
Rep.
Jane Harman has received assurances that she is not under an ethics investigation, following the
disclosure last week that the House Ethics Committee looked into her wiretapped phone call.
Rep.
Zoe Lofgren, who chairs the committee, wrote to Harman this week stating that "the Committee is not conducting an investigation regarding your conduct."
If that sounds familiar, recall that the Justice Department also sent Harman a letter in June stating that she is not the subject of a criminal inquiry into the matter.
This goes back to April, when CQ Politics
published a story claiming that Harman had been taped agreeing to press for leniency in an espionage case against two former AIPAC officials in exchange for support in her bid to become chair of the Intelligence Committee. Harman has said she never intervened in the case and has called the disclosure an abuse of power.
According to a document obtained last week by the Washington Post, the Ethics Committee subpoenaed Harman's wiretapped call. The Post
also reported that the Justice Department denied the request.
Recall for a moment that South Bay Reps.
Maxine Waters and
Laura Richardson were not initially investigated by the Ethics Committee, but rather by the semi-independent Office of Congressional Ethics. So why didn't the OCE also look into the Harman wiretapping? Who knows, but it's interesting to note that the co-chair of the OCE is
Porter Goss, who has a not-insignificant role in the whole affair.
Read the full Ethics Committee letter after the jump.