55 000 to a political action committee that backed Jeb Bush during the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries and 2 700 to Donald Trump during the general election campaign 355 Executive powers edit Barr is a proponent of the unitary executive theory which holds that the President has broad executive powers 3 291 356 357 358 Prior to joining the Trump administration he argued that the president has complete authority to start or stop a law enforcement proceeding 3 Race relations edit In June 2020 amid the George Floyd protests against racism and police brutality Barr said he rejected the view that the law enforcement system is systemically racist 359 In a CNN news interview in September 2020 Barr denied that systemic racism plays a role in police shootings of unarmed African American men and called such shootings by white police officers very rare 360 Derek Chauvin the officer who murdered Floyd was willing to agree to third degree murder and serve more than ten years in prison Barr rejected a plea deal 361 In September 2020 Barr suggested bringing sedition charges against disruptive looters and rioters a legal tool that is rarely used by the United States government 362 Sedition charges are normally reserved for those who conspire to overthrow put down or to destroy by force the Government of the United States according to 18 U S C 2384 Such suggestions have brought fears that Barr is politicizing the U S Justice Department and if enacted would mean that the Justice Department could prosecute individuals based on political speech 363 China edit In July 2020 Barr condemned large American tech companies such as Google Microsoft Yahoo and Apple 364 and Hollywood studios accusing them of kowtowing to the Chinese Communist Party for the sake of profits He said that Hollywood now regularly censors its own movies to appease the Chinese Communist Party the world s most powerful violator of human rights 365 Personal life editBarr has been married to Christine Moynihan Barr since 1973 16 She holds a master s degree in library science and together they have three daughters 366 Mary Barr Daly Patricia Barr Straughn 367 and Margaret Meg Barr 14 Their eldest daughter Mary born 1977 or 1978 was a senior Justice Department official who oversaw the department s anti opioid and addiction efforts Patricia born 1981 or 1982 was counsel for the House Agriculture Committee and Meg born 1984 or 1985 is a former Washington prosecutor and cancer survivor of recurrent Hodgkin s lymphoma was counsel for Republican Senator Mike Braun of Indiana 14 In February 2019 as their father awaited Senate confirmation for his appointment as attorney general Mary left her post at the Department of Justice as the Trump Administration s point woman on the opioid crisis and took a position at the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network FinCEN the Treasury Department s financial crimes unit 368 Her husband however continued to work in the Justice Department s National Security Division 369 Around the same time Mary left the Department of Justice Tyler McGaughey the husband of her youngest sister left the U S Attorney s office in Alexandria Virginia to join the White House Counsel s office 368 Barr is a Roman Catholic and is a member of the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast Barr served from 2014 to 2017 on the board of the Catholic Information Center CIC of the Archdiocese of Washington an Opus Dei center and nexus of politically connected Catholics on K Street 80 Opus Dei has denied that Barr is a member 370 However his views in favor of the death penalty were criticised by the Jesuit magazine America 371 372 Barr is an avid bagpiper He began playing at age eight and has performed competitively in Scotland with a major American pipe band At one time Barr was a member of the City of Washington Pipe Band 43 During a US Attorneys National Conference on June 26 2019 Barr surprised attendees by standing up in the middle of an NYPD Emerald Society performance and joined them in playing Scotland the Brave with a bagpipe 373 Barr is the brother of Stephen Barr a physics professor at the University of Delaware 15 Barr and Robert Mueller have known each other since the 1980s and are said to be good friends Mueller attended the weddings of two of Barr s daughters and their wives attend Bible study together 374 Honors editIn 1992 he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws LL D by George Washington University 375 Bibliography edit 2022 One Damn Thing After Another Memoirs of an Attorney General New York William Morrow ISBN 978 0 06 315860 3 376 See also editRussian