Where might the Justice Department be focusing its attention now that the Jan. 6 committee has finished its first season of hearings and in the wake of new reporting that DOJ is focusing on Donald Trump, himself?
One problem for the Justice Department is that it has to try to be everywhere at once. It must focus on the enormous number of people in the mob that overran the Capitol — where prosecutors put most of their resources during Attorney General Merrick Garland’s first year in office. As the Jan. 6 hearings have made clear, DOJ must also simultaneously pursue the pressure campaign used to try to persuade Vice President Mike Pence to avoid certifying the election and the fake electors scheme and the militia members indicted for seditious conspiracy, as well as the occasional witnesses who ignored congressional subpoenas. All of these investigations are important. But there is one thread Garland and team should prioritize: bad lawyers.
These inept and unscrupulous advisers may help lead investigators to those most culpable for the big lie and the Jan. 6 insurrection.
First off, these lawyers need to be held accountable for any criminal behavior. But beyond that, these inept and unscrupulous advisers may help lead investigators to those most culpable for the big lie and Jan. 6 insurrection.
The House committee exposed the lawyers’ misconduct to the public. But it is increasingly clear that the Justice Department was already focused on these bad actors, who were operating in close proximity to and in direct contact with Trump. The Justice Department is reportedly pursuing whether Kraken lawyer Sidney Powell, for example, was involved in funding the insurrection and has seized Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani’s phones and computers.
Jeffrey Clark and John Eastman round out Trump’s cadre of questionable counselors. These four in particular seem to have been especially involved with the legal plotting used in various aspects of perpetuating the big lie and preventing the certification of the election.
Clark, the former acting head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division, wanted to run Trump’s Justice Department so badly he was willing to advance Trump’s plan to remain in power despite losing the election to get the promotion to attorney general. He has been floated as a possible attorney general nominee should the former president win again in 2024.
Fortunately, federal investigators are already interested in Clark — at the end of June, in what appears to be an investigation run by the Justice Department’s inspector general, they showed up at his home. Clark is also in trouble with the D.C. Bar, which is investigating him for “conduct involving dishonesty” and attempting “to engage in conduct that would seriously interfere with the administration of justice.” The ethics charges the bar is pursuing run almost parallel to federal charges the Justice Department could bring if the evidence substantiates them.
Clark is in infamous company. Eastman’s behavior has been mentioned frequently throughout these Jan. 6 hearings and earned rebuke from his longtime mentor, former federal appellate Judge Michael Luttig, a conservative icon. Eastman, a former law professor, was willing to push a fake elector scheme despite acknowledging to people in a meeting where Trump was present that the ruse might not be legal. Powell pursued the Kraken litigation without ever posting a substantive win in any courtroom, even the ones where Trump-appointed judges made the rulings. Defending herself in a subsequent defamation case, Powell argued “no reasonable person” thought her statements about the 2020 election results were factual. And at every step of the way, including during the riot itself, Giuliani was a tireless cheerleader and enabler for Trump.
In a complicated and grave situation like this one, the notion that the Justice Department should “work from the bottom up” — bringing indictments, flipping defendants and using cooperator testimony to work up the chain — doesn’t make as much sense as it does in a basic drug conspiracy or bank robbery case.
The problem here is that there are multiple conspiracies. While there is overlap of participants and objectives, there isn’t a single defined conspiracy with one set of participants. So starting in the middle, so to speak, makes sense. Working up the chain from the members of the Capitol mob won’t lead in a straight line to the people who ran the effort to interfere with the election. But following the lawyers likely will.
Investigating possible conspiracies involving the bad lawyers, as well as the activities of Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon and others in the Willard Hotel “war rooms,” would position the Justice Department to develop cooperators and sources of information that can clarify, for once and for all, who in the White House bears criminal responsibility for the events on Jan. 6.








