More documents have been released about Jack Smith’s investigation into President Donald Trump. According to an article by Fred Lucas at The Daily Signal, the newly released documents from the Department of Justice “provide details on former special counsel Jack Smith’s subpoenas for phone records of current administration officials and members of Congress.”
The
documents were made public shortly before a hearing by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee
on Federal Courts, Oversight, Agency Action, and Federal Rights, titled “Arctic
Frost: A Modern Watergate.” They reveal how Smith’s probe demanded current FBI
Director Kash Patel’s phone records and proposed subpoenas for records of 14
members of Congress.
Senate
Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, released the documents along with Senate
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Chairman Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Sen.
Ted Cruz, R-Texas, chairman of the subcommittee that held the hearing on
Tuesday.
Cruz
compared the data gathering by Smith’s team to the scandal that led to the resignation
of President Richard Nixon in 1974.
“It
is a modern Watergate, trading a break-in at one office for a digital sweep
into approximately 100,000 private communications, more than a dozen senators,
and thousands of individuals’ lives,” Cruz said.
“It
is something far broader, an operation that aligned Democrats across all three
branches of government: the Biden executive branch, through DOJ and the FBI,
wielding investigative power against political opponents; Democrat-appointed
judges in the judiciary, through warrants, secrecy orders, and deference,
failing to serve as a meaningful check; and members of the legislative branch,
who should be the first line of oversight, choosing instead to look the other
way,” Cruz continued.
In
2025, the Senate Judiciary Committee released a set of documents that showed
Smith’s team collected phone data from nine Republican senators and one
Republican House member in the investigation, dubbed “Arctic Frost.”
The
new batch of documents shows Smith’s team wanted even more members’ records.
Cruz
noted the Smith team sought records of about one-fifth of Senate Republicans.
He asked Will Chamberlain, senior counsel for the Article III Project, a
watchdog group, how he would compare the Arctic Frost probe to the Watergate
scandal.
Chamberlain
brought up the surveillance of then-Trump campaign manager Susie Wiles and her
lawyer. Wiles is not the White House chief of staff. According to reports, the
FBI recorded a phone call between Wiles and her lawyer without her knowledge.
“If
anything, it might even be greater. The scope of this, in terms of the sheer
number of people and organizations affected, this brazen violation of attorney-client
privilege, wiretapping, a phone call between Susie Wiles and her lawyer,”
Chamberlain told the Senate panel. “These are egregious offenses, and if
Watergate was just about a single break-in, this is effectively compounding that
by 200.”
Smith
issued two subpoenas to Verizon, requesting about two years of Patel’s phone
records spanning January 2021 through February 2023, the documents show.
The
subpoenas sought Patel’s residential and email addresses and phone connection
records, including records of text messages sent and received. Such information
would not include the content of conversations by phone or text.
Federal
judges approved nondisclosure agreements for the requests, asserting there were
“reasonable grounds” because disclosure of the subpoenas “will result” in
actions such as flight from prosecution and evidence tampering….
An
email on Jan. 10, 2023, discussed plans to subpoena toll records for various
members of Congress and staff, including Republican Reps. Brian Babin of Texas;
Andy Biggs of Arizona, Mo Brooks of Alabama, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Jody Hice
of Georgia, Paul Gosar of Arizona, Louie Gohmert of Texas, Lee Zeldin of New
York; as well as Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah, Dan Sullivan of Alaska,
Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Lindsey Graham of South
Carolina, and Cruz.
“The
records include a wish list created by Smith’s team naming 14 members of
Congress for whom they wanted to seek tolling data. Some of those members are
senators on this very committee,” Grassley said.
“But,
the list notes that Smith’s team already knew these members had communications,
to include text messages for some members, with individuals associated with President
Trump.”
Smith
defended his actions while testifying before the House Judiciary Committee in
January: “For the conspiracy that we were investigating, it was relevant to get
full records to understand the scope of that conspiracy,” Smith told the House
panel. He added, “In conducting a criminal investigation, securing non-content
toll records, as you described, is a common practice in almost any complex
concern.”
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