interference in the 2020 United States elections Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia January June 2018 Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia 2019 Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia 2020 2021 Trump Ukraine scandalReferences edit Savage Charlie January 14 2019 Trump Says He Alone Can Do It His Attorney General Nominee Usually Agrees The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2019 a b c d Hamburger Tom May 16 2019 How William Barr now serving as a powerful ally for Trump has championed presidential powers The Washington Post Retrieved September 29 2019 a b c Johnson Eliana May 1 2019 The real reason Bill Barr is defending Trump Politico Retrieved September 29 2019 a b c Tonry Michael February 18 2016 Sentencing Fragments Penal Reform in America 1975 2025 Studies in Crime and Public Policy Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 79 ISBN 9780190204686 Retrieved November 6 2021 a b Quinn Melissa May 18 2020 Barr doesn t expect investigations of Obama Biden stemming from Russia review CBS News Retrieved June 24 2020 a b Strohm Chris May 18 2020 Barr Says He Doesn t Expect Criminal Probe Into Obama or Biden Bloomberg Retrieved June 24 2020 Mystal Elie July 17 2020 The Trump Administration Is on a Capital Punishment Killing Spree The Nation Retrieved December 15 2020 a b Leonnig Carol Zapotosky Matt Dawsey Josh Tan Rebecca June 2 2020 Barr personally ordered removal of protesters near White House leading to use of force against largely peaceful crowd The Washington Post Retrieved June 3 2020 a b c d Weiser Benjamin Rashbaum William Hong Nicole Haberman Maggie Benner Katie June 19 2020 Clash Over U S Attorney Who Investigated Trump Associates Sets Off Crisis The New York Times Archived from the original on June 25 2020 Retrieved June 25 2020 a b c d e f g Lipton Eric Weiser Benjamin October 29 2020 Turkish Bank Case Showed Erdogan s Influence With Trump The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 1 2020 a b Balsamo Michael Mascaro Lisa Tucker Eric December 1 2020 Disputing Trump Barr says no widespread election fraud Associated Press Archived from the original on December 1 2020 Retrieved June 29 2022 Balsamo Michael Mascaro Lisa Tucker Eric December 2 2020 Disputing Trump Barr says no widespread election fraud Associated Press Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved June 29 2022 Bauder David June 28 2022 The story behind AP report that caused Trump to throw lunch Associated Press Archived from the original on June 28 2022 Retrieved June 29 2022 Saxon Wolfgang February 10 2004 Donald Barr 82 Headmaster And Science Honors Educator The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2018 Haltiwanger John December 7 2019 Meet William Barr What you need to know about the possible once and future attorney general Business Insider Archived from the original on December 9 2018 Retrieved December 20 2018 a b c Miller Judith January 11 2019 Stepping Into the Fire City Journal Retrieved March 25 2019 a b Berardino Mike December 15 2019 U S Attorney General William Barr decries attacks on religious freedom in Notre Dame speech The Indianapolis Star Retrieved June 24 2020 a b c d e Schwartz Mattathias June 1 2020 William Barr s State of Emergency The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 14 2020 a b c d e LaFraniere Sharon Savage Charlie Benner Katie June 9 2019 People Are Trying to Figure Out William Barr He s Busy Stockpiling Power The New York Times Retrieved June 16 2019 Two Time Columbia Graduate William Barr Confirmed as U S Attorney General Columbia News news columbia edu February 14 2019 Retrieved August 12 2019 a b Barr William P February 14 2019 William Barr Senate Questionnaire Answers PDF Nominations United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Attorney General William Pelham Barr United States Department of Justice October 24 2014 Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved August 20 2019 Tau Byron Gurman Sadie February 19 2019 Attorney General Nominee Barr Helped Navigate CIA Through Rocky Times With Congress The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 20 2019 a b c Current Biography Yearbook 1992 Current Biography Yearbook Annual Cumulation The H W Wilson Company 1992 First published 1992 ISSN 0084 9499 Barr William P Files 1982 1983 REAGAN LIBRARY COLLECTIONS PDF Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Report December 14 2018 Archived from the original PDF on December 9 2018 Retrieved March 25 2019 Savage Charlie Goldman Adam Benner Katie January 26 2023 Barr Pressed Durham to Find Flaws in the Trump Russia Investigation