Senator seeks explanation for career U.S.
prosecutor's abrupt resignation
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[November 08, 2017]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Democratic Senator
said on Tuesday he wants answers from top Justice Department officials
about why a career prosecutor was asked to resign days before a special
counsel unveiled the first criminal charges in an investigation into
Russia's role in the 2016 U.S. election.
Dana Boente was asked to quit in late October as the U.S. Attorney for
the Eastern District of Virginia, whose district has played an important
role in the investigation.
Just days later, Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigators charged
President Donald Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort and
another aide, Rick Gates, with conspiring to launder money and other
charges.
It was also announced on Oct. 30 that a third former Trump adviser,
George Papadopoulos, had pleaded guilty earlier in the month to a charge
of lying to the FBI.
U.S. Senator Chris Coons, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
said he was writing to U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to ask if Boente's departure was "normal
or justified."
"I'm concerned about the abrupt departure of Dana Boente after a career
as a federal prosecutor ... There's a lot of circumstances that connect
the ongoing Mueller investigation to the Eastern District," Coons said
in an interview.
A Department of Justice spokesman said the agency does not comment on
personnel matters.
Boente could not immediately be reached for comment.
Investigations into whether Republican Trump's campaign associates
colluded with Russia last year to help him defeat Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton for the presidency arose after U.S. intelligence
agencies concluded Russia carried out a campaign of hacking and
propaganda to interfere in the election.
Russia has repeatedly denied meddling allegations and Trump has denied
any collusion.
A Justice Department veteran, Boente has stepped in to help stabilize
the law enforcement agency in frequent periods of turmoil during the
first year of the Trump administration.
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Dana Boente, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, is
pictured in this undated handout photo. The United States Attorney's
Office, Eastern District of Virginia/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
Boente has also been temporarily serving as the acting assistant
attorney general for the department's National Security Division. He
previously was acting attorney general after Trump fired the
prosecutor in that post, Sally Yates. After that, Boente also
briefly was acting deputy attorney general.
A person familiar with the matter confirmed that Sessions, a former
Alabama Republican senator and close Trump ally, asked Boente to
tender his resignation in late October.
Boente will step down as head of the National Security Division once
Trump's nominee John Demers is confirmed by the Senate. After that,
Boente will continue as head of the Eastern District in Alexandria,
Virginia, until he is replaced.
Trump has not yet nominated anyone for that post.
The Eastern District post is the fourth most powerful position in
the department's line of succession.
A judge in the district approved the search warrant for the
Alexandria, Virginia home of former Trump campaign manager Manafort
in July.
A grand jury in the district earlier this year became part of
Mueller's probe of former national security adviser Michael Flynn,
who is under scrutiny for his work as a lobbyist for a Turkish
businessman.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Grant
McCool)
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