Former US prosecutor Smith says Trump 'willfully broke' laws in bid to keep power
Reuters
Jan 22, 2022

Former
special counsel Jack Smith, testifies before the House Judiciary
Committee about his investigations into President Donald Trump, in the
Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, January 22,
2026.
WASHINGTON - Former U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith, who
unsuccessfully prosecuted President Donald Trump, told a House of
Representatives panel on Thursday that Trump was "looking for ways to
stay in power" following his defeat in the 2020 election as he
confronted Republican criticism of his investigation.
Smith
fielded questions from the Republican-controlled House Judiciary
Committee about his two criminal cases, which he dropped after Trump won
the 2024 presidential election. One case accused Trump of conspiring to
overturn his defeat in the 2020 election, while the other accused him
of unlawfully holding onto classified documents.
The
hearing marked the first time the American public heard at length from
Smith, whose historic prosecutions dominated Trump's years out of power
and helped fuel the Republican president's quest for retribution
since returning to office. Smith told the panel he expected Trump's
Justice Department to try to bring criminal charges against him.
"President
Trump was charged because the evidence established that he willfully
broke the very laws that he took an oath to uphold," Smith told the
House panel. "If asked whether to prosecute a former president based on
the same facts today, I would do so, regardless of whether that
president was a Democrat or a Republican."
After
the hearing, Trump reiterated his calls for Smith to be prosecuted,
writing on social media that he had "destroyed the lives of many
innocent people."
REPUBLICANS ALLEGE BIAS
Republican
lawmakers sought to discredit Smith's investigation and buttress
Trump's claims that the probes were an abuse of the legal system.
Republicans focused particular attention on Smith's decision to seek
limited phone records from former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and
several Republican senators, along with court orders that barred
lawmakers from being notified of the subpoenas.
Trump allies have argued that the records show Smith’s investigation was overzealous and aimed at the political opposition.
"It
was always about politics," Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio, the
Republican chair of the Judiciary Committee, said at the start of the
hearing. "To get Donald Trump, they were willing to do just about
anything."
Smith
said the records were necessary to examine Trump’s efforts to pressure
Republican lawmakers to block certification of the election. He said he
had "grave concerns about obstruction of justice in this investigation,
specifically with regards to Donald Trump."
Smith’s
testimony focused primarily on the case that accused Trump of using
false voter fraud claims to obstruct the certification of election
results following his 2020 defeat to Democrat Joe Biden. He told
lawmakers that Republican witnesses, especially those who informed Trump
that his fraud claims were not true, would have formed the core of the
case had it gone to trial.
"Our
investigation revealed that Donald Trump was not looking for honest
answers about whether there was fraud in the election," Smith said. "He
was looking for ways to stay in power."
A federal judge has barred the Justice Department
from disclosing many of the details surrounding Smith’s second case,
which accused Trump of stashing highly sensitive government documents at
his Mar-a-Lago residence following the end of his first term in 2021.
Trump
pleaded not guilty to all charges and has repeatedly argued the charges
were improperly aimed at damaging his 2024 campaign.
Neither case reached trial and Smith dropped them after Trump won reelection, citing a Justice Department policy against prosecuting a sitting president.
The Trump administration has fired dozens of Justice Department lawyers, FBI agents and staffers who worked on the investigations.
Democrats defended Smith as an apolitical career prosecutor who was guided by the evidence in building his cases against Trump.
Representative
Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the panel, said Trump has
assailed Smith "not because you did anything wrong, but because you did
everything right."
"You had the audacity to do your job," Raskin added.
No comments:
Post a Comment