US election: Top Justice Lawyer Quits Over 'Vote Fraud' Inquiries
A top
justice department lawyer Richard Pilger, has quit his job following US
attorney general William Barr order allowing federal prosecutors to probe
alleged irregularities in the presidential election. Mr. Pilger would have
overseen such investigations.
Any such
cases would normally be the remit of individual states, but Mr Barr said this
was not a hard and fast rule.
Mr Pilger
said he had quit in response to Mr Barr's memo.
"Having
familiarised myself with the new policy and its ramifications... I must
regretfully resign from my role," he wrote in an email to colleagues.
Mr Pilger
became head of the department's Election Crimes Branch in 2010. This branch,
and Mr Pilger himself, were previously in the public eye at the time of a row
about extra scrutiny of political groups seeking tax exemption.
He was
reported to have had discussions about the issue with Lois Lerner, the tax
official at the centre of the row.
Donald Trump
refuses to accept Joe Biden's projected victory, and has made unsubstantiated
fraud claims.
The
president's campaign is seeking an emergency injunction in Pennsylvania to
prevent Mr Biden's victory being certified in the state.
The
president-elect's projected win there on Saturday took him over the threshold
of 270 electoral college votes needed to secure victory nationwide.
The attorney
general wrote that inquiries could be made by federal prosecutors "if
there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if
true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an
individual State".
Mr Barr said
prosecutors should only look into "substantial allegations" of
irregularities.
He
acknowledged that individual states had the primary responsibility for the
conduct of elections but said the justice department had "an obligation to
ensure that federal elections are conducted in such a way that the American
people can have full confidence in their electoral process and their
government".
The
department would normally only go beyond preliminary investigations after an
election had been concluded and the results certified, but Mr Barr said this
could result in situations where "misconduct cannot realistically be
rectified".
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