Sports

House oversight panel recommends DOJ probe Biden's autopen use

House oversight panel recommends DOJ probe Biden's autopen use

Oct. 28 (UPI) -- The House Oversight Committee on Tuesday asked the Justice Department to investigate former President Joe Biden's use of the autopen to sign executive orders and pardons.
The request came after the committee released a report on its investigation into Biden's use of the autopen and whether it indicated an administration coverup of an alleged cognitive decline.

In a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the committee, accused Biden's aides of coordinating "a cover-up of the president's diminishing faculties."
Over the summer, the oversight committee interviewed more than a dozen former aides and advisers to Biden. Among those who appeared before the committee were former chiefs of staff Ron Klein and Jeff Zients, and Biden's former physician, Dr. Kevin O'Connor, who invoked the Fifth Amendment.
Related
Jack Smith wants open hearings before Congress on cases against Trump
Joe Biden starts radiation therapy for prostate cancer
Mitt Romney says he urged Biden to pre-emptively pardon Trump
Trump rescinds Biden-era firearms export rule to high-risk nations
In addition to the letter to Bondi, Comer sent a letter to Andrea Anderson, chairwoman of the board of medicine at the District of Columbia Health calling on the board to investigate whether O'Connor was "derelict in his duty as a physician by, including but not limited to, issuing misleading medical reports, misrepresenting treatments, failing to conform to standards of practice, or other acts in violation of District of Columbia law regulating licensed physicians."

The committee recommended that O'Connor's medical license be revoked.
President Donald Trump has taken particular issue with Biden's use of the autopen during his presidency, though he, himself, has used it. In a Presidential Walk of Fame exhibit installed at the White House in September, photos of each president were displayed outside the West Wing, except Biden's. Instead, a photo of an autopen was put in Biden's place.
There's been a long history of presidents using an autopen to sign the many documents that come across their desks each day, beginning with the third president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson. According to the Shapell Manuscript Foundation, which collects historical documents, Presidents Gerald Ford, Lyndon B. Johnson, John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama used the device, some to sign the many requests for autographs and letters, others to sign important documents and orders.
In 2005, then-President George W. Bush asked the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel whether it was constitutional for him to sign official documents using the autopen. The office concluded that "the president need not personally perform the physical act of affixing his signature to a bill he approves and decides to sign in order for the bill to become law."

Trump said he has used the autopen but not for important documents. In June, he ordered an investigation into Biden's cognitive state.
Biden has denied Trump's claims about his mental faculties and autopen use.
"I made the decisions during my presidency," Biden said in a statement.
"I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation and proclamations.
"Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false," he added.

Topics
PoliticsJoe BidenKevin O'ConnorPam BondiRon KleinJeff ZientsDonald TrumpThomas JeffersonGerald FordLyndon Baines JohnsonKennedy AssassinationGeorge W. BushBarack Obama

Latest Headlines

U.S. News // 45 minutes ago
Amazon says it is laying off 14,000 staff in its corporate offices
Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Amazon announced plans to layoff around 14,000 of its corporate workforce as it shifts to investing more in AI amid CEO Andy Jassy's ongoing cost-cutting drive.

U.S. News // 6 hours ago
Trump formally appeals New York criminal conviction
Oct. 28 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump late Monday formally appealed his criminal conviction in New York, asking the state's Supreme Court the throw the case out.

U.S. News // 8 hours ago
Confederate statue toppled in 2020 reinstalled in D.C.
Oct. 28 (UPI) -- A statue of a Confederate general toppled amid the civil rights protests that swept across the country during the summer of 2020 has been reinstalled in Washington, D.C.'s Judiciary Square.

U.S. News // 9 hours ago
Chicago-to-Germany flight diverted to Boston after two teens stabbed
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- A Lufthansa flight from Chicago to Germany was diverted to Boston over the weekend after a 28-year-old man stabbed two minors with a metal fork, federal prosecutors said.

U.S. News // 9 hours ago
Trump, Takaichi sign U.S.-Japan trade, critical minerals deals
Oct. 28 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump met with Japan's first female prime minister Tuesday in Tokyo before signing deals on trade and critical minerals to mark "a new golden age."

U.S. News // 11 hours ago
Delta flight attendant accidentally deploys emergency slide at airport
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- A Delta Air Lines flight attendant inadvertently deployed the plane's emergency slide, before departing Pittsburgh International Airport, forcing passengers to rebook.

U.S. News // 11 hours ago
Spectator suffers life-threatening fall during Penguins game
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- A man was hospitalized with life-threatening injuries Monday after falling from the upper concourse of PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh during a Penguins hockey game.

U.S. News // 13 hours ago
Rutgers fraternity shut down after student injured in alleged hazing incident
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- A fraternity at Rutgers University in New Jersey is under investigation and has been permanently shut down after a student was critically injured in an alleged hazing incident.

U.S. News // 13 hours ago
'Historic' half-million unregistered migrants leave U.S.
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- More than half a million undocumented immigrants have left the United States since Donald Trump became president again, Department of Homeland Security said.

U.S. News // 14 hours ago
Federal Reserve to make interest rate decision this week
Oct. 27 (UPI) -- The Federal Reserve will meet Wednesday, as the U.S. government shutdown enters its fifth week, to decide whether to cut interest rates for a second time since September.

Oct. 28 (UPI) -- The House Oversight Committee on Tuesday asked the Justice Department to investigate former President Joe Biden's use of the autopen to sign executive orders and pardons.

The request came after the committee released a report on its investigation into Biden's use of the autopen and whether it indicated an administration coverup of an alleged cognitive decline.

In a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the committee, accused Biden's aides of coordinating "a cover-up of the president's diminishing faculties."

Over the summer, the oversight committee interviewed more than a dozen former aides and advisers to Biden. Among those who appeared before the committee were former chiefs of staff Ron Klein and Jeff Zients, and Biden's former physician, Dr. Kevin O'Connor, who invoked the Fifth Amendment.
Related
Jack Smith wants open hearings before Congress on cases against Trump
Joe Biden starts radiation therapy for prostate cancer
Mitt Romney says he urged Biden to pre-emptively pardon Trump
Trump rescinds Biden-era firearms export rule to high-risk nations

In addition to the letter to Bondi, Comer sent a letter to Andrea Anderson, chairwoman of the board of medicine at the District of Columbia Health calling on the board to investigate whether O'Connor was "derelict in his duty as a physician by, including but not limited to, issuing misleading medical reports, misrepresenting treatments, failing to conform to standards of practice, or other acts in violation of District of Columbia law regulating licensed physicians."

The committee recommended that O'Connor's medical license be revoked.

President Donald Trump has taken particular issue with Biden's use of the autopen during his presidency, though he, himself, has used it. In a Presidential Walk of Fame exhibit installed at the White House in September, photos of each president were displayed outside the West Wing, except Biden's. Instead, a photo of an autopen was put in Biden's place.

There's been a long history of presidents using an autopen to sign the many documents that come across their desks each day, beginning with the third president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson. According to the Shapell Manuscript Foundation, which collects historical documents, Presidents Gerald Ford, Lyndon B. Johnson, John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama used the device, some to sign the many requests for autographs and letters, others to sign important documents and orders.

In 2005, then-President George W. Bush asked the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel whether it was constitutional for him to sign official documents using the autopen. The office concluded that "the president need not personally perform the physical act of affixing his signature to a bill he approves and decides to sign in order for the bill to become law."