U.S. acting AG falsely claimed
scholar-athlete honor: report
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[December 27, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Acting U.S.
Attorney General Matthew Whitaker has incorrectly claimed in government
documents that he had been named an Academic All-American while playing
football at the University of Iowa, the Wall Street Journal reported on
Wednesday.
It said Whitaker made the claim in his biography on his former law
firm’s website and on a resume sent in 2014 to the chief executive of a
now-closed patent-marketing firm, for which he sat on the advisory
board.
The resume was included in documents released by the U.S. Federal Trade
Commission last month, the Journal said.
President Donald Trump named Whitaker to his position on Nov. 7,
immediately after he ousted former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whom
he had criticized for recusing himself from an investigation into
Russian meddling in the 2016 election. Whitaker had been Sessions' chief
of staff, a former U.S. attorney and a conservative commentator.
"Mr. Whitaker’s name doesn’t appear in the list of Academic
All-Americans on the website of the organization that bestows the annual
honor, the College Sports Information Directors of America," the Journal
said.
It quoted a spokeswoman for the organization, Barb Kowal, as saying it
had no record showing Whitaker, who was a tight end on the University of
Iowa team from 1990 to 1992 and went on to earn business and law degrees
from the university, was ever an Academic All-American.
Kowal said it appeared that Whitaker was given a lower level honor,
according to the Journal.
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U.S. Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker boards Air Force One.
Dec. 7, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
A Justice Department spokeswoman said Whitaker had relied on a 1993
University of Iowa football guide which had listed him as a "GTE
District VII academic All-American," the Journal said. GTE was the
contest sponsor at that time.
The Journal quoted an assistant athletic director at the University
of Iowa, Steve Roe, as saying any confusion could be partly from
"how we listed it in our media guide."
A high-raking Justice Department official said last week Whitaker
had decided not to recuse himself from the Russia investigation,
disregarding advice from department ethics officials.
Earlier this month Trump said he would nominate William Barr, who
was attorney general under former President George H.W. Bush in the
1990s, to be the Justice Department's new permanent chief, replacing
Whitaker. The nomination needs Senate approval.
(Reporting by Mohammad Zargham; Editing by David Gregorio)
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