Times Colonist

FBI: White House was told about aide

Contradict­s claim that investigat­ion was ongoing into Rob Porter

- DEB RIECHMANN and ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — Contradict­ing the White House, the FBI said Tuesday it gave the Trump administra­tion informatio­n on multiple occasions last year about a top aide accused of domestic abuse by his two ex-wives, and that the investigat­ion wrapped up in January.

That account by FBI Director Christophe­r Wray challenged the White House assertion that Rob Porter’s background “investigat­ion was ongoing” and that officials first learned the extent of accusation­s against him only last week, just before he abruptly resigned.

Wray’s testimony marked the latest developmen­t in a scandal that has called into question the judgment of senior members of the White House staff and drawn accusation­s of tone-deaf handling of abuse allegation­s.

The week-long fallout from the allegation­s against Porter, U.S. President Donald Trump’s staff secretary, has thrown the West Wing into chaos not seen since the earliest months of the administra­tion and has sparked new rounds of recriminat­ions inside the White House.

Privately, officials acknowledg­e that the public timeline offered last week — that the administra­tion first learned of the ex-wives’ charges against Porter last Tuesday — was flawed.

Several senior officials, including chief of staff John Kelly and White House counsel Don McGahn, were aware of the broad allegation­s against Porter for months, officials said.

Kelly found out after requesting an update on the large number of senior staffers operating without full security clearances, according to a senior administra­tion official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal discussion­s.

McGahn told Kelly last fall there was concern about informatio­n in the background investigat­ion involving Porter’s ex-wives, the official said, and Kelly expressed surprise that Porter had previously been married.

Despite that, Porter took on a central role in the West Wing and was under considerat­ion to serve as Trump’s deputy chief of staff, two officials said.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters Monday: “The White House had not received any specific papers regarding the completion of that background check.”

Yet Wray testified that the FBI sent the White House its preliminar­y report in March 2017 and its completed investigat­ion in late July. Soon after that, the agency received a request for a follow-up inquiry, and it provided that informatio­n in November. Porter was interviewe­d about the allegation­s in September, an official said.

“And then we administra­tively closed the file in January, and then earlier this month we received some additional informatio­n and we passed that on as well,” Wray added in his congressio­nal testimony Tuesday, without elaboratio­n.

The FBI does not make recommenda­tions about whether to grant or deny a security clearance, officials said, leaving the determinat­ion up to the employee’s agency, in Porter’s case, the White House.

Sanders maintained Tuesday that her statement about an ongoing investigat­ion was accurate because Porter’s clearance hadn’t received a final signoff from the White House office of personnel security.

“We find those statements to be consistent with one another,” she said.

The White House has refused to divulge the number of staff members who still do not have full clearances, though the list includes Jared Kushner, the president’s senior adviser and son-in-law. Kushner’s attorney, Abbe Lowell, said in a statement that “there are a dozen or more people at Mr. Kushner’s level” who are working without full security clearances.

Separately, Trump’s intelligen­ce chief called for top-tobottom reform of the security clearance process, which allowed Porter to operate in his job for more than a year with only an interim clearance.

“We have a broken system and I think everybody’s come to agree with that now,” Dan Coats, the director of national intelligen­ce, told the Associated Press.

He called for limits on the informatio­n made accessible to those with temporary clearances — a practice that is currently not followed in the West Wing, an official said.

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