A pair of Republican-led House committees will advance resolutions to hold Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress on Thursday, DailyMail.com has learned.
The Oversight Committee and the Judiciary Committee will hold dual markups of their contempt resolutions this week.
Both Oversight Chairman James Comer and Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan issued subpoenas to Garland for the audio of ex-special counsel Robert Hur‘s interview with Biden. They say Garland refused to comply with either subpoena, so both committees will move to hold him in contempt.
The Justice Department says that it has been more than accommodating to the Republicans’ requests for information. It has handed over a transcript of the interview, but not the recording itself.
‘There must be consequences for refusing to comply with lawful congressional subpoenas and we will move to hold Attorney General Garland in contempt of Congress,’ Comer said in a statement to DailyMail.com Monday.
‘These audio recordings are important to our investigation of President Biden’s willful retention of classified documents and his fitness to be President of the United States.’
A pair of Republican-led House committees will advance resolutions to hold Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress on Thursday, DailyMail.com has learned
Both Oversight Chairman James Comer (above) and Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan issued subpoenas to Garland for the audio of ex-special counsel Robert Hur’s interview with Biden
The attorney general had until April 8 to hand over requested materials from Robert Hur’s interviews with Biden that led him to conclude the president is ‘elderly’ and ‘well-meaning’ but has a ‘poor memory.’
They subpoenaed transcripts, notes, audio and video files largely related to Hur’s interview.
While the DOJ has handed over transcripts of Hur’s interviews with Biden as well as the transcripts of an interview with Biden’s ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer, Republicans are unsatisfied.
They have insisted they need audio from the Hur and Zwonitzer interviews too.
The DOJ, however, said in an April letter to the GOP committee chairmen that the department had already been ‘extraordinarily’ accommodating in giving up the Biden transcript.
They said releasing audio as well might make it harder for prosecutors to secure recorded interviews in the future, with witnesses knowing they could be blasted out into the public.
‘The Committees have already received the extraordinary accommodation of the transcripts, which gives you the information you say you need,’ the letter, written by assistant attorney general Carlos Uriarte, read.
‘To go further by producing the audio files would compound the likelihood that future prosecutors will be unable to secure this level of cooperation. They might have a harder time obtaining consent to an interview at all. It is clearly not in the public interest to render such cooperation with prosecutors and investigators less likely in the future.’
The letter said that the Oversight and Judiciary committees have not identified any valid reasoning for needing the audio of the interview in addition to transcripts.
Still, the GOP disagreed.
Comer clapped back in a statement: ‘The Biden Administration does not get to determine what Congress needs and does not need for its oversight of the executive branch.’
Hur, in a report explaining his decision not to prosecute Biden over mishandling classified documents, sparked opposition from all sides – Republicans who questioned why he would not charge the president and Democrats who took issue with his description of Biden as a ‘sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.’
‘The February 27 subpoenas create a legal obligation on you to produce this material,’ the GOP lawmakers wrote to Garland. ‘If you fail to do so, the Committees will consider taking further action, such as the invocation of contempt of Congress proceedings.’
The Justice Department has only said it is conducting an ‘interagency review’ for classified and confidential information within the material.
Hur said he found that Biden had ‘willfully’ retained classified material but stopped short of filing charges, believing a jury would not convict the president.
He explained his decision to make the assessment in the hearing: ‘I knew that for my position to be credible. I could not simply announce that there would be no charges, I needed to explain why. I needed to show my work.’
‘We identified evidence that the President willfully retained classified materials after the end of his vice presidency, when he was a private citizen,’ Hur said during a high-stakes hearing in April.
In interviews with investigators, Biden became muddled about the dates he was vice president and could not even remember the year in which his son Beau died, according to the transcript reviewed by DailyMail.com.
Biden forgot the year Beau died, when Trump was elected and said ‘I don’t recall’, ‘I don’t remember’ and ‘I have no goddamn idea’ more than 100 times while cracking jokes and making car noises with the investigators.
And it said his cavalier attitude to classified documents, such as his habit of reading sensitive files to a ghostwriter, posed a significant national security risk.
One of the reasons they decided not to press charges was because ‘at trial, Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.’
This image, contained in the report from special counsel Robert Hur, shows a damaged box where classified documents were found in the garage of President Joe Biden in Wilmington, Del., during a search by the FBI on Dec. 21, 2022
Close-up shot of damaged box containing Biden’s classified documents
This image, contained in the report from special counsel Robert Hur, shows notebooks in a file cabinet under a printer that were seized in first-floor home office of President Joe Biden in Wilmington, Del., on Jan. 20, 2023, during a search by FBI agents
Hur said during testimony that he described Biden this way because of his ‘inability to recall certain things’ and that he had to be prompted by his lawyers to recall certain dates.
According to transcripts of Hur’s interviews with Biden on October 8 and October 9, 2023, Biden’s lawyer had to tell him what year his son Beau died of brain cancer and the president joked about the special counsel finding pictures of his wife Jill in a swimsuit.
I just hope you didn’t find any risqué pictures of my wife in a bathing suit. Which you probably did. She’s beautiful,’ said Biden.
‘What month did Beau die?’ Biden mused at one point, adding, ‘Oh God, May 30th.’
‘He did not remember, even within several years, when his son Beau died. And his memory appeared hazy when describing the Afghanistan debate that was once so important to him,’ Hur said.
A White House lawyer then chimed in with the year, 2015.
‘Was it 2015 he died?’ Biden asked.
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .