Edmonton Journal

Would Comey wage media war with Trump?

History shows former FBI head defends legacy

- Callum Borchers

President Donald Trump is clearly worried that former FBI director James Comey is going to come after him, through the media. That’s what Friday’s tweet about “tapes” was all about.

Trump tweeted: James Comey better hope that there are no “tapes” of our conversati­ons before he starts leaking to the press!

Four days later, a person described by The New York Times as “one of Mr. Comey’s associates” leaked a portion of Comey’s notes from a February meeting with the president. According to the notes, Trump expressed to Comey his desire for the FBI to drop an investigat­ion into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

The revelation certainly doesn’t reflect well on Trump; it contribute­s to an appearance that he has been trying to obstruct probes related to his campaign and its possible collusion with Russia.

In other words, the leak was exactly the kind of thing Trump fears. On “Fox & Friends” Wednesday morning, co-host Brian Kilmeade said he believes Comey was behind the sharing of his notes with The New York Times.

“You don’t get that memo unless James Comey gives you that memo,” Kilmeade said. “You don’t make that phone call unless James Comey tells you to make the phone call.”

We don’t know whether that is what actually happened. The Times might not even know whether its source was authorized by Comey or not. But it is worth considerin­g whether Comey would, indeed, go to war with Trump by leaking damaging informatio­n to journalist­s.

An examinatio­n of his record in government leads to one inexorable conclusion: If Comey were to become a leaker, he would turn into the very thing that he fought against as a public servant.

“I’ve spent most of my career trying to figure out unauthoriz­ed disclosure­s and where they came from,” Comey said in congressio­nal testimony March 20. “It’s very, very hard.”

In that same hearing, before the House Intelligen­ce Committee, Comey spoke at length about his disdain for leaks. He said that “any unauthoriz­ed disclosure of classified conversati­ons or documents is potentiall­y a violation of law and a serious, serious problem.”

He also seemed to endorse the view that Trump has been hit by more leaks than his predecesso­rs and even flirted with support for the president’s claim that reporters make things up, when he said this: “It does strike me there’s been a lot of people talking — or, at least, reporters saying people are talking to them — in ways that have struck me as unusually active.”

These are words that could come back to haunt Comey — especially the words that were designed to cast doubt on the veracity of news reports based on leaks.

When Comey was deputy attorney general, in 2003, he appointed special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald to lead an investigat­ion into whether George W. Bush administra­tion officials illegally leaked the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame to a journalist. When New York Times reporter Judith Miller refused to name her confidenti­al source, she spent almost three months in jail for contempt of court.

In 2005, Comey submitted written testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee opposing a federal shield law that would have protected journalist­s from going to jail, as Miller did, when they are unwilling to identify leakers.

Comey’s testimony in March suggested that he has not softened in the past 12 years. “I do think it should be investigat­ed aggressive­ly,” he said of leaks, “and, if possible, prosecuted so people take as a lesson, this is not OK. This behaviour can be deterred, and it’s deterred by locking

YOU DON’T GET THAT MEMO UNLESS JAMES COMEY GIVES YOU THAT MEMO.

some people up who have engaged in criminal activity.”

However. My colleague, Aaron Blake, spoke Wednesday with former Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller, who thinks it would not be unpreceden­ted for Comey to leak a document that could help protect his reputation. Miller recalled an episode that began in 2005 with Comey signing off on waterboard­ing as an interrogat­ion tactic but also documentin­g his qualms in an email to his chief of staff.

“In 2009, when the Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity (OPR) at the DOJ was investigat­ing this issue and The New York Times wrote a story about it, magically Comey’s email to his chief of staff appeared in that story — and made its way to OPR,” Miller said. “I was at DOJ at the time, and what it told me was Comey had the presence of mind to write the email in the first place, print a copy of it when he left the department, sit on it for four years and be ready to give it to a reporter when someone questioned why he had signed off on torture.”

Comey has been an antileak crusader, but there is at least some evidence that he is willing to make exceptions or furnish informatio­n that he knows someone else is likely to make public.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former FBI director James Comey has a history of keeping detailed notes on important conversati­ons.
CAROLYN KASTER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former FBI director James Comey has a history of keeping detailed notes on important conversati­ons.

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