WASHINGTON -- The chief of the IRS fended off Republican demands Wednesday he should lose his job, telling the House Judiciary Committee he'd made statements about missing emails that later proved wrong but had done nothing to merit impeachment.
At a 4 1/2-hour hearing on whether to oust him, John Koskinen repeatedly said he'd cooperated fully with congressional investigators probing why his agency -- before he joined it -- subjected tea-party groups seeking tax exemptions to excessive scrutiny. Conservatives leading a campaign-year effort to remove him said Koskinen has led an agency that destroyed emails investigators wanted, and he should pay the price.
"When you destroy documents that are under subpoena, somebody's got to be held accountable for that. And that starts with you," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, chairman of another committee that has had a long-running investigation of the IRS' treatment of conservative organizations.
Koskinen told lawmakers when he testified in June 2014 no documents had been destroyed since congressional investigations began, he didn't know three months earlier, IRS workers had mistakenly destroyed backup tapes bearing thousands of emails.
"In retrospect, I would have been better advised to say, 'To the best of my knowledge,'" Koskinen told the Judiciary panel. He added later, "No one lied; no one covered up."
With Republicans divided and GOP leaders offering no support, the impeachment effort is ensured of an eventual defeat. Last week, members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus agreed not to force a House impeachment vote until after the November elections -- even though it seemed likely to lose -- in exchange for Wednesday's hearing.
The conservatives say Koskinen obstructed congressional investigations by lying, ignoring subpoenas and leading an agency that destroyed documentation.
Investigations by the Justice Department and the IRS' independent inspector general have found no evidence Koskinen or the agency purposely destroyed evidence or its actions against the conservative groups were politically motivated. The inspector general concluded the backup tapes were erased mistakenly by IRS workers in Martinsburg, West Virginia.
"The old midnight-shift guys in Martinsburg excuse," scoffed Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, leader of the Freedom Caucus.
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