Panel: Jeffrey Clark’s bid to aid election scheme violated attorney rules

By Kyle Cheney | 04/05/2024 12:59 PM EDT

Disciplinary investigators who brought the charges against Clark say they intend to advocate for his disbarment.

Jeffrey Bossert Clark is seen during an interview,

Former Assistant Attorney General for the Environmental and Natural Resources Division Jeffrey Bossert Clark is seen during an interview at Department of Justice headquarters in Washington on Aug. 13, 2019. Francis Chung/POLITICO

A disciplinary panel in Washington has found that Jeffrey Bossert Clark, a former high-ranking Justice Department official, violated ethics rules for lawyers in his attempt to aid former President Donald Trump’s bid to subvert the 2020 election.

The three-member disciplinary committee determined Thursday that Clark’s campaign to pressure Justice Department leaders to help upend the transfer of power to Joe Biden violated his duties as an attorney.

The preliminary ruling jump-starts a process that could lead to the suspension or even permanent revocation of Clark’s license to practice law, even as he’s considered a candidate for a senior position in a second Trump administration. Disciplinary investigators who brought the charges against Clark say they intend to advocate for his disbarment.

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The decision followed six days of testimony, including by Clark’s former Justice Department superiors: acting Attorney General Jeff Rosen and his deputy Richard Donoghue, who described a failed effort by Clark to use the department to falsely claim the election results were in doubt. Former Deputy White House Counsel Pat Philbin also testified publicly for the first time about Clark’s gambit.

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