The New York Times Retrieved January 26 2023 Jurecic Quinta July 9 2021 Review An indictment of William Barr s tenure as attorney general The Washington Post Retrieved January 27 2023 a b c LaFraniere Sharon November 12 1991 For Nominee Barr an Unusual Path to Attorney General s Office The Washington Post p A6 Retrieved March 25 2019 Boys James D February 7 2018 The Clinton Administration s Development and Implementation of Rendition 1993 2001 Studies in Conflict amp Terrorism 42 12 1090 1102 doi 10 1080 1057610X 2018 1438062 ISSN 1057 610X S2CID 115511462 Goodman Ryan April 15 2019 Barr s Playbook He Misled Congress When Omitting Parts of Justice Dep t Memo in 1989 Just Security Retrieved September 29 2019 Johnston David August 30 1990 Political Lifeguard at the Department of Justice The New York Times Retrieved March 25 2019 Santini Maureen October 17 1991 New Yorker Tapped Daily News p C12 Jehl Douglas October 17 1991 Acting Justice Dept Chief Named Attorney General Los Angeles Times p 1 Retrieved March 25 2019 Johnston David August 10 1991 Attorney General Makes it Official The New York Times Retrieved March 25 2019 Mothers Ronald August 31 1991 U S Agents Storm Prison in Alabama Freeing 9 Hostages The New York Times Retrieved March 25 2019 Klaidman Daniel September 9 1991 Barr s Star Rises After Hostage Rescue Legal Times p 6 Barrett Paul October 17 1991 Bush Picks Barr for Attorney General Post The Wall Street Journal p A25 Erickson Bo June 11 2019 In the 1990s Joe Biden said William Barr was one of the best attorneys general CBS News Retrieved June 12 2019 a b c Ostrow Ronald J November 14 1991 Barr Opposed to Roe vs Wade Decision Justice Dept The attorney general designate tells Senate panel right to privacy does not extend to obtaining an abortion Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 29 2019 a b Frazee Gretchen December 7 2018 William Barr s record on 4 key issues PBS NewsHour Retrieved December 7 2018 Ostrow Ronald J November 16 1991 Judiciary Panel Approves Barr for Attorney General Los Angeles Times Who is William Barr Trump s pick to be the next attorney general CBS News December 7 2018 Retrieved December 7 2018 Johnston David November 21 1991 Barr Is Confirmed on Voice Vote As 77th Attorney General of U S The New York Times Retrieved April 18 2019 Colvin Jill Miller Zeke December 7 2018 Trump Says He s Nominating Barr for Attorney General U S News amp World Report Associated Press Retrieved December 7 2018 a b c Ostrow Ron October 17 1991 Barr Conservative With Political Savvy Is on Fast Track Los Angeles Times p A20 Retrieved March 25 2019 a b c Johnston David March 3 1992 New Attorney General Shifts Department s Focus The New York Times p A17 Retrieved March 25 2019 LaFraniere Sharon March 5 1992 Barr Takes Center Stage at Justice Department With New Script The Washington Post Retrieved March 25 2019 Barrett Paul June 11 1990 At Justice Department New No 2 Man Brings Humor Humility to Difficult Job The Wall Street Journal Barrett Paul M February 11 1992 Attorney General Barr Targeting Violent Crime Comes on Like Gangbusters in a Campaign Year The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on October 14 2020 Kalmbacher Colin October 14 2020 News Clipping from 1992 Shows Bill Barr Has Long Been a Reelection Wingman for GOP Presidents lawandcrime com Retrieved December 16 2020 Barr William P October 28 1992 The Case for More Incarceration PDF Office of Legal Policy United States Department of Justice Report Retrieved April 5 2019 Blumstein Alfred Beck Allen J 1999 Population Growth in U S Prisons 1980 1996 Crime and Justice 26 1 17 61 doi 10 1086 449294 ISSN 0192 3234 S2CID 56683850 a b Tonry Michael April 11 1996 Malign Neglect Race Crime and Punishment in America Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 19 24 36 ISBN 9780195104691 Kelly Erin I November 12 2018 The Limits of Blame Rethinking Punishment and Responsibility Harvard University Press p 45 ISBN 9780674980778 Bua Nicholas September 30 2013 Report of Special Counsel Nicholas J Bua to the Attorney General of the United States Regarding the Allegations of INSLAW Inc PDF United States Department of Justice Report Retrieved December 8 2018 via governmentattic org Denniston Lyle October 17 1992 Ex judge to probe Iraq loan scandal Barr s appointee assailed as fig leaf The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on December 9 2018 Retrieved December 8 2018 Smith R Jeffery October 14 1992 Boren Critices Plans for Justice FBI Probe of Alleged Misconduct in BNL Case The Washington Post Retrieved December 7 2018 a b Barr names special counsel in BNL case his resignation still