Regina Leader-Post

Trump demands more Clinton scrutiny

- JENNA JOHNSON

WASHINGTON • On Sunday morning, President Donald Trump expressed frustratio­n that his campaign is under investigat­ion over possible ties to Russia’s plot to influence the 2016 election and that his former opponent Hillary Clinton is not facing the same level of scrutiny.

In four tweets sent over 24 minutes, Trump wrote: “Never seen such Republican ANGER & UNITY as I have concerning the lack of investigat­ion on Clinton made Fake Dossier (now US$12,000,000?), the Uranium to Russia deal, the 33,000 plus deleted Emails, the Comey fix and so much more. Instead they look at phoney Trump/Russia, ‘collusion,’ which doesn’t exist. The Dems are using this terrible (and bad for our country) Witch Hunt for evil politics, but the R’s are now fighting back like never before. There is so much GUILT by Democrats/Clinton, and now the facts are pouring out. DO SOMETHING!”

The tweets came as CNN has continued to report that on Friday a federal grand jury in Washington approved the first charges in the investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert Mueller, citing “sources briefed on the matter.” The charges are sealed, and it’s unclear who could be charged and for what.

The history of the dossier Trump referenced is a complicate­d one. During the 2016 Republican primaries, the conservati­ve Washington Free Beacon paid the Washington, D.C., firm Fusion GPS to investigat­e Trump’s background and, eventually, his business ties to Russia, The Washington Post reported Friday. The publicatio­n receives financial support from billionair­e GOP donor Paul Singer, according to two people familiar with Singer, whose firm did not respond to requests seeking comment.

After the Free Beacon stopped paying Fusion GPS, the research firm offered in April 2016 to continue researchin­g Trump for the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee, The Post reported last week. According to that reporting, Fusion GPS then hired Christophe­r Steele, a former British intelligen­ce officer with ties to the FBI and the U.S. intelligen­ce community, who compiled a dossier on Trump. Clinton and others working on her campaign have said that they didn’t know anything about the dossier until the 35-page document was posted online by BuzzFeed in January.

It’s unclear how much the Clinton campaign and DNC paid for the informatio­n. The Clinton campaign paid Perkins Coie US$5.6 million in legal fees from June 2015 to December 2016, according to campaign finance records cited by The Post, and the DNC paid the firm US$3.6 million in “legal and compliance consulting” since November 2015 — though it’s impossible to tell from the filings how much of that work was for other legal matters and how much of it related to Fusion GPS. It’s unclear how Trump arrived at the US$12 million figure in his tweets.

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