Lee, Tester introduce legislation for proper investigations at Justice Department

WASHINGTON D.C. – Thursday, U.S. Sens. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Jon Tester, D-Mont., introduced legislation to increase transparency and accountability at the Department of Justice. The Inspector General Empowerment Act would eliminate a problem in the law that requires allegations of attorney misconduct at the Justice Department to be investigated by an agency that reports directly to the attorney general rather than the autonomous Office of the Inspector General.

The bill would remove this obvious conflict of interest and grant the Office of the Inspector General complete jurisdiction throughout the department. Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, are also original cosponsors.

“The rules that apply to inspectors general in other federal agencies should apply at the Department of Justice,” Lee, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said. “Current law invites undue influence from the attorney general’s office into the process and should be changed to ensure the integrity of investigations of misconduct within the Justice Department.”

“Inspectors General are true watchdogs who save taxpayer dollars and help deliver better services to Americans,” Tester, chairman of the Senate subcommittee that oversees federal workforce and programs, said. “This bill is a common-sense measure that makes sure taxpayers are getting the level of service they expect and increases oversight of an agency that has enormous powers under the Patriot Act.”

“When Americans pledge to abide by ‘Liberty and Justice for all,’ that does not mean that those pursuing justice can creatively apply different standards or break the rules to get convictions – it means everyone that in America everyone is held equally accountable,” Murkowski said. “I’m proud to cosponsor the Inspector General Empowerment Act because it does just that: it gives the men and women charged with judging the actions of attorneys the power to mete out justice within the Justice Department.”

A report just released by the Project on Government Oversight revealed that the Office of Professional Responsibility, the agency overseen by the attorney general, documented more than 650 instances of misconduct, yet details on if and how these cases were handled are not available to the public. For example, a 2013 report from USA Today revealed that complaints from two federal judges who said Justice Department lawyers had misled them about the extent of the National Security Agency surveillance program were never investigated. Had the OIG been in charge, it could have investigated these complaints without conflict of interest and the results of their report would have been made available without requiring a Freedom of Information Act request.

“Placing this responsibility under the OIG increases government transparency,” Lee said, “and ensures that instances of abuse will be handled in a timely and responsible manner.”

The bill, S. 2127,  was referred to a congressional committee on Thursday for consideration.

Submitted by the offices of Sen. Mike Lee

Resources

S. Bill 2127 Inspector General Empowement Act of 2014 – Introduced 20140314

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