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United States Department of Justice Office of Special Counsel

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The Office of Special Counsel was a prosecutorial unit within the United States Department of Justice that operated from 1978 until the expiration of its statutory authority on December 31, 1999. Created by the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, the office enabled the appointment of an independent counsel—a lawyer outside the Department's ordinary chain of command—tasked with investigating and, when warranted, prosecuting allegations of misconduct by high‑level federal officials.

When the relevant provisions of the Act lapsed, the position was supplanted by the role of special counsel established under 28 CFR part 600. Those regulations—drafted in 1999 by then‑Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal—authorize the attorney general (or acting attorney general) to appoint a special counsel whenever a matter presents a conflict of interest for the Department or when an outside prosecutor would better serve the public interest.

Under the now‑defunct statute, an independent counsel was required—pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 595—to submit a comprehensive final report to the United States Congress explaining investigative findings and the rationale for any prosecutorial decisions.

History

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Creation in response to Watergate (1978)

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In the aftermath of the Watergate scandal—and the related Saturday Night Massacre—a Democratic‑led Congress sought stronger checks on executive power. The result was the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, which authorized a court‑appointed **special prosecutor** (renamed **independent counsel** in 1983) to investigate senior federal officials and national campaign figures outside the normal Department of Justice chain of command.

Appointed by a three‑judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, an independent counsel received an unlimited budget, no statutory time limit, and could be removed only for "good cause" by the attorney general. Although designed to ensure impartiality, critics—most prominently Antonin Scalia in his lone dissent in Morrison v. Olson (1988)—argued that the post created a "fourth branch" unaccountable to the Constitution.

Notable independent‑counsel investigations (1983–1999)

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  • **Iran–Contra (1987).** Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh investigated clandestine arms sales to Iran and diversion of proceeds to Nicaraguan rebels.
  • **Wedtech / Edwin Meese III (1987).** Inquiry into allegations that the attorney general had aided a defense contractor for personal gain.
  • **Madison Guaranty / Whitewater (1994).** Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's probe into Arkansas real‑estate dealings expanded, culminating in a referral that led to the impeachment of President Bill Clinton by the United States House of Representatives (the Senate later acquitted him).
  • **Mike Espy gifts probe (1994).** Under the 1994 reauthorization, Attorney General Janet Reno asked the court to appoint Donald Smaltz to investigate Agriculture Secretary Espy's acceptance of gifts from parties with business before the Department, with authority to pursue any related crimes uncovered.

The Act's authority lapsed on December 31, 1999, automatically terminating the office.

Transition to the special‑counsel model (1999–present)

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Congress allowed the statute to expire, and the Department adopted 28 CFR part 600, drafted by then–Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal, to govern **special counsel** appointments.

  • **Valerie Plame leak (2003).** Patrick Fitzgerald was named special counsel to investigate the public exposure of the CIA officer's identity.
  • **Russian–interference probe (2017–2019).** Robert Mueller examined Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election and links to the Trump campaign.
  • **Crossfire Hurricane review (2020).** Attorney General William Barr converted federal prosecutor John Durham's inquiry into a special‑counsel investigation of the FBI's 2016 counterintelligence probe.
  • **Trump‑related matters (2022).** Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Jack Smith to oversee investigations into classified documents retained at Mar‑a‑Lago and efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Today, the special‑counsel mechanism—rooted in 28 USC § 510 and implemented through part 600—remains the Department's primary tool for handling politically sensitive investigations that present a conflict of interest for its regular hierarchy.

Timeline

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  • October 26, 1978: The Ethics in Government Act is signed into law, establishing the Office of Independent Counsel.
  • January 3, 1983: Congress passes amendments to refine the office's authority under the Ethics in Government Act Amendments of 1982 (96 Stat. 2039).
  • December 15, 1987: The law is reauthorized for five more years under the Independent Counsel Reauthorization Act of 1987 (101 Stat. 1293).
  • December 15, 1992: The statute lapses after Congress fails to pass a reauthorization bill.
  • June 30, 1994: Congress reinstates the independent counsel provisions by passing the Independent Counsel Reauthorization Act of 1994 (
    103

).

  • June 30, 1999: The reauthorization expires and Congress allows the statute to sunset.
  • Late 1999: The Office of Independent Counsel is formally phased out. Its investigative function is replaced by the special counsel system defined under 28 CFR part 600.