demanded UPI October 16 1992 Retrieved December 8 2018 a b Snepp Frank October 27 1992 Bill Barr The Cover Up General The Village Voice p 1 Retrieved March 25 2019 Lacayo Richard July 22 1991 Iran Contra The Cover Up Begins to Crack Time Archived from the original on February 11 2010 a b Heath Brad March 28 2019 Justice under AG Barr began vast surveillance program without legal review in 1992 inspector general finds USA Today Retrieved May 17 2019 Savage Charlie December 5 2019 27 Years Later Senators Want Inquiry into Barr s Blessing of Call Logs Collection The New York Times A Review of the Drug Enforcement Administration s Use of Administrative Subpoenas to Collect or Exploit Bulk Data PDF justice gov March 2019 Savage Charlie December 5 2019 27 Years Later Senators Want Inquiry Into Barr s Blessing of Call Logs Collection The New York Times Retrieved December 5 2019 a b c Cummings William May 21 2019 The president is not an errand boy for Congress Barr says he s protecting presidency not Trump USA Today Retrieved May 31 2019 a b Welna David December 6 2018 George H W Bush s Mixed Legacy In A Reagan Era Scandal NPR Retrieved May 30 2019 a b Johnston David December 25 1992 The Pardons Bush Pardons 6 in Iran Affair Aborting a Weinberger Trial Prosecutor Assails Cover Up The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 18 2019 Chapter 28 George Bush Federation of American Scientists Retrieved June 15 2019 Johnston David February 9 1993 Walsh Implies Bush Used Pardons to Avoid Testifying The New York Times Retrieved June 15 2019 Doppler Jack January 1993 No Longer News The Trial of the Century That Wasn t ABA Journal 79 1 56 59 JSTOR 27832773 Bush George H W December 24 1992 Proclamation 6518 Grant of Executive Clemency The American Presidency Project Retrieved April 23 2008 a b William P Barr Oral History Assistant Attorney General Deputy Attorney General Attorney General Miller Center April 5 2001 Retrieved December 6 2018 Johnston David December 25 1992 Bush Pardons 6 in Iran Affair Aborting a Weinberger Trial Prosecutor Assails Cover Up The New York Times Retrieved December 8 2018 Johnston David February 9 1993 Walsh Implies Bush Used Pardons to Avoid Testifying The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 18 2019 Hartmann Thom March 26 2019 Cover up Attorney General Bill Barr strikes again Salon com Retrieved April 18 2019 Safire William October 19 1992 Opinion Essay The Patsy Prosecutor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 29 2022 Johnson Carrie January 14 2019 William Barr Supported Pardons In An Earlier D C Witch Hunt Iran Contra NPR org Retrieved April 18 2019 Green Frank August 1994 Parole Sentencing Reform Plan Clears First Hurdle Richmond Times Dispatch p A1 A10 Baker Peter August 17 1994 Allen Offers Plan to Abolish Parole The Washington Post Retrieved April 18 2019 Atkinson Frank B 2006 Virginia in the Vanguard Political Leadership in the 400 Year Old Cradle of American Democracy 1981 2006 Rowman amp Littlefield pp 231 232 ISBN 9780742552104 a b c Krajicek David J 1999 Scooped Media Miss Real Story on Crime While Chasing Sex Sleaze and Celebrities Columbia University Press p 222 ISBN 0 231 10292 5 OCLC 277770502 a b c Rohde David January 13 2020 William Barr Trump s Sword and Shield The New Yorker Retrieved May 30 2020 Landler Mark January 20 1997 The Lawyer Leading the Charge Against the FCC s Regulations The New York Times p D1 Retrieved March 25 2019 Barrett Paul December 5 1996 GTE Lawyer Shapes Strategy for Telecommunications The Wall Street Journal Verizon General Counsel William P Barr Announces Retirement Verizon Communications Press release September 29 2008 Retrieved November 28 2019 Board of Visitors Special Collections Research Center Wiki College of William amp Mary August 3 2010 Retrieved October 8 2010 William P Barr profile kirkland com Archived from the original on December 6 2018 Retrieved December 6 2018 Laird Lorelei December 7 2018 Who is William Barr Trump s pick to replace Sessions as AG ABA Journal Retrieved November 27 2019 Gurman Sadie May 20 2019 Barr Under Fire Says He s Fighting for the Presidency Not Trump The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved May 20 2019 Haberkorn Del Quentin Wilber Jennifer January 14 2019 William Barr to face tough Senate hearing on attorney general nomination Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 20 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Baker Peter November 14 2017 Lock Her Up Becomes More Than a Slogan The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2018 Kiely Eugene October 26 2017 The Facts on Uranium One Zapotosky Matt Barrett