WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, U.S. Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) and members of the Senate Judiciary Committee wrote to Attorney General Garland requesting that he return to the committee to provide additional testimony regarding his school board memo.
“During your testimony on October 27, you told the Senate Judiciary Committee that your Memorandum was merely about ‘setting up meetings.’ You stated that the 'purpose of this Memorandum is to get our law enforcement to assess the extent of the problem' and that the Memo ‘comes before investigations.’ When asked why the DOJ was treating parents at school boards as domestic terrorists, you said: ‘[m]y Memo says nothing about domestic terrorism, says nothing about parents committing any such things,’” the senators wrote.
“Your statements appear to be deeply misleading. They are inconsistent with the letter sent by Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Montana to local officials to provide a roadmap for prosecution and to offer the FBI’s assistance. Acting U.S. Attorney Johnson listed 12 federal statutes under which parents could potentially be charged—including ‘repeated telephone calls’ or ‘anonymous telecommunications harassment’— and offered to ‘collaborate’ with local entities to bring ‘federal investigation[s] and prosecution[s],’” the senators continued.
“Additionally, an FBI whistleblower has recently revealed that the heads of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division and Counterterrorism Division have instructed their agents and analysts to use a designated threat tag whenever they encounter potential threats, harassment, and intimidation of school officials. This suggests that the Bureau is looking for opportunities to pursue investigations, including using counterterrorism authorities and tools, under the Memorandum,” the senators concluded.
The full text of the letter can be found here.
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