Pre-Watergate In 1875,
Ulysses Grant appointed the first federal special prosecutor,
John B. Henderson, to investigate the
Whiskey Ring scandal. After attempting to stifle Henderson's investigation of the president's personal secretary, Grant fired Henderson on the grounds that Henderson's statements to a grand jury regarding Grant were impertinent. Following criticism, Grant appointed a new special prosecutor,
James Broadhead, to continue the investigation. In 1881,
James Garfield appointed the next special prosecutor, William Cook, to investigate the
Star Route scandal. Cook continued his investigation into the
Chester Arthur administration. In 1924,
Calvin Coolidge appointed two special counsels from the two major parties of the time,
Atlee Pomerene (a
Democrat) and
Owen Roberts (a
Republican), to investigate the
Teapot Dome scandal. This appointment was unique in that it was mandated under a special Congressional joint resolution, and was subject to approval in the Senate, similar to a cabinet appointment. This process was unique in the history of federal special prosecutors. In 1952,
Harry Truman appointed
Newbold Morris as a "special assistant to the Attorney General" to investigate the corruption at the Bureau of Internal Revenue following Congressional pressure and calls for a special prosecutor. After Morris submitted a lengthy questionnaire on personal finances to be completed by all senior executive officers, he was fired by Attorney General
Howard McGrath, who was in turn fired by the president. Following the appointment of a new attorney general, the investigation was continued through regular channels.
Watergate Before his May 25, 1973 appointment as
Richard Nixon's attorney general,
Elliott Richardson had agreed at his Senate confirmation hearing to appoint a
Watergate special prosecutor, and so immediately on taking office appointed
Archibald Cox under a special one-time regulation. As part of his investigation, in July of that year, Cox first requested and then subpoenaed the
Nixon White House tapes; secret recordings Nixon had made of conversations in the Oval Office and elsewhere. The Nixon administration refused to produce the tapes citing
executive privilege, and the dispute was fought in court until October. After a Court of Appeals instructed the president to comply with the special prosecutor's subpoena, Nixon ordered the special prosecutor fired. In a
constitutional crisis that became known as the
Saturday Night Massacre, both the attorney general and deputy attorney general (who had both made promises regarding the special prosecutor in their Senate confirmation hearings) resigned rather than carry out the order to fire Cox.
Solicitor General Robert Bork, who was third in line at the Department of Justice, then fired Cox. Initially, the Nixon White House announced that the office of the special prosecutor had been abolished, but after public outcry Nixon instead had Bork appoint
Leon Jaworski as the second Watergate special prosecutor. The firing was ruled illegal in the case of
Nader v. Bork, but, as a new special prosecutor had already been appointed, the case was already moot when decided, and the decision was never appealed past the
district court. Jaworski continued Cox's pursuit of the White House tapes, but Nixon resisted. He raised
separation of powers questions under the U.S. Constitution. Since the special counsel is a member of the
executive branch, Nixon argued that the special counsel is ultimately answerable to the president and that the president could not be compelled by a subpoena issued by his own subordinate. The tapes were ultimately released following the Supreme Court decision in
United States v. Nixon. Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9, 1974, and Jaworski resigned about two and a half months later, to be replaced by his (and Cox's) deputy, Henry Ruth Jr.—who in turn resigned in 1975, leaving
Charles Ruff the fourth and final Watergate special prosecutor. Acting under his existing appointment as Watergate special prosecutor, Ruff conducted an unrelated investigation into whether Gerald Ford had misused campaign funds while a congressman, clearing the new president of any wrongdoing.
