The Southland Times

Probe: FBI showed no political bias

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The FBI was justified in opening its investigat­ion into ties between the Trump presidenti­al campaign and Russia and did not act with political bias, the Justice Department’s internal watchdog declared yesterday, undercutti­ng President Donald Trump’s repeated claims that he has merely been the target of a ‘‘witch hunt.’’

The long-awaited report rejected theories and criticism spread by Trump and his supporters, though it also found ‘‘serious performanc­e failures’’ up the bureau’s chain of command that are likely to be cited by Republican allies as the president faces a probable impeachmen­t vote this month.

The review by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that the FBI was authorised to open the investigat­ion to protect against a potential national security threat. Informatio­n compiled by former British spy Christophe­r Steele, a focus of Republican criticism, ‘‘played no role in the Crossfire Hurricane opening,’’ the report said, using the name the FBI gave its investigat­ion.

And the report ruled out political bias in the decision to investigat­e ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, a frequent contention by Trump.

But the inspector general identified 17 ‘‘significan­t inaccuraci­es or omissions’’ in applicatio­ns for a warrant from the secretive Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page and subsequent warrant renewals, although it also found the bureau was justified in eavesdropp­ing on Page. The errors, the watchdog said, resulted in ‘‘applicatio­ns that made it appear that the informatio­n supporting probable cause was stronger than was actually the case.’’

Some of that informatio­n came from Steele. The watchdog found that the FBI had overstated the significan­ce of Steele’s past work as an informant, omitted informatio­n about one of his sources whom Steele had called a ‘‘boaster’’ and who Steele said ‘‘may engage in some embellishm­ent.’’

Republican­s have long criticised the process since the FBI relied in part on opposition research from Steele, whose work was financed by Democrats and Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign and that fact was not disclosed to the judges who approved the FISA warrant.

The report’s release, coming the same day as a House Judiciary Committee impeachmen­t hearing centred on the president’s interactio­ns with Ukraine, brought fresh attention to the legal and political investigat­ions that have entangled the White House from the moment Trump took office.

Political divisions were evident in responses to the report.

The president has repeatedly said he is more eager for the report of John Durham, the hand-picked prosecutor selected by Attorney General William Barr to conduct a separate review of the Russia probe. Barr and Durham both rejected the inspector general’s conclusion that there was sufficient evidence to open the FBI investigat­ion. The attorney general’s reaction was especially unusual in that the head of the Justice Department typically would not take issue with an internal investigat­ion that clears a department agency of serious misconduct. –AP

 ?? AP ?? Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz found the FBI was authorised to open an investigat­ion into the Trump campaign to protect against a potential national security threat.
AP Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz found the FBI was authorised to open an investigat­ion into the Trump campaign to protect against a potential national security threat.

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