- Then-President Donald
Trump suggested DOJ send letters to states suggestingelection fraud . - Rosen refused to send the letters, stating there was no evidence of fraud during 2020 elections.
Former acting Attorney General
Rosen told lawmakers on the House select committee investigating the
"The Justice Department declined all of those requests that I was just referencing because we did not think they were appropriate based on the facts and the law, as we understood," Rosen said.
The requests from Trump and his campaign came after William Barr resigned as attorney general and Rosen stepped into that role in an acting capacity. Rosen told the committee that between the dates of December 23, 2020, and January 3, 2021, Trump would call him or meet with him almost every day.
During these meetings, Trump would express how the Justice Department needed to do more to investigate election fraud during the 2020 presidential election, Rosen said.
Also at Thursday's hearing, former acting Deputy Attorney General Richard Donoghue recalled how Trump tried to pressure the Justice Department to do more to support his claims of voter fraud. The committee displayed an image of Donoghue's handwritten note on the former president's instructions to DOJ that read, "Just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me and the R. Congressmen."
Donoghue said he and other DOJ officials told the former president that the Justice Department found no evidence of election fraud and that these allegations of voter fraud had no merit.
"It was clear to us that there are a lot of people whispering in his ear, feeding him these conspiracy theories and allegations, and I felt that being very blunt in that conversation might help make you clear to the president that these allegations were simply not true," Donoghue said.