FBI director has until July 25 to avoid contempt of Congress proceedings
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House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan is threatening to hold FBI Director Christopher Wray in contempt of congress if the bureau doesn’t comply with multiple subpoenas.
Jordan says he’ll take action if the FBI doesn’t hand over more unredacted documents by Tuesday July 25 at noon.
On February 3, the committee subpoenaed Wray for documents and communications related to the FBI’s use of the Patriot Act to target parents who spoke out at school board meetings.
On April 10, the committee issued Wray a subpoena for documents and information related to a now withdrawn memorandum from the FBI’s Richmond Field Office that stated: “FBI Richmond assesses the increasingly observed interest of racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists in radical-traditionalist catholic ideology…”
The FBI has turned over hundreds of documents related to the subpoenas but Jordan says the information is either incomplete or heavily redacted. Jordan asked Wray about redactions to the Richmond Field Office memo during a recent hearing.
Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio date: 7/12/23
When can we get a copy that didn’t have all these redactions on it so we can actually see what the American taxpayers were paying for? To see their rights their First Amendment religious liberty rights attacked.
Director Wray did not defend the memo.
Christopher Wray, FBI Director date: 7/12/23: “As soon as I found out about it, I was aghast and ordered it withdrawn and removed from FBI systems.”
Democrats say Jordan has his own history of not complying with subpoenas. The January 6th investigative committee issued Jordan a subpoena in 2022.
Rep. Eric Swallwell, D-Calif: “It never gets old that Chairman Jordan is complaining about subpoena compliance. We’re approaching 500 days since Chairman Jordan has failed to comply with a lawfully issued subpoena. For the greatest crime ever committed in America.”
To hold Wray in contempt, the committee would need to hold an initial vote. Then there would be a second vote in the full House, which requires a simple majority to be approved. Straight from DC, I’m Ray Bogan.