The News (New Glasgow)

IG faults Comey’s calls in Clinton email probe

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND CHAD DAY

The Justice Department’s watchdog faults former FBI Director James Comey for breaking with establishe­d protocol in his handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigat­ion, but it says his decisions before the 2016 elections were not driven by political bias, according to a person familiar with the findings.

The report from the inspector general also criticizes Comey for not keeping his superiors at the Justice Department, including former Attorney General Loretta Lynch, properly informed about his handling of the investigat­ion, said the person, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the report is not yet public.

The report’s findings were to be made public later Thursday. It represents the culminatio­n of an 18-month review into one of the most consequent­ial FBI investigat­ions in recent history.

The report has long been expected to criticize the FBI’s handling of the Clinton email probe, stepping into a political minefield while examining how a nonpartisa­n law enforcemen­t agency came to be entangled in the 2016 presidenti­al race.

President Donald Trump is looking to the report to provide a fresh line of attack against two former top FBI officials, Comey and his deputy, Andrew McCabe, as he claims that a politicall­y tainted bureau tried to undermine his campaign and, through the later Russia investigat­ion, his presidency. Trump is certain to try to use the report to validate his firing of Comey last year.

But the report could do more to back Democratic claims that the FBI actually contribute­d to Trump’s victory, most notably by reopening in the final days of the race its investigat­ion into whether Clinton mishandled classified informatio­n. That developmen­t unfolded as Trump’s own campaign — unbeknowns­t at the time to the American public — also came under FBI investigat­ion for possible co-ordination with Russia.

Inspector General Michael Horowitz, a former federal prosecutor appointed by President Barack Obama, prepared the report. Supporters from both parties regard him as apolitical. His most significan­t report before this was the 2012 study of the botched Obama-era gun operation known as Fast and Furious.

The Clinton report will examine key actions by FBI leaders, including Comey’s decision to publicly announce in July 2016 his recommenda­tion against criminal charges for Clinton, and his disclosure to Congress days before the election that the investigat­ion was being revived because of newly discovered emails.

An earlier inspector general report criticized McCabe and led to his firing on allegation­s that he misled internal investigat­ors about his role in a news media disclosure. He denies those charges.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Former FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington in January 2017.
AP PHOTO Former FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington in January 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada