Daily
Signal
IRS
Violated Law With Missing Emails, Top Archivist Says
Josh
Siegel
June
25, 2014
IRS
officials broke federal law by failing to report the loss of two
years’ worth of emails sent and received by Lois Lerner, the former
official accused of being behind the agency’s targeting of
conservative groups, the government’s top archivist testified
yesterday.
The
Internal Revenue Service violated the Federal Records Act by not
telling the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration about
the missing Lerner emails, Archivist of the U.S. David Ferriero said
at a hearing on the targeting scandal held by the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee.
“They
did not follow the law,” Ferriero said.
The
testimony came as a new Fox News poll found that three-quarters of
voters — 76 percent — said Lerner’s missing emails were
deliberately destroyed.
>>>
Most Americans, Including Democrats, Believe IRS ‘Deliberately
Destroyed’ Emails
The
skepticism crossed party lines, the poll found, as 90 percent of
Republicans, 74 percent of independents, and 63 percent of Democrats
said the Lerner emails were destroyed intentionally. Only 12 percent
said the destruction of the emails was accidental, and another 12
percent said they weren’t sure.
At
the same hearing, a White House attorney and former counsel to the
IRS defended the tax agency’s response to congressional probes of
the agency’s unusual scrutiny of tea party and other conservative
groups that applied for tax-exempt status.
The
House committee had questioned IRS Commissioner John Koskinen in a
hearing Monday about how Lerner’s emails went missing and why the
agency waited until recently to notify Congress.
IRS
officials say a computer hard drive crash in 2011 erased Lerner’s
emails, which were not permanently backed up.
>>>
Paul Ryan Confronts IRS Commissioner: ‘I Don’t Believe You’
Jennifer
O’Connor, who worked as IRS counsel for six months last year before
leaving for the White House, denied accusations the tax agency
deliberately misled lawmakers.
“The
record of the IRS while I was there and since then shows the hard
work and diligence in trying to get the documents the committees are
seeking,” O’Connor said.
Oversight
Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said Monday that Koskinen purposely
misled lawmakers in March when he promised to produce all emails sent
by Lerner and did not mention the crashed hard drive. Republicans say
IRS officials knew about the lost emails as early as February but
withheld the information from Congress until June 13.
Issa
said he believes the emails will answer lingering questions, such as
whether the IRS continued to delay applications for tax-exempt status
from conservative groups even after the agency admitted acting
improperly and whether targeting included liberal groups.
Koskinen
said the IRS has handed over 750,000 documents to Congress and has
recovered some 24,000 of Lerner’s missing emails. He said the
Treasury Department’s inspector general for tax administration has
begun investigating the hard drive crash.
House
Budget Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., is among Republicans who have
pushed back hard, contending the effort to recover the emails is not
sufficient.
O’Connor
said the IRS learned of the missing emails in April – long after
her departure from the agency in November 2013 – which is why she
didn’t know about them.
Lawmakers
were skeptical.
“I
can’t believe you’re not being more candid with us,” Rep. Jason
Chaffetz, R-Utah, told O’Connor. “Why are you being so elusive?”
Republicans
asked O’Connor why the IRS told the Treasury Department about
Lerner’s missing emails before it told Congress. She said she had
no knowledge of the Obama administration’s handling of that
information because she joined the White House only about a month
ago.
When
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, asked who from Treasury told the White House
that the emails were lost, O’Connor responded: “I’d love to be
helpful … I just started.”
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