White House Halts GOP Access To Prosecutor Interview Tapes Amid Allegations Of Biden's Memory Lapse
The Biden administration moved to block the release of a recording of Special Counsel Robert Hur’s interview with the president over his handling of classified documents, cueing up a fight between House Republicans and the Attorney General over a probe that didn’t end in charges but led to Hur calling the president’s memory “significantly limited.”
House Republicans previously issued a subpoena to the Justice Department, demanding the recording of the controversial interview where Special Counsel Hur determined President Joe Biden had “poor memory” but did not break the law.
Attorney General Merrick Garland’s office sent two letters denying the release hours before an Oversight Committee hearing on Wednesday, where members were expected to vote on a contempt resolution for the attorney general for defying the subpoena.
Garland asked Biden on Wednesday to assert executive privilege in a letter obtained by Politico, claiming that “to date, the Committees have failed to satisfy any of the potentially relevant standards for overcoming an assertion of executive privilege.”
Garland also informed House Republicans of his decision not to release the audio recordings in a letter addressed to Judiciary Committee chair Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Oversight Committee chair Rep. James Comer, R-Ky.
The House Oversight Committee has not immediately responded to a request for comment from Forbes.
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