Bill Barr’s former special counsel John Durham to testify in House hearing
Special Counsel John Durham, who then-United States Attorney General William Barr appointed in 2019 after the release of the Mueller report to probe the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation, arrives for his trial at the United States District Court for the District of Columbia on May 26, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Ron Sachs/Consolidated News Pictures/Getty Images)

Former Special Counsel John Durham, who recently ended his four-year investigation into the FBI's decision to launch an investigation into Russia's attack on the 2016 election and any possible connection Donald Trump or his campaign had to those efforts, will testify before the Republican-majority House Judiciary Committee next month.

The Durham report, widely-panned by legal experts but praised by GOP partisans, was the culmination of an investigation many believe was started to appease then-President Donald Trump. Trump Attorney General Bill Barr secretly elevated Durham to Special Counsel status in October of 2020, effectively to allow his investigation to continue regardless of the result of the following month's presidential election.

Durham ended up indicting just three people. He lost two cases and the third pleaded guilty to a minor charge.

Washington Post columnist Philip Bump published an analysis earlier this month titled, "Durham’s probe ends as it began: Pointing at trees to obscure the forest."

But Durham's report gives fodder to the far-right.

National security and legal experts have torn the Durham report apart, with some noting his investigation directly conflicts with findings from a DOJ Inspector General and the then-GOP majority Senate Intelligence Committee's report.

Fox News reports Durham "will testify in front of the House Judiciary Committee about his report in June, a source has told Fox News on Friday."

"The hearing will happen on Wednesday, June 21," Fox adds. "The day before, Durham will appear before the House Intelligence Committee in a closed-door briefing."