Investigations carried out by independent counsel

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Name Start End Topic Appointer
John Henderson June 1, 1875 December 10, 1875 Whiskey Ring Ulysses Grant
(President)
James Broadhead January 1876 March 1876
William Cook June 1881 September 1882 Star Route scandal James Garfield
(President)
Holmes Conrad June 1903 June 1904 Bribery at the United States Post Office Department Teddy Roosevelt
(President)
Charles Bonaparte
Francis Heney October 1903 January 1, 1905 Oregon land fraud scandal Philander Knox
(Attorney General)
Atlee Pomerene February 16, 1924 June 1931 Teapot Dome scandal Calvin Coolidge
(President)
Owen Roberts February 18, 1924 June 2, 1930
Newbold Morris February 1, 1952 April 3, 1952 DOJ corruption allegations Howard McGrath
(Attorney General)
Archibald Cox May 18, 1973 October 20, 1973 Watergate scandal Elliot Richardson
(Attorney General)
Leon Jaworski November 1, 1973 October 25, 1974 Bob Bork
(Acting Attorney General)
Hank Ruth October 25, 1974 October 17, 1975 William Saxbe
(Attorney General)
Chuck Ruff October 17, 1975 June 20, 1977 Edward Levi
(Attorney General)
Arthur Christy November 29, 1979 May 28, 1980 Allegations of illegal drug use of Jimmy Carter's aide Hamilton Jordan DC Circuit Court
Paul Curran March 23, 1979 October 16, 1979 Carter business loans Griffin Bell
(Attorney General)
Gerald Gallinghouse September 9, 1980 March 1981 Allegations of illegal drug use of Jimmy Carter's aide Timothy Kraft DC Circuit Court
Leon Silverman December 29, 1981 September 13, 1982 Raymond Donovan's connections to organized crime
Jacob Stein April 2, 1984 September 21, 1984 Ed Meese financial improprieties
Jim McKay April 23, 1986 May 29, 1986 Ted Olson obstruction of Congress's Superfund investigation
Alexia Morrison May 29, 1986 March 14, 1989
Mike Seymour May 29, 1986 August 6, 1989 Michael Deaver conflict of interest and lobbying
Lawrence Walsh December 19, 1986 August 4, 1993 Iran-Contra affair
Carl Rauh December 19, 1986 March 30, 1987 Lawrence Wallace's personal tax matters
James Harper August 17, 1987 December 18, 1987
Jim McKay February 3, 1987 September 1988 Wedtech scandal
Unknown May 31, 1989 August 23, 1989 Under seal
Arlin Adams March 1, 1990 May 1995 Samuel Pierce's mismanagement and fraud of programs at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
Larry Thompson July 3, 1995 October 27, 1998
Unknown April 19, 1991 July 15, 1992 Under seal
Nicholas Bua November 14, 1991 March 1993 Inslaw scandal Bill Barr
(Attorney General)
Malcolm Wilkey March 20, 1992 December 17, 1992 House banking scandal
Frederick Lacey October 16, 1992 December 8, 1992 Iraqgate
Joe diGenova December 14, 1992 January 11, 1996 Improper search of Bill Clinton's passport records by George H. W. Bush administration staff on behalf of his 1992 presidential reelection campaign DC Circuit Court
Michael Zeldin January 11, 1996 August 12, 1998
Bob Fiske January 24, 1994 August 5, 1994 Suicide of Vince Foster, the Whitewater scandal, Travelgate, Filegate, and later the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal Janet Reno
(Attorney General)
Ken Starr August 5, 1994 September 11, 1998 DC Circuit Court
Robert Ray September 11, 1998 March 13, 2002
Julie Thomas March 13, 2002 September 30, 2004
Don Smaltz September 9, 1994 October 25, 2001 Allegations of corrupt gratuity by Mike Espy
David Barrett May 24, 1995 January 19, 2006 Henry Cisneros payments controversy
Daniel Pearson July 6, 1995 November 14, 1996 Commerce Department trade mission controversy
Curtis von Kann November 27, 1996 December 19, 1997 Eli Segal's conflicts of interest
Carol Elder Bruce March 19, 1998 August 22, 2000 Bruce Babbitt and allegations of public corruption surrounding the Department of Interior's denial of a casino contract to an Indian Nation and the truth or falsity of testimony to a Senate Committee concerning the official conduct
Ralph Lancaster May 26, 1998 April 5, 2000 Charges of influence-peddling and the solicitation of illegal campaign contributions against Alexis Herman
John Danforth September 9, 1999 November 8, 2000 Waco siege Janet Reno
(Attorney General)
Patrick Fitzgerald December 30, 2003 March 6, 2008 Plame affair Jim Comey
(Deputy Attorney General)
Bob Mueller May 17, 2017 May 29, 2019 Investigation into possible interference by the Russian government in the 2016 presidential election, which include a possible criminal conspiracy between the Russian government and the presidential campaign of Donald Trump Rod Rosenstein
(Deputy Attorney General)
John Durham October 19, 2020 May 15, 2023 Counter-investigation of the origins of the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane probe Bill Barr
(Attorney General)
Jack Smith November 18, 2022 January 10, 2025 Donald Trump's attempts to delay the certification of the 2020 United States presidential election and his mishandling of files recovered during the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago Merrick Garland
(Attorney General)
Robert K. Hur January 12, 2023 February 5, 2024 Investigation of the Joe Biden classified documents incident
David Weiss August 11, 2023 present Hunter Biden scandal

See also

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References

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