Devlin January 5 2018 FBI has been investigating the Clinton Foundation for months The Washington Post Blake Aaron December 6 2018 The red flags on Trump s new attorney general pick The Washington Post Retrieved December 7 2018 Barr William February 1 2017 Former attorney general Trump was right to fire Sally Yates The Washington Post Zapotosky Matt July 5 2017 As Mueller builds his Russia special counsel team every hire is under scrutiny The Washington Post Retrieved February 16 2019 Sommer Will June 17 2017 Trump allies hit Mueller on relationship with Comey The Hill Retrieved March 28 2019 de Vogue Ariane January 15 2019 Barr sent or discussed controversial memo with Trump lawyers CNN Retrieved September 29 2019 a b Watkins Eli March 26 2019 Barr authored memo last year ruling out obstruction of justice CNN Retrieved May 2 2019 a b c Gurman Sadie Viswanatha Aruna December 20 2018 Trump s Attorney General Pick Criticized an Aspect of Mueller Probe in Memo to Justice Department The Wall Street Journal Retrieved March 28 2019 Blake Aaron January 15 2019 Barr confirms he shared his Mueller memo with lots of people around Trump The Washington Post Retrieved September 29 2019 Watkins Eli March 26 2019 Barr authored memo last year ruling out obstruction of justice CNN Retrieved September 29 2019 Morin Rebecca December 20 2018 Rosenstein AG nominee s memo had no impact on Mueller probe Politico Retrieved December 20 2018 Samuelsohn Darren April 4 2019 Barr s legacy on the line as Mueller team fumes Politico Retrieved May 2 2019 Livni Ephrat Yanofsky David July 18 2019 William Barr s donations to Senate Republicans spiked just before they confirmed him as attorney general Quartz Retrieved July 21 2019 Faulders Katherine Karl Jonathan Turner Trish December 7 2018 Trump announces he ll nominate William Barr as next attorney general ABC News Retrieved December 7 2018 Byrnes Jesse February 14 2019 Senate confirms Trump pick William Barr as new attorney general The Hill Retrieved February 14 2019 Isikoff Michael Klaidman Daniel December 8 2018 Trump first wanted his attorney general pick William Barr for another job Defense lawyer news yahoo com Retrieved December 10 2018 Berenson Tessa Gajanan Mahita December 7 2018 Here s What Trump s New Pick for Attorney General Has Said About the Mueller Investigation Time Retrieved December 10 2018 Balsamo Michael Tucker Eric Day Chad December 7 2018 Trump Justice pick likely to be queried on Mueller comments Associated Press Daniel Annie Lee Jasmine C February 14 2019 How Every Senator Voted on Barr s Confirmation as Attorney General The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 28 2019 U S Senate U S Senate Roll Call Votes 116th Congress 1st Session www senate gov Retrieved February 14 2019 Ewing Philip February 14 2019 Attorney General William Barr Swears Oath Of Office After Senate Confirmation NPR Retrieved February 15 2019 Sale Jon A February 7 2019 William Barr is right man for the times The Hill Retrieved March 23 2019 a b Balsamo Michael Lemire Jonathan May 17 2019 In Barr Trump has found his champion and advocate Associated Press Retrieved May 18 2019 Robson Nate March 25 2019 In Reversal DOJ Now Says Whole ACA Unconstitutional The National Law Journal Retrieved May 4 2019 Robson Nate May 1 2019 US Justice Dept Goes All In Embracing Texas Judge s Obamacare Takedown The National Law Journal Retrieved May 4 2019 Shortell David July 16 2019 Barr sides against civil rights officials in declining to bring charges against NYPD officer in Garner case CNN Retrieved July 21 2019 Smith David July 25 2019 US justice department resumes use of death penalty and schedules five executions The Guardian Retrieved September 29 2019 Zhao Christina July 8 2019 William Barr Says He s Recused From Epstein Case Over Legal Conflict Newsweek Retrieved February 7 2021 Rashbaum William K Weiser Benjamin Gold Michael August 10 2019 Jeffrey Epstein Dead in Suicide at Jail Spurring Inquiries The New York Times Retrieved February 7 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Benner Katie November 22 2019 Barr Says Epstein s Suicide Resulted From Perfect Storm of Screw Ups The New York Times Retrieved February 7 2021 Witness Statement of Victor Micolajovich Shokin PDF Factcheck org September 4 2019 Retrieved May 21 2021 Multiple sources Zapotosky Matt October 22 2019 Prosecutors flagged possible ties between Ukrainian gas tycoon and Giuliani associates The Washington Post Retrieved September 10 2021 O Brien Rebecca Ballhaus and Rebecca Davis May 1 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allies channelled billions to Ukraine oligarch Reuters Shuster