Ex-Trump Justice official Clark faces legal disciplinary charges
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[July 23, 2022]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Legal licensing
authorities in Washington announced on Friday they have filed
disciplinary charges against Jeffrey Bossert Clark, a former Trump
administration Justice Department official who tried to get himself
appointed as attorney general to help promote Donald Trump's false
election fraud claims.
Clark, who is now also facing a federal investigation into his conduct,
is accused of attempting to "engage in conduct involving dishonesty" and
attempting actions "that would seriously interfere with the
administration of justice," according to a petition filed by the D.C.
Bar's Office of Disciplinary Counsel.
The ethics charges, dated June 29 and received by the Bar of the
District of Columbia Court of Appeals on July 19, were made public on
Friday, after Clark was served a copy of them in the morning, said
Hamilton "Phil" Fox, the head of the D.C. Office of Disciplinary
Counsel.
Rachel Semmel, a spokesperson from Center for Renewing America, Clark's
new employer, called the charges "the latest attack on the legal
qualifications of one of the only lawyers at the DOJ who had the
interests of the American people at heart."
"Jeff Clark is an American hero and the media sure seems to enjoy being
the press secretary for the J6 committee," she added.
This marks the second high-profile disciplinary action by the D.C. bar
in recent weeks.
Last month, the same office also filed disciplinary action against
former President Trump's attorney Rudy Giuliani over baseless claims he
made in federal court alleging the 2020 presidential election was
stolen.
He has since filed a response, saying the charges against him are
baseless, and is due to appear for the first in a series of public
hearings on Aug. 4.
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An image of Jeffrey Clark is seen on a screen during U.S. House
Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United
States Capitol hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 23,
2022. Mandel Ngan/Pool via REUTERS
In the matter against Clark, the office alleges that
he violated standards of conduct governing the practice of law in
Washington.
The U.S. House of Representatives committee probing the Jan. 6,
2021, attack on the Capitol spotlighted how Trump sought to replace
Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen with Clark, who was the
Justice Department's top environmental lawyer, at a hearing in June.
Clark was deposed by the committee but repeatedly invoked his legal
right not to answer questions that might be self-incriminating under
the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
Earlier this year, Reuters reported that Rosen and former Acting
Deputy Attorney General Rich Donoghue both appeared voluntarily to
provide testimony to assist with the DC bar's probe into Clark.
The charges are focused on Clark's efforts to pressure Donoghue and
Rosen to send a letter to lawmakers in Georgia falsely claiming that
the Justice Department had "significant concerns" about the
legitimacy of Democrat Joe Biden's victory in the state and echoing
Trump's false claims of voting fraud.
Clark, who has also been the subject of an ongoing investigation by
the Justice Department's inspector general, had his home searched by
federal agents in a pre-dawn raid last month.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington; Writing by Susan Heavey
and Katharine JacksonEditing by Tim Ahmann and Matthew Lewis)
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