House Judiciary
Committee Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr. (R-Wis.) released the
following statement:
``Yesterday, a 1995
memo written by 9/11 Commission Member Jamie Gorelick, in her former
role as the second in command at the Justice Department, revealed
her actions in establishing the heightened 'wall' prohibiting the
sharing of intelligence information and criminal information.
Scrutiny of this policy lies at the heart of the Commission's work.
Ms. Gorelick has an inherent conflict of interest as the author of
this memo and as a government official at the center of the events
in questions. Thus, I believe the Commission's work and independence
will be fatally damaged by the continued participation of Ms.
Gorelick as a Commissioner. Reluctantly, I have come to the
conclusion that Ms. Gorelick should resign from this Commission.
``The Commission's
Guidelines on Recusals state, 'Commissioners and staff will recuse
themselves from investigating work they performed in prior
government service.' Commissioner Gorelick's memo directing a policy
that 'go(es) beyond what is legally required' indicates that her
judgment and actions as the Deputy Attorney General in the Reno
Justice Department are very much in question before the Commission.
Indeed Attorney General Ashcroft called this DOJ policy, 'the single
greatest structural cause for September 11 ... (and) embraced flawed
legal reasoning.' Commissioner Gorelick is in the unfair position of
trying to address the key issue before the Commission when her own
actions are central to the events at issue. The public cannot help
but ask legitimate questions about her motives.
``While it is
regrettable that this conflict had not come to light sooner, this
Commission's work and forthcoming recommendations are too important
to be questioned in this way, and may be devalued by Ms. Gorelick's
continued participation as a Commissioner. Given Ms. Gorelick's work
as the Deputy Attorney General under Janet Reno, Ms. Gorelick can be
quite valuable to the Commission's work preparing 'a full and
complete account of the circumstances surrounding the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks.' However, that contribution should come as a
witness before the Commission - not as a member.
``Key figures like
former FBI Director Freeh, Director Mueller, Attorney General
Ashcroft, former presidential adviser Richard Clarke, and National
Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice have all testified before the
Commission and would have rightly sparked indignation about a
conflict of interest had these individuals also been members of the
Commission. Testifying before the Commission is Ms. Gorelick's
proper role, not sitting as a member of this independent
commission.''
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