Simon October 15 2019 Exclusive How a Ukrainian Oligarch Wanted by U S Authorities Helped Giuliani Attack Biden Time Retrieved November 6 2021 Haberman Maggie Benner Katie October 10 2019 Trump Lashes Out at Fox News Poll as Barr Meets With Murdoch The New York Times Retrieved November 6 2021 Johnson Martin October 10 2019 Barr met privately with Murdoch amid impeachment scrutiny report The Hill Retrieved November 6 2021 Pengelly Martin August 22 2020 William Barr told Murdoch to muzzle Fox News Trump critic new book says The Guardian Retrieved November 6 2021 Polantz Katelyn Glover Scott Ward Vicky October 23 2019 How two businessmen hustled to profit from access to Rudy Giuliani and the Trump administration CNN Retrieved November 6 2021 Elfrink Tim December 4 2019 William Barr says communities that protest cops could lose the police protection they need The Washington Post Archived from the original on December 12 2019 Retrieved February 20 2019 Shortell David February 10 2020 Barr confirms Justice Department is receiving Giuliani information about Ukraine CNN Retrieved February 13 2020 Zapotosky Matt Barrett Devlin February 11 2020 Barr acknowledges Justice Dept has created intake process to vet Giuliani s information on Bidens The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 10 2020 Retrieved February 13 2020 Chait Jonathan February 10 2020 Lindsey Graham Implicates William Barr in Massive Scandal on Live Television New York Retrieved February 13 2020 Parke Caleb October 14 2019 AG Barr blasts militant secularists in speech on religious freedom Fox News Retrieved November 6 2021 Tucker Eric September 4 2020 In Barr Trump has powerful ally for challenging mail voting Associated Press Retrieved September 14 2020 Barr announces 100 million more to combat human trafficking PBS NewsHour September 21 2020 Retrieved August 12 2023 Gurman Sadie December 21 2020 For Attorney General William Barr New Lockerbie Charges Punctuate a Decadeslong Mission The Wall Street Journal Retrieved December 29 2020 18 U S Code 875 Interstate communications LII Legal Information Institute Cohn Alicia May 17 2021 Trump DOJ subpoenaed Twitter for identity behind Nunes parody account The Hill Rohrlich Justin May 17 2021 Trump DOJ Tried to Unmask User Behind Devin Nunes Parody Twitter Account The Daily Beast Savage Charlie May 17 2021 Trump Justice Dept Tried to Use Grand Jury to Identify Nunes Critic on Twitter The New York Times Polantz Katelyn Perez Evan May 18 2021 Justice Department sought to unmask Devin Nunes parody Twitter account this year court records show CNN Retrieved November 6 2021 Benner Katie Fandos Nicholas Schmidt Michael S Goldman Adam June 11 2021 Hunting Leaks Trump Officials Focused on Democrats in Congress The New York Times Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Jalonick Mary Clare Balsamo Michael June 11 2021 Trump DOJ seized data from House Democrats in leaks probe Associated Press Retrieved November 6 2021 Shabad Rebecca January 14 2019 William Barr Vitally important for Mueller to complete Russia probe NBC News Retrieved February 9 2019 Tucker Eric January 14 2019 Trump s AG nominee to tell Senate panel it is vitally important Mueller finish work The Boston Globe Associated Press Retrieved February 9 2019 Breuninger Kevin March 22 2019 Mueller Probe is Over Special counsel submits Russia report to Attorney General William Barr CNBC Retrieved March 22 2019 Barr William P March 24 2019 Attorney General s Letter to House and Senate Judiciary Committee Justice gov p 3 After reviewing the Special Counsel s final report on these issues consulting with Department officials including the Office of Legal Counsel and applying the principles of federal prosecution that guide our charging decisions Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and I have concluded that the evidence developed during the Special Counsel s investigation is not sufficient to establish that the President committed an obstruction of justice offense Our determination was made without regard to and is not based on the constitutional considerations that surround the indictment and criminal prosecution of a sitting president Montoya Galvez Camilo March 24 2019 The key findings from the Justice Department summary of Mueller s report www cbsnews com Retrieved May 16 2019 Barr William March 24 2019 Letter to Lindsey Graham Jerrold Nadler Dianne Feinstein and Doug Collins PDF Retrieved April 1 2019 Pramuk Jacob Kimball Spencer March 24 2019 Attorney General Barr to release Mueller Russia probe report findings CNBC Retrieved March 24 2019 Todd Chuck Murray Mark Dann Carrie May 1 2019 Here s what Barr