James Knapp
James Knapp was a non-career Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Criminal Division of the DOJ.
James Knapp was a non-career Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Criminal Division of the DOJ. He was implicated in allegations surrounding the PROMIS Software Scandal.
According to a source of Ronald LeGrand, Knapp was one of three senior DOJ officials, along with Miles Matthews and James Johnston, whom Lowell Jensen allegedly relied upon to engineer Inslaw's problems. The source claimed that Jensen wanted to get Inslaw "out of the way and give the business to friends."1
However, when interviewed by the Special Counsel, James Knapp stated that he was unaware of any negative feelings toward Inslaw by Jensen. He denied any knowledge of, or participation in, a scheme to cause problems for INSLAW or to give Inslaw's contracts to friends of Jensen or Edwin Meese. Knapp also stated that he did not even know James Johnston, who was alleged to have conspired with him to implement Jensen's scheme. The Special Counsel's investigation found no credible evidence to support the allegations against Knapp or any connection between him and a conspiracy related to Inslaw or PROMIS.1
Sources
- U.S. Department of Justice. Report of Special Counsel Nicholas J. Bua to the Attorney General of the United States Regarding the Allegations of Inslaw, Inc. March 1993. ↩
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