Global Times

FBI eyes Russia ties of ex-Trump adviser

Comes a week after Mueller indicts 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers

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The FBI believed that a former Trump campaign adviser had ties to Russia as it sought to influence the 2016 US presidenti­al election, top secret documents released to US news organizati­ons revealed on Saturday.

The October 2016 applicatio­n to the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court named Carter Page, a former foreign policy adviser to the campaign of Donald Trump, according to the documents which The New York Times published.

The newspaper, along with USA Today and others, filed Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuits to obtain the material, which the Justice Department released but with many details redacted.

“The FBI believes Page has been the subject of targeted recruitmen­t by the Russian government,” the initial FBI applicatio­n says before it is blacked out and continues: “undermine and influence the outcome of the 2016 presidenti­al election in violation of US criminal law.”

Release of the documents comes just over one week after Special Counsel Robert Mueller, probing possible collusion between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia, indicted 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers, accusing them of hacking Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton’s campaign to steal documents, which were then publicly released.

The surveillan­ce of Page became in February the subject of intense rivalry between Republican and Democratic lawmakers. The former, from Trump’s party, released a memo claiming that Democratic-funded research prompted the FBI to spy on Page.

Trump defied his own FBI director and the Justice Department to declassify the four-page Republican document, which was based on the much larger secret court applicatio­n record which has now been released.

The White House initially blocked release of a counter-memo from the Democrats, which argued the surveillan­ce warrant request “was based on compelling evidence and probable cause.”

In the documents released Saturday, the FBI cited a source which, it said, had a history of providing reliable informatio­n regardless of the source’s reasons for conducting research into Trump’s ties to Russia. Trump is not named in the document but identified only as “Candidate #1.” A judge approved the initial wiretappin­g applicatio­n, which was renewed three times by other judges, The New York Times said.

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