left out in his summary of Mueller s findings NBC News Retrieved May 8 2021 Tucker Eric May 5 2021 Judge orders Justice Dept to release Trump obstruction memo Associated Press Retrieved May 8 2021 a b Schmidt Michael S May 4 2021 Judge Says Barr Misled on How His Justice 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Jalonick Mary Clare April 11 2019 Barr says I think spying did occur against Trump campaign Associated Press Retrieved May 17 2019 a b Hermani Jordyn May 8 2019 Comey The FBI doesn t spy The FBI investigates Politico Retrieved May 17 2019 a b c d Desiderio Andrew April 10 2019 Barr s FBI spying claim amps up fight over Mueller probe Politico Retrieved May 17 2019 a b c Fandos Nicholas Goldman Adam April 10 2019 Barr Asserts Intelligence Agencies Spied on the Trump Campaign The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 17 2019 Durkin Erin Walters Joanna April 10 2019 William Barr says spying did occur on Trump campaign during Obama era The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved May 17 2019 a b c Stracqualursi Veronica May 17 2019 Barr says review of Russia probe origins could lead to FBI rule changes CNN Retrieved May 17 2019 Tillett Emily May 17 2019 Attorney General William Barr doubles down on spying claims questions origins of Russia probe CBS News Retrieved May 17 2019 Goldman Adam May 7 2019 F B I Director Defends Bureau Against Spying Accusations That s Not the Term I Would Use The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 17 2019 a b c d e Balsamo Michael May 14 2019 AP source Barr launches new look at origins of Russia probe Associated Press Retrieved September 29 2019 Touchberry Ramsey May 24 2019 William Barr directs DOJ official to defy congressional subpoena to testify about 2020 census Newsweek Retrieved May 2 2019 Desiderio Andrew June 3 2019 House Dems to hold Barr Ross in contempt over census question The Oversight Committee wants key documents by Thursday Politico Retrieved June 3 2019 Desidero Andrew July 17 2019 House holds William Barr Wilbur Ross in criminal contempt of Congress Politico Retrieved February 16 2020 Somnez Felicia July 18 2019 House votes to hold Attorney General Barr Commerce Secretary Ross in contempt for failing to comply with subpoena on 2020 Census The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 16 2020 Retrieved February 16 2020 Haberman Maggie Schmidt Michael S May 23 2019 Trump Gives Attorney General Sweeping Power in Review of 2016 Campaign Inquiry The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2019 Riechmann Deb May 24 2019 Critics worry AG will reveal Russia probe info to help Trump Associated Press Retrieved September 29 2019 Bertr Natasha May 24 2019 Trump puts DOJ on crash course with intelligence agencies Politico Retrieved September 29 2019 Harris Shane May 24 2019 Barr could expose secrets politicize intelligence with review of Russia probe current and former officials fear The Washington Post Barnes Julian E Benner Katie Goldman Adam Schmidt Michael S June 12 2019 Justice Dept Seeks to Question C I A in Its Own Russia Investigation The New York Times Balsamo Michael Tucker Eric April 10 2020 Barr says Russia probe was started without basis Associated Press Retrieved May 14 2021 Prokop Andrew September 30 2019 Trump and Barr have been urging foreign governments to help them investigate the Mueller probe s origins Vox Retrieved October 1 2019 Viswanatha Aruna Gurman Sadie Legorano Giovanni October 6 2019 Barr s Requests for Foreign Help Prompt Backlash in Australia Italy U K The Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 9 2019 Mazzetti Mark Goldman Adam Benner Katie October 6 2019 Barr and a Top Prosecutor Cast a Wide Net in Reviewing the Russia Inquiry The New York Times Graham Lindsey October 2 2019 Letter from Senate Committee on the Judiciary to prime ministers of Australia Italy and UK PDF Retrieved October 22 2019 Zapotosky Matt Dawsey Josh Harris Shane Helderman Rosalind S October 6 2019 Barr s review of Russia investigation wins Trump s favor Those facing scrutiny suspect he s chasing conspiracy theories The Washington Post Momigliano Anna October 23 2019 Italy Did Not Fuel U S Suspicion of Russian Meddling Prime Minister Says The New York Times Sengupta Kim November 1 2019 UK intelligence officials shaken by Trump administration s requests for help with counter impeachment inquiry The Independent Retrieved June 24 2020 Nakashima Ellen Zapotosky Matt Barrett Devlin November 22 2019 Justice Dept watchdog finds political bias did not taint top officials running the FBI s Russia probe but documents errors The Washington Post Barrett Devlin Demirjian