In re Clark

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 2024
Docket23-BG-0891
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
In re Clark, (D.C. 2024).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 22-BG-0891

IN RE JEFFREY B. CLARK, RESPONDENT.

A Member of the Bar of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals

(Bar Registration No. 455315)

On Petition for Rehearing (DDN: 2021-D193; BDN: 22-BD-39)

(Argued February 23, 2024 Decided March 15, 2024)

Charles Burnham, Harry W. MacDougald, of the bar of the State of Georgia, pro hac vice, and Robert A. Destro, of the bars of the States of California and Ohio, pro hac vice, for respondent Jeffrey B. Clark.

Hamilton P. Fox, III, Disciplinary Counsel, Theodore (Jack) Metzler, Senior Assistant Disciplinary Counsel, and Jason R. Horrell, Assistant Disciplinary Counsel, for Office of Disciplinary Counsel.

Before DEAHL * and HOWARD, Associate Judges, and GLICKMAN, Senior Judge.

* Associate Judge AliKhan was a member of the panel that initially ruled on the motion to enforce a subpoena. Following her appointment to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, effective December 12, 2023, Judge Deahl was assigned to take her place on the panel for purposes of considering the instant petition for rehearing. 2

PER CURIAM: This matter involves a motion to enforce a subpoena duces

tecum that the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (“ODC”) served on Mr. Clark, a

member of our bar, in connection with disciplinary charges filed by ODC against

him. Those charges, which are pending before a hearing committee of the District

of Columbia Board on Professional Responsibility, assert that Mr. Clark violated our

Rules of Professional Conduct by actions he took while serving as an Assistant

Attorney General in the United States Department of Justice. In opposition to

ODC’s motion to enforce the subpoena, Mr. Clark contends that a federal statute, 28

U.S.C. § 530B, deprives this court and the Board of jurisdiction to discipline him for

his alleged professional misconduct as a Department of Justice official. In addition,

Mr. Clark argues that the subpoena cannot be enforced against him because it

infringes on his Fifth Amendment right not to be “compelled in any criminal case to

be a witness against himself.” 11

We initially granted ODC’s motion to enforce the subpoena. Mr. Clark then

petitioned for rehearing. We granted that petition and, following oral argument,

issued an order on February 26, 2024, denying ODC’s motion on the ground that

enforcing the subpoena would violate Mr. Clark’s Fifth Amendment privilege

1 U.S. CONST. amend. V. 3

against self-incrimination. The order stated that an opinion explaining our decision

would issue in due course. This is that opinion.

I.

ODC instituted formal disciplinary proceedings against Mr. Clark in July

2022. Its specification of charges alleges that, while serving in the Department of

Justice as both Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural

Resources Division and Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division,

Mr. Clark “attempted to engage” in conduct involving dishonesty that would

seriously interfere with the administration of justice, in violation of D.C. Rules of

Professional Conduct 8.4(a), (c), and (d). These charges are based on Mr. Clark’s

alleged activities to subvert the results of the 2020 presidential election.

In brief, ODC alleges the following: In December 2020, Mr. Clark drafted a

letter falsely asserting, among other things, that the Department of Justice had

serious concerns about the integrity and outcome of the election in Georgia and

urged that a special session of the Georgia legislature be convened to address those

concerns and choose between competing slates of electors, one that would favor

then-President Trump (and the other that favored now-President Biden). Mr. Clark

urged his superiors, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and Principal 4

Associate Deputy Attorney General Richard Donoghue, to sign and send this letter,

but they refused to do so because of its falsity. Mr. Clark then informed Mr. Rosen

and Mr. Donoghue on January 2, 2021, that President Trump had offered him the

position of Acting Attorney General, and that he was thinking of accepting that offer

if they remained unwilling to send the letter, but they again refused to do so. The

following day, Mr. Clark told Mr. Rosen that he intended to accept President

Trump’s offer to become Acting Attorney General and would send the letter himself.

This precipitated a meeting with the President attended by Mr. Clark, Mr. Rosen,

Mr. Donoghue, the White House Counsel, and other senior lawyers, at which Mr.

Clark said he would send the letter if he were appointed Acting Attorney General,

and all the other lawyers present expressed their opposition to the letter and Mr.

Clark’s appointment and warned it would trigger their resignations. President

Trump decided not to appoint Mr. Clark as Acting Attorney General, and the letter

was never sent.

The allegations of Mr. Clark’s conduct in connection with the draft letter came

to light in the congressional investigations following the storming of the Capitol

during the certification of the Electoral College vote on January 6, 2021. In October

2021, Senator Richard J. Durbin, as Chair of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee,

referred Mr. Clark to ODC for possible violations of the D.C. Rules of Professional 5

Conduct. ODC opened an investigation, which culminated in July 2022 with the

commencement of the current disciplinary proceeding against Mr. Clark. On

October 6, 2022, ODC served Mr. Clark with a subpoena for documents. The

subpoena directs Clark to:

Produce all documents and records . . . of which you were aware before January 4, 2021, that contain evidence of irregularities in the 2020 presidential election and that may have affected the outcome in Georgia or any other state. . . . Produce all documents and records containing information of election fraud or election irregularities that came to your attention following the announcement of Attorney General Barr on December 1, 2020, that the Department [of Justice] had found no evidence of fraud on a scale that could have affected the results of the presidential election. . . .

Produce any file or collection of materials or correspondence, written or electronic, relating to any efforts that you made between the November 3, 2020, presidential election and January 4, 2021, that relate in any way to any efforts you made to persuade officials of the United States Department of Justice to intervene in the certification by any state, specifically including Georgia, of the results of that election. . . .

Provide the results of any legal research that you conducted, had conducted, or received before January 4, 2021, that relate to the authority of the United States Department of Justice to intervene in the certification by any state of the results of a presidential election, including the circumstances under which the Department is authorized to intervene, the quantum of proof necessary for such an intervention, the officials within the Department whose responsibility it is to initiate such an intervention, and the form that such intervention should take.

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