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House panel finds IRS official waived Fifth Amendment right, can be forced to testify in targeting probe
A House Republican-led committee approved a resolution Friday declaring that high-ranking IRS official Lois Lerner waived her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by delivering a statement before the committee in May.
Lerner used to oversee the IRS division that targeted groups for additional scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status. At a May 22 hearing, she invoked her right not to answer lawmakers' questions after declaring in an opening statement that she had done nothing wrong.
Members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee voted along party lines Friday morning, with 22 Republicans saying she waived the Fifth and 17 Democrats arguing she did not. Lerner remains under subpoena, and the committee believes it could bring the long-time IRS official back and compel her to testify.
How silly; you only waive your 5th Amendment right when you choose to answer a specific question. Your 5th Amendment right is sort of like a buffet in that it is your right to pick and choose what you wish to answer to. The 5th Amendment is not an "all or nothing" right. I hope they call her back to testify and I hope she invokes her 5th Amendment right again. What are they going to do about it? It's her constitutional right. No one will arrest her and there is no recourse the House panel has on this issue.
Members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee voted along party lines Friday morning, with 22 Republicans saying she waived the Fifth and 17 Democrats arguing she did not. Lerner remains under subpoena, and the committee believes it could bring the long-time IRS official back and compel her to testify.
Originally posted by LeatherNLace
I hope they call her back to testify and I hope she invokes her 5th Amendment right again. What are they going to do about it?
Originally posted by Bob Sholtz
reply to post by LeatherNLace
How silly; you only waive your 5th Amendment right when you choose to answer a specific question. Your 5th Amendment right is sort of like a buffet in that it is your right to pick and choose what you wish to answer to. The 5th Amendment is not an "all or nothing" right. I hope they call her back to testify and I hope she invokes her 5th Amendment right again. What are they going to do about it? It's her constitutional right. No one will arrest her and there is no recourse the House panel has on this issue.
not correct. the 5th amendment does not work like that in this situation.
you cannot give testimony, then claim the 5th. one has the right to not incriminate themselves by testifying, however she did testify. if she were asked to testify, then simply said "i claim the 5th"; i would defend her 5th amendment right, but that is not what she did.
Did Ms. Lerner forfeit her Fifth Amendment protections?
Ms. Lerner, who was subpoenaed to testify, wasn’t taking the stand at a criminal trial. But it’s generally accepted that the same protections apply in congressional investigations.
To guard against distorted testimony, courts have held that you can’t selectively invoke the privilege by picking and choosing the details that you disclose.
But it’s never been clearly articulated exactly what constitutes a waiver of privileges in this situation, Andrew D. Leipold, a professor of criminal procedure at the University of Illinois College of Law, told Law Blog.
The same issue came up in 2002, when Bernard Ebbers, the former chief executive of WorldCom, rankled members of the House Financial Services Committee when he asserted his Fifth Amendment rights after declaring himself innocent of criminal conduct and defending his role at the company in brief prepared remarks. He was never charged with contempt of Congress.
But while it would have been safer for Ms. Lerner to not saying anything, it’s doubtful that Ms. Lerner went too far in her opening remarks, legal experts said.
Yale Kamisar, a retired University of Michigan law professor who is an expert on criminal procedure, said it didn’t seem that Ms. Lerner disclosed any incriminating facts that would demand further explanation.
“A denial is different than disclosing incriminating facts,” he said. “You ought to be able to make a general denial, and then say I don’t want to discuss it further,” he said.
Originally posted by loam
reply to post by LeatherNLace
You don't get to say under path that you're innocent of any wrongdoing, didn’t violate any laws, didn’t violate any IRS regulations, and didn't provide any false testimony.......and then get to plead the 5th.
That doesn't matter from where I'm sitting. We're not talking about whether past statements can or cannot be used by some application of the 5th in a retroactive way or some other creative example. They're talking about brining her BACK to testify now and without option of the 5th as a protection against FUTURE testimony. Umm... That, I see a huge problem with.
I respectfully disagree with your interpretation of the 5th Amendment; which, by the way, makes no mention of "waiving one's right" or what constitutes a "waiver". Anyhow, it seems that, at best, some legal experts see this issue as gray area....but luckily for the citizens of the US, the constitution is not any shade of gray...it says what it means and it means what it says.
nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself