The Telegram (St. John's)

Leak crackdown talk yields rare Comey, Trump agreement

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James Comey and President Donald Trump seem to disagree on most everything, but the EX-FBI director’s memos show consensus on at least one thing: the need to hunt down leakers.

The two men bonded over the idea of a proposed leak crackdown, even sharing a chuckle over a crude joke involving jailed journalist­s, according to memos written by Comey and obtained by The Associated Press.

The jocularity over leakers and journalist­s is striking given the otherwise tense nature of their conversati­ons, which touched on loyalty pledges, Russian prostitute­s and open FBI investigat­ions.

The memos kept by Comey show his unease with Trump’s requests and his concern that the president was blurring the bright line between politics and law enforcemen­t, including with a request that he end an investigat­ion into former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Yet Trump and Comey were clearly on the same page about leaks, even if they weren’t quite in agreement on whom to hold accountabl­e for them.

Comey recounts an Oval Office conversati­on from February 2017 in which Trump raises the prospect of jailing journalist­s who benefit from leaked informatio­n. According to the memos, Comey told Trump it would be tricky legally to jail reporters but said he saw value in going after leakers and “putting a head on a pike as a message’’ by bringing such a case.

Trump shot back that sending that message may involve jailing reporters.

“They spend a couple days in jail, make a new friend, and they are ready to talk,’’ Trump says in one memo. Comey laughed as he walked out of the room, according to the memo.

The Trump administra­tion has loudly complained about leaks, and Trump himself has repeatedly accused Comey of being a leaker. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has said there are several dozen leak investigat­ions open, though that aggressive­ness is similar to that of the Obama Justice Department, which was frequently criticized by media organizati­ons and free press advocates.

Comey’s memos had been eagerly anticipate­d since their existence was first revealed last year, especially since Comey’s interactio­ns with Trump are a critical part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into whether the president sought to obstruct justice. Late Thursday night, Trump tweeted that the memos “show clearly that there was NO COLLUSION and NO OBSTRUCTIO­N.’’

The documents cover the early months of the Trump administra­tion, a period of upheaval marked by staff turnover, a cascade of damaging headlines and revelation­s of an FBI investigat­ion into potential ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. The memos reflect Trump’s uneasiness about that investigat­ion, though not always in ways that Comey seemed to anticipate.

In a February 2017 conversati­on, for instance, Trump told Comey how Putin told him, “we have some of the most beautiful hookers in the world’’ even as the president adamantly distanced himself from a salacious allegation concerning himself and prostitute­s in Moscow, according to one memo. Comey says Trump did not say when Putin had made the comment.

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