Comey says Russia probe behind firing
FORMER FBI director James Comey asserted yesterday that President Donald Trump fired him to interfere with his investigation of Russia’s ties to the Trump campaign, bluntly accusing the White House of spreading “lies, plain and simple”.
Mr Comey also revealed that he’d orchestrated the public release of information about his private conversations with the President in an effort to further the investigation.
Mr Comey’s testimony, at a hugely anticipated congressional hearing that captured the country’s attention, provided a gripping account of his interactions with Mr Trump and underscored the deep distrust that had soured their relationship before his stunning firing last month.
In occasionally explosive statements, Mr Comey portrayed Mr Trump as a chief executive dismissive of the FBI’s independence and made clear that he interpreted Mr Trump’s request to end an investigation into his former national security adviser as an order coming from the President.
He expressed confidence that the circumstances of his firing, and Mr Trump’s overall behaviour toward him, could be investigated by special counsel Robert Mueller for possible obstruction of justice. But he declined to offer an opinion on whether it met such a threshold.
Mr Trump’s private attorney Marc Kasowitz seized on Mr Comey’s admission that he had told Mr Trump on multiple occasions that he was not personally under investigation and maintained the testimony made clear Mr Trump “never, in form or substance, directed or suggested that Mr Comey stop investigating anyone”.
Mr Kasowitz also jumped on Mr Comey’s revelation that he had released details of his private conversations with the President, casting the former FBI director as one of the “leakers” set on undermining the Trump administration.
Still, there’s no doubt the veteran lawman made for a challenging adversary.
“It’s my judgment that I was fired because of the Russia investigation,” Mr Comey said toward the end of more than two hours of testimony before the Senate intelligence committee.
“I was fired in some way to change, or the endeavour was to change, the way the Russia investigation was being conducted. That is a very big deal, and not just because it involves me.”
At one point he practically dared Mr Trump to release any recordings of their conversations, a prospect the President once alluded to in a tweet. “Lordy, I hope there are tapes,” Mr Comey said, suggesting such evidence would back up his account over the president’s.
The hearing was Mr Comey’s first public appearance since his sudden May 9 firing and it brought Washington and other parts of the country to a standstill as Americans sat glued to their screens.