Karoun December 3 2019 Barr disputes key inspector general finding about FBI s Russia investigation The Washington Post Zapotosky Matt Barrett Devlin December 4 2019 Barr s handpicked prosecutor tells inspector general he can t back right wing theory that Russia case was U S intelligence setup The Washington Post Benner Katie Goldman Adam October 24 2019 Justice Dept Is Said to Open Criminal Inquiry Into Its Own Russia Investigation The New York Times Retrieved October 24 2019 Goldman Adam Savage Charlie November 22 2019 Russia Inquiry Review Is Said to Criticize F B I but Rebuff Claims of Biased Acts The New York Times Benner Katie October 29 2019 Barr Rejects Complaints That He Is Bolstering Trump s Personal Agenda The New York Times Retrieved October 29 2019 Bice Allie October 28 2019 William Barr I act on behalf of the United States Politico Retrieved October 29 2019 Kalmbacher Colin August 14 2020 Here s What We Know About FBI Attorney 2 Kevin Clinesmith the First Person Charged in Durham Probe Law amp Crime Polantz Katelyn Shortell David August 14 2020 Former FBI lawyer set to plead guilty to altering email during Russia investigation CNN Horowitz Michael December 20 2019 December 9 2019 Review of Four FISA Applications and Other Aspects of the FBI s Crossfire Hurricane Investigation PDF Office of the Inspector General U S Department of Justice Retrieved August 15 2020 Basu Zachary December 9 2019 Justice Department inspector general concludes Russia probe was justified Axios Retrieved December 9 2019 Mallin Alexander Kim Soo Rin December 10 2019 DOJ watchdog finds Russia investigation not improper despite missteps Retrieved December 10 2019 a b Dilanian Ken December 10 2019 Barr thinks FBI may have acted in bad faith in probing Trump campaign NBC News Retrieved December 10 2019 Basu Zachary December 10 2019 Attorney General Bill Barr attacks Russia investigation as completely baseless Axios Retrieved December 10 2019 Benner Katie Barnes Julian E December 19 2019 Durham Is Scrutinizing Ex C I A Director s Role in Russian Interference Findings The New York Times Retrieved May 18 2021 Oprysko Caitlin December 9 2019 Here are the Russia probe conspiracy theories debunked by the DOJ inspector general report Politico Retrieved November 6 2021 Cohen Marshall December 11 2019 Justice Department watchdog debunks Trump s claims about the Russia probe CNN Retrieved November 6 2021 Savage Charlie Goldman Adam Benner Katie December 9 2019 Report on F B I Russia Inquiry Finds Serious Errors but Debunks Anti Trump Plot The New York Times Retrieved November 6 2021 Hosenball Mark January 13 2020 U S presidential campaign probes to require top officials approval Barr Reuters Retrieved January 14 2020 Savage Charlie April 10 2020 Endorsing Trump s Firing of Inspector General Barr Paints Distorted Picture The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 16 2020 Blitzer Ronn June 21 2020 Barr hints at developments in Durham probe this summer says racism not systemic problem in law enforcement Fox News Retrieved September 13 2020 a b Gerstein Josh July 28 2020 Barr won t rule out pre election release of Durham report Politico Retrieved September 13 2020 Mahony Edmund H September 11 2020 Nora Dannehy Connecticut prosecutor who was top aide to John Durham s Trump Russia investigation resigns amid concern about pressure from Attorney General William Barr Hartford Courant Retrieved September 13 2020 Cheney Kyle September 18 2020 House Dems call for an emergency DOJ watchdog review of Durham probe Politico Waas Murray November 2 2020 How Trump and Barr s October Surprise Went Bust New York Retrieved November 4 2020 a b Weiser Benjamin Protess Ben Benner Katie Rashbaum William July 1 2020 Inside Barr s Effort to Undermine Prosecutors in N Y The New York Times Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved July 1 2020 Blake Aaron February 13 2020 Trump just made the DOJ s Roger Stone intervention look even worse The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved February 13 2020 Sullivan Eileen Shear Michael February 12 2020 Trump Praises Barr for Rejecting Punishment Recommended for Stone The New York Times Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved February 13 2020 Kirby Jen February 13 2020 Bill Barr Trump s tweets make it impossible to do my job Vox Retrieved May 8 2020 Gurman Sadie Viswanatha Aruna February 14 2020 Attorney General Says Tweets Make It Impossible for Him to Do His Job The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved February 20 2020 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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