Lethbridge Herald

Trump warns fired FBI boss

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

President Donald Trump appeared to threaten the former head of the FBI on Twitter on Friday, warning the just-fired James Comey not to leak to the media. The president tweeted: “Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversati­ons before he starts leaking to the press!”

It’s unclear whether the president was alluding to actual secret recordings, or making a casual remark. The president’s opponents immediatel­y found Nixonian parallels, making comparison­s to the White House tapes that fuelled the Watergate scandal.

The administra­tion only fed the intrigue. Later in the day, a solemn-sounding spokesman repeatedly shrugged off questions about whether the White House does, in fact, secretly tape the president’s meetings.

“I’ve talked to the president. The president has nothing further to add on that,” Sean Spicer told the daily briefing. Democrats asked to know more. A lawmaker, Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, sent a letter to the White House attorney with two questions: • Do secret recordings exist? • If so, could the White House please provide copies of the president’s conversati­ons with Comey; conversati­ons about the hiring or firing of Russiafrie­ndly former general Michael Flynn and the meeting this week with Russia’s ambassador and foreign minister?

The president’s threat came in a series of frustrated morning tweets that called the Russia investigat­ions a witch-hunt, threatened to cancel White House press briefings, accused the media of conveying fake news and lamented that people were making a big deal out of the occasional erroneous statement from his staff.

The morning rant came after media pointed out contradict­ions in his story of the Comey firing.

A main one was the notion peddled by the White House that the firing was a response to a suggestion from the deputy attorney general — which Trump has said isn’t true. He’s said he wanted Comey gone and would have fired him regardless.

Another point of contention was whether the president received an assurance from Comey he was not being investigat­ed. Trump says so. But now stories are appearing in multiple news reports, with details of a Comey-Trump dinner that contradict that assertion.

Hence the context for the president warning Comey to keep quiet.

The president is entering a legally dangerous area, said Nick Ackerman, an assistant Watergate prosecutor and former assistant U.S. attorney for New York. He referred to multiple reports about the Comey-Trump dinner, purporting to reflect Comey’s version.

“What we’re really talking about is the potential obstructio­n of justice of an ongoing investigat­ion,” Ackerman told MSNBC.

“He invites the head of the FBI over for dinner — which in itself is probably inappropri­ate if they’re going to be talking about the Russian investigat­ion. Then to demand loyalty from him is completely over the top.”

Another expert said the threatenin­g tweet might be legal. That’s because the definition of blackmail in U.S. law is unclear, said Yale law professor Steven Duke.

“Our extortion statutes are extremely vague, leaving room at least for an argument that almost any threat is extortion,” Duke said. “Trump could claim that he was only trying to motivate Comey to tell the truth and he was not seeking to induce Comey to do anything other than remaining silent or telling the truth.”

Duke said the more interestin­g question is why Trump keeps piling one deception atop another: “Trump knows there are no tapes of his conversati­ons with Comey; that’s why he can falsely claim that Comey assured him that he was not under investigat­ion.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s opponents are starting to search his money trail.

Lawmakers are increasing­ly focusing on Trump’s business relationsh­ips. They have asked for documents from the Treasury Department’s foreign money-laundering unit.

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