Jordan To Zients 8-29-23
Jordan To Zients 8-29-23
Jordan To Zients 8-29-23
The Committee on the Judiciary is continuing its oversight of the Biden Justice
Department’s commitment to impartial justice and its handling of a special counsel investigation
against President Biden’s chief opponent in the upcoming presidential election. According to
recent reporting, Jay Bratt—a Department of Justice employee and top aide to Special Counsel
Jack Smith—met with White House officials multiple times, just weeks before Mr. Smith
indicted former President Donald Trump.1 This new information raises serious concerns
regarding the potential for a coordinated effort between the Department and the White House to
investigate and prosecute President Biden’s political opponents.
In September 2021, Mr. Bratt reportedly met with an advisor to the White House Chief of
Staff.2 Two months later, in November 2021, Mr. Bratt again went to the White House to meet
with Administration officials.3 During this same period, President Trump’s lawyers were
negotiating with the National Archives about presidential records from his tenure in office.4
According to reporting, Mr. Bratt’s 2021 White House meetings related to “national security.”5
Subsequently, on March 31, 2023, just nine weeks prior to Mr. Smith’s indictment of President
Trump, Mr. Bratt met with the White House Counsel’s Office Deputy Chief of Staff Caroline
Saba and FBI Special Agent Danielle Ray for a “case-related interview.”6
1
Jon Levine, Biden staffers met with special counsel Jack Smith aides before Trump indictment, N.Y. POST (Aug.
26, 2023).
2
Id.
3
Id.
4
See Ryan King, Trump lawyer agreed National Archives should get records, email claims, WASH. EXAMINER
(Aug. 24, 2022); Josh Dawsey and Jacqueline Alemany, Archives asked for records in 2021 after Trump lawyer
agreed they should be returned, email says, WASH. POST (Aug. 24, 2022).
5
Jon Levine, Biden staffers met with special counsel Jack Smith aides before Trump indictment, N.Y. POST (Aug.
26, 2023).
6
Id.
Mr. Jeff Zients
August 29, 2023
Page 2
We have previously raised concerns about Mr. Bratt’s involvement in this matter, which
you have declined to address to date.7 Mr. Bratt is alleged to have improperly pressured a lawyer
representing an employee of President Trump to induce the lawyer’s client to cooperate with the
Department’s prosecution.8 Mr. Bratt allegedly commented to the lawyer that he did not think the
lawyer was a “Trump guy” and that “he would do the right thing.”9 Mr. Bratt referenced the
lawyer’s application for a judgeship on the D.C. Superior Court and implied that the application
would be received more favorably if his client cooperated with the prosecution of President
Trump.10
These facts reinforce the serious concern that Mr. Smith is not running an impartial and
unprejudiced investigation and prosecution. The Committee has a significant interest in
examining how the Department runs its Special Counsel investigations to inform potential
legislative reforms concerning the Department’s Special Counsel practices and operations.
Accordingly, so that the Committee can fulfill its oversight obligations, please produce the
following information:
2. All documents and communications between the Executive Office of the President
and the Department of Justice referring or relating to the investigation and/or
prosecutions of Special Counsel Jack Smith.
Please provide this information as soon as possible but not later than 5:00 p.m. on
September 12, 2023. Further, this letter serves as a formal request to preserve all existing and
future records and materials related to Mr. Bratt’s appointments, meetings, and visits to the
White House or Executive Office of the President, and any documents or communications
referring or relating to Mr. Bratt’s White House visits. You should construe this preservation
notice as an instruction to take all reasonable steps to prevent the destruction or alteration,
whether intentionally or negligently, of all documents, communications, and other information,
including electronic information and metadata, that are or may be responsive to this
congressional inquiry. This instruction includes all electronic messages sent using your official
and personal accounts or devices, including records created using text messages, phone-based
message applications, or encryption software.
7
Letter from Rep. Jim Jordan, Chairman, H. Comm. on the Judiciary, to Hon. Merrick B. Garland, Att’y Gen., U.S.
Dep’t of Justice (June 9, 2023).
8
See Ken Dilanian, Lawyer for witness in Trump docs probe alleges prosecutorial misconduct, NBC NEWS (Jun. 8,
2023).
9
Hugo Lowell, Lawyer for Trump valet in Mar-a-Lago documents case alleges misconduct, The Guardian (June 8,
2023).
10
Id.
Mr. Jeff Zients
August 29, 2023
Page 3
The Committee on the Judiciary has jurisdiction to oversee the activities of the Justice
Department pursuant to Rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives.11 Please ask your
staff to contact Committee staff at (202) 225-6906 if you have any questions about this request.
Sincerely,
Jim Jordan
Chairman
11
Rules of the U.S. House of Representatives, R. X, 118th Cong. (2023).