Ethics in Government Act Inspired in part by Watergate, in 1978 Congress passed the
Ethics in Government Act. Title VI of this act was known as the Special Prosecutor Act and later renamed the Independent Counsel Act, which established formal rules for the appointment of a special prosecutor. The appointment of special prosecutors varied in important ways from appointments made before and since. Majorities of either party within the House or Senate Judiciary Committee could formally request the attorney general to appoint a special prosecutor on a particular matter, but the decision of whether or not to appoint the independent counsel remained with the attorney general and was not reviewable in court. If the attorney general decided not to appoint an independent counsel in response to such a request, they were only required to respond in writing with the reasons. The law did not allow special prosecutors to be removed except under specific circumstances such as wrongdoing or incapacitation. The special prosecutor provisions in the bill were temporary but were reauthorized by Congress in 1983 and 1987, expiring five years later in 1992; they were reinstated for another five years in 1994 before expiring again in 1999. The
constitutionality of the law was affirmed by a 7–1 decision of the Supreme Court in the case of
Morrison v. Olson. Roughly twenty special prosecutors (called independent counsels after 1983) were appointed under the Ethics in Government Act and its reauthorizations during the
Jimmy Carter,
Ronald Reagan,
George H. W. Bush, and
Bill Clinton administrations. These include significant investigations into the
Iran–Contra affair and the
Whitewater controversy, the latter of which ultimately led to the
impeachment of Bill Clinton over the
Clinton–Lewinsky scandal. Numerous smaller investigations into cabinet secretaries for relatively minor offenses, such as drug use, were also carried out by independent counsels during this period. During the period 1992–1994 when the independent counsel provisions were not in force, Attorney General
Janet Reno appointed
Robert Fiske special counsel to investigate the
Whitewater controversy. When the law was reauthorized in 1994, Reno invoked it to order an independent counsel be appointed to investigate Whitewater, and suggested Fiske continue in that role. Instead,
Ken Starr was given the job by the three-judge panel. Starr resigned and was replaced by
Robert Ray in 1999 just before the expiration of the independent counsel statute. Ray formally concluded the Whitewater investigation in 2003.
Current regulations Since the expiration of the independent counsel statute in 1999, there has been no federal statutory law governing the appointment of a special counsel. Upon the law's expiration in 1999, the Justice Department, under Attorney General Janet Reno, promulgated procedural regulations governing the appointment of special counsels. In 1999, these regulations were used by Reno to appoint
John Danforth special counsel to investigate the FBI's handling of the
Waco siege. In 2003, during the
George W. Bush administration,
Patrick Fitzgerald was appointed special counsel to investigate the
Plame affair by
Deputy Attorney General James Comey after the
recusal of Attorney General
John Ashcroft. On May 17, 2017, former
FBI Director Robert Mueller was
appointed special counsel to take over the previous FBI investigation of
Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election by Deputy Attorney General
Rod Rosenstein after the recusal of Attorney General
Jeff Sessions. In December 2020,
Attorney General William Barr revealed to Congress that
John Durham's investigation had been granted special counsel status on October 19. On November 18, 2022, Attorney General Garland named
Jack Smith special counsel to investigate
Donald Trump's actions regarding the
January 6 United States Capitol attack and
handling of classified documents. On January 12, 2023, Garland appointed
Robert Hur special counsel to investigate
Joe Biden's
storage of classified materials. On August 11, 2023
Merrick Garland appointed
David C. Weiss special counsel to investigate
Joe Biden's son
Hunter Biden stemming from nearly five years of federal investigations into felony tax evasion, illegal foreign lobbying, money laundering, and other possible crimes. This development came shortly after Republicans alleged that Hunter received a "sweetheart" deal in Delaware where he was facing several criminal charges relates to tax evasion and firearm offenses.
Constitutionality On 15 July 2024, federal judge
Aileen Cannon, in a 93-page ruling, ruled that Jack Smith's appointment and funding were both unconstitutional under Article I, Section 9, Clause 7, of the
US Constitution, which prohibits appropriations except when authorized by law. She also ruled that it was disallowed by Article II Section 2 Clause 2, which requires principal officers to be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Therefore, she dismissed the classified documents case that a grand jury under Smith had brought against former president Donald Trump. Smith's office announced that it would appeal the ruling to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Cannon discussed that case, however, arguing that it no longer had any applicability, on the grounds that it concerned special counsels appointed under the special statutory authority of the Independent Counsels Act, which law Congress had since allowed to expire, and hence Smith's appointment was not made under it. ==Legal authority==