Gyamfi Admitted To Perjury - Still Employed At DOJ?
“It
is now common knowledge in the Section that she lied about her actions
to Inspector General investigators and was caught in the lie with e-mail
documentation.” - Hans von Spakovsky
By Dell Hill via Ed Morrissey
One has to ask; does anyone inside the Beltway tell the truth?
“Hans von Spakovsky reports today for PJ Media
that a key figure in the Department of Justice investigations of Texas
redistricting in the last decade admitted to perjury during an Inspector
General probe of leaks from the Civil Rights Division to the Washington
Post.
Spakovsky,
who formerly worked in the same office as Celandine Gyamfi, says that
Gyamfi twice denied under oath having any knowledge of the leaks, but
when confronted with e-mail evidence, admitted that she herself was the
source:
Ms.
Gyamfi made no secret of her hatred of conservatives and Republicans
when I worked in the Voting Section from 2001 to 2002. Later, when I
moved to the Civil Rights Division’s front office, she had a difficult
time hiding her contempt any time she was forced to meet with the
political leadership. In revelations now known throughout the Voting
Section, she apparently went beyond hatred and resorted to flagrantly
violating Justice Department confidentiality requirements and ethical
obligations. It is now common knowledge in the Section that she lied
about her actions to Inspector General investigators and was caught in
the lie with e-mail documentation. Ahh, it’s always the cover-up.
According
to numerous sources within the Section, Ms. Gyamfi had been asked in
two separate interviews whether she was involved in the leaking of
confidential and privileged information out of the Voting Section. Each
time, she flatly denied any knowledge as to who was responsible for the
leaks. In a third interview, she was once again questioned about her
role in the leaks. At first, she adamantly denied involvement. Then,
however, she was confronted with e-mail documents rebutting her
testimony.
At
that point, she immediately broke down and confessed that she had lied
to the investigators three separate times. Since IG interviewees are
all required to take an oath to tell the truth upon penalty of perjury,
and investigators record all interviews, an audio recording of these
admissions must exist in the IG files. Mind you, Ms. Gyamfi did not say
she misunderstood the questions. She did not claim to have forgotten
something and later remembered it.
Instead,
she plainly admitted her deceit and ascribed her motive to attempting
to protect the “other people” involved, i.e., the other career staff
(mostly attorneys) who also violated their oaths of office and their
professional obligations by publicizing confidential legal opinions and
analyses.
After
the admission, Ms. Gyamfi returned to the Voting Section distraught,
crying and sobbing. She was consoled by another career employee to whom
she confessed what had happened. This was witnessed and heard by other
Voting Section staff, and the story of what occurred during the IG
interview was soon known all over the Section.
Did
Gyamfi get fired? Face discipline? Not according to Spakovsky’s
sources, who note that Gyamfi has been assigned to the Voting Section’s
probe of the new Texas redistricting plan.
Coincidentally or not, the leaks occurred on the last CRD investigation of a redistricting plan in Texas:
The
genesis of Ms. Gyamfi’s perjury is apparently rooted in political
attacks on the Bush Justice Department. Throughout 2005-2007, numerous
attorney-client privileged documents, confidential personnel
information, and other sensitive legal materials were leaked from inside
the Voting Section to the Washington Post and various left-wing blogs.
One
of the most prominent leaks involved the Voting Section’s privileged,
internal analysis of the 2003 Texas congressional redistricting plan,
submitted to the Civil Rights Division in October 2003 for review under
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. The contents of the internal
memorandum appeared on the front page of the Washington Post on Dec. 2,
2005, to great fanfare from Democrats on Capitol Hill and their
surrogates in the liberal blogosphere.
This
follows on the heels of other reporting at PJ Media from another former
CRD attorney, J. Christian Adams, of bias and political influence in
the Civil Rights Division, but this is the first hint that perjury has
taken place within the DoJ. Adams has his own thoughts
on this story, advising readers not to focus entirely on Eric Holder
but also on the corrupt career bureaucrats that have distorted the CRD’s
mission. Meanwhile, the Daily Caller reports that the DoJ has not responded to the claims in the story, and that Gyamfi refused to comment at all.
Assuming
that the story is true, this still leaves Holder in the hot seat. If
Gyamfi somehow avoided the technical commission of perjury (and there
are many technical details involved), she still would have committed
obstruction of justice. That’s grounds for disbarment, and it certainly
should be a disqualifier for employment at the Department of Justice,
which has a crucial stake in prosecuting people who obstruct, er,
justice. If this is true, it takes the politicization of the DoJ into
undreamed-of extremes.
The Judiciary and Oversight committees in both chambers of Congress need to immediately get to the bottom of this.”
Lying is just a "state of mind" remember?
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