Former officials say something 'insidious' is brewing between the White House and DOJ

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anthony scaramucci

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Anthony Scaramucci attends the daily White House press briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House July 21, 2017 in Washington, DC.

The White House's tumultuous relationship with the Justice Department has reached new heights in recent days, with the president publicly attacking his attorney general in interviews and on Twitter and his new communications director suggesting he asked the FBI to investigate his West Wing rivals.

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The episodes have been construed by some former officials as attempts by President Donald Trump and the White House communications director, Anthony Scaramucci, to project a degree of control over the DOJ. That perception intensified on Thursday when a top Justice Department official delivered a previously unannounced briefing on anti-gang efforts from the White House podium.

The official, Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General Rob Hur, was joined by the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. But the briefing, combined with Trump's characterization of Attorney General Jeff Sessions as "beleaguered" and Scaramucci's suggestion that the FBI gave him "digital fingerprints" of alleged White House leakers, has stoked fears of an increasingly politicized - and potentially delegitimized - Department of Justice.

"All of the episodes are disconcerting," said William Yeomans, a former deputy assistant attorney general who spent 26 years at the Justice Department.

Trump's attacks on Sessions, stemming largely from his anger over Sessions' decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation, "demonstrate again that Trump has no sense of the rule of law, or of the fact that the attorney general is beholden to the law and is not Trump's personal lawyer," Yeomans said.

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The White House and DOJ did not respond to requests for comment.

Sessions, for his part, said the attacks were "a bit hurtful." But he gave no indication that he planned to resign. And he has reportedly been working on getting back in Trump's good graces by pursuing leakers more aggressively, something Trump indicated in a press conference Wednesday was another point of friction between them.

Thursday's briefing was another unforced error.

"The DOJ has a perfectly good press room for significant announcements," Yeomans said. "Moving them to the White House dissolves the necessary separation between the White House and law enforcement when it comes to criminal investigations and prosecutions."

Matt Miller, a former DOJ spokesman under President Barack Obama, seemed to agree.

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"Forget Russia recusal," he tweeted. "Sessions is still breaking the WH/DOJ wall in a million ways. All these little things - inappropriate contacts & press release language, DOJ staff at the WH - add up to one big thing: politicization of DOJ."

Trump Sessions

REUTERS/Mike Segar

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is introduced by U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R-AL) at the "Retired American Warriors" conference during a campaign stop in Herndon, Virginia, U.S., October 3, 2016.

'I will be contacting @FBI and the @TheJusticeDept'

Perhaps the most striking episode, however, was Scaramucci's expletive-laden interview with the New Yorker on Wednesday night in which he threatened to sic the FBI on people he believes to be White House leakers.

"I've got digital fingerprints on everything they've done through the FBI and the fucking Department of Justice," Scaramucci said. He invoked the FBI and the DOJ again later that night a tweet that has since been deleted.

"In light of the leak of my financial disclosure info which is a felony. I will be contacting @FBI and the @TheJusticeDept #swamp @Reince45," Scaramucci wrote, referring to White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, who Scaramucci thought had leaked his financial disclosure form to Politico.

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"The greatest threat in our democracy to the rule of law is using our criminal justice system to go after people for political reasons," Yeomans said. "Asking the FBI to investigate infighting in the White House is a stunning misuse of the FBI's power and would drag the bureau into the middle of the political thicket."

To be sure, the bureau would likely decline such overtures, since it is traditionally averse to, and wary of, being politicized. That's why former FBI Director James Comey went to such great lengths last year to avoid the perception that his investigation of Hillary Clinton's email server had been tainted by Attorney General Loretta Lynch's airport tarmac meeting with former President Bill Clinton.

"The FBI is full of highly trained and experienced law enforcement officers and intelligence professionals who know that a person using this type of loud, threatening, bullying behavior usually has nothing to back it up," said Scott Olson, a recently retired FBI agent who spent more than two decades at the bureau.

"I can't imagine anyone at the FBI is particularly impressed with Scaramucci."

Andrew McCabe

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Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe waits for the beginning of a hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee.

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'There is something more insidious happening'

As former DOJ counsel Carrie Cordero wrote recently, Trump's feud with the Justice Department long predated Scaramucci's appointment and the events of last week.

Trump, Cordero said, fired acting Attorney General Sally Yates in January when she refused to defend his immigration order and dismissed Comey after he refused to state publicly that Trump was not personally under FBI investigation.

Yates warned against the White House's encroachment on the DOJ in an op-ed published Friday.

"The spectacle of President Trump's now daily efforts to humiliate the attorney general into resigning has transfixed the country," Yates wrote. "But while we are busy staring at the wreckage of Attorney General Jeff Sessions' relationship with the man he supported for the presidency, there is something more insidious happening."

Sally Yates

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Sally Q. Yates, then the US deputy attorney general, speaks during a press conference at the Department of Justice on June 28, 2016 in Washington, DC.

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Trump's attacks on DOJ officials have extended to Twitter, where he has repeatedly questioned the credibility of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe, and FBI special counsel Robert Mueller.

"President Trump's actions appear aimed at destroying the fundamental independence of the Justice Department," Yates said. "All the while, he's ripping the blindfold off Lady Justice and attempting to turn the department into a sword to seek vengeance against his perceived enemies and a shield to protect himself and his allies."

Cordero, a former counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for National Security, recommended that the country "take note of who [Trump] is firing or pressuring to resign in his first six months in office.

"These are the senior government officials responsible for the equitable enforcement of our laws," she wrote.

Dan Goldberg, former chief of of the DOJ's Office of Legislative Affairs, argues that the Trump's clear distaste for the Department's independence goes back to his presidential campaign, when he disparaged US District Judge Gonzalo Curiel's Mexican heritage.

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"It's been very clear from the getgo that this president does not respect the rule of law," said Goldberg, now the legal director at the progressive judicial advocacy group Alliance For Justice. "And it's remarkable."

Goldberg pointed to a memo written by former Attorney General Eric Holder in 2009, which sets out guidelines "to govern all communications" between DOJ representatives, the White House, and Congress.

"The legal judgments of the Department of Justice must be impartial and insulated from political influence," the memo reads. "It is imperative that the Department's investigatory and prosecutorial powers be exercised free from partisan consideration."

Goldberg emphasized that while much attention has been paid to these high-profile attacks, "the vast majority of DOJ employees are apolitical, outstanding civil servants who walk into work every day with one goal: to properly enforce the Constitution and the rule of law."

"The politicization at the top of the DOJ is deeply disconcerting," he said. "But I'm confident that most of the Department's civil servants are continuing to serve their country admirably."

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