Medicine Hat News

COMEY TESTIFIES

Trump thinks he’s been vindicated

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WASHINGTON Claiming “total and complete vindicatio­n,” President Donald Trump broke his Twitter silence Friday morning to weigh in on fired FBI Director James Comey’s closely watched testimony.

Trump, who had refrained from tweeting all day Thursday — even as Comey accused his administra­tion of spreading “lies” and suggested Trump had attempted to influence the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election — struck back in an early-morning tweet.

“Despite so many false statements and lies, total and complete vindicatio­n,” Trump wrote, suggesting that Comey, who was under oath at the hearing, had committed perjury.

Trump also seized on Comey’s revelation that he had directed a friend to release memos he’d written documentin­g his conversati­ons with the president to a reporter.

“...and WOW, Comey is a leaker!” Trump wrote at 6:10 a.m.

Trump also retweeted a comment from attorney Alan Dershowitz?, who had written: “We should stop talking about obstructio­n of justice. No plausible case. We must distinguis­h crimes from” political “sins.”

Trump had stayed unusually quiet on Thursday, refraining from weighing in on the testimony gripping the country both on Twitter and at several public appearance­s. Instead, Trump let his lawyer do the talking for him.

But the self-imposed silence didn’t last. The White House announced late Thursday that Trump would be holding a press conference with Iohannis.

In his first congressio­nal appearance since being abruptly fired by Trump last month, Comey detailed months of distrust of the president and bluntly asserted that Trump had fired him to interfere with the probe of Russia’s ties to the Trump campaign.

He said that he’d carefully documented his interactio­ns with Trump because he worried Trump would misreprese­nt them, and accused the administra­tion of spreading “lies, plain and simple” about the reasons for his firing.

Comey’s testimony underscore­d the discord that had soured their relationsh­ip. He painted Trump as a chief executive dismissive of the FBI’s independen­ce and made clear that he interprete­d Trump’s request to end an investigat­ion into the former national security adviser as an order coming from the president.

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.

Trump’s private attorney, Marc Kasowitz, seized on the admission, casting the former FBI director as one of the “leakers” set on underminin­g the Trump administra­tion.

The attorney is expected to file a complaint with the Justice Department inspector general about the revelation next week, according to a person close to the legal team who agreed to speak ahead of the filing on condition that the person’s name is not used.

Kasowitz also maintained that the testimony made clear that Trump “never, in form or substance, directed or suggested that Mr. Comey stop investigat­ing anyone.”

While Trump’s staunchest supporters have tried to paint Comey’s testimony as vindicatio­n for the president, few Republican­s who don’t work for Trump stepped in to defend the president's version of his contacts with Comey.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK ?? President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Romanian President Klaus Werner Iohannis (not pictured), speaks during a news conference in the Rose Garden at the White House, Friday in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Romanian President Klaus Werner Iohannis (not pictured), speaks during a news conference in the Rose Garden at the White House, Friday in Washington.

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