Wales On Sunday

Trump: Comey lied to Senate

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump has accused fired FBI director James Comey of lying to Congress and said he was “100%” willing to testify under oath about their conversati­ons.

Mr Trump crypticall­y refused to say whether those private exchanges were taped – a matter at the heart of the conflictin­g accounts of what passed between them at a time when Mr Comey was leading an FBI investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election and its ties to the Trump campaign.

He asserted that nothing in Mr Comey’s testimony to the Senate pointed to collusion with Russia or obstructio­n of justice.

He further denied ever asking Mr Comey for his “loyalty”, contradict­ing Mr Comey’s detailed sworn testimony about a private dinner the two men had in the White House.

“No I didn’t say that,” Mr Trump stated abruptly, taking questions at a joint press conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis in the Rose Garden. Asked if he would make that denial under oath, he said, “100%”.

Mr Trump’s aides have dodged questions about whether conversati­ons relevant to the Russia investigat­ion have been recorded, and so did the president.

“Well, I’ll tell you about that maybe sometime in the very near future,” Mr Trump said.

The House intelligen­ce committee sent a letter on Friday asking White House counsel Don McGahn whether any tape recordings or memos of Mr Comey’s conversati­ons with the president exist.

The committee also sent a letter to Mr Comey asking for any notes or memos in his possession about the discussion­s he had with Mr Trump before being abruptly fired last month.

Mr Comey told the Senate intelligen­ce committee on Thursday about several oneon-one interactio­ns with the president, during which he said Mr Trump pressed him to show “loyalty,” to back off on the FBI investigat­ion of his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and to disclose that Mr Trump himself was not under investigat­ion.

Mr Comey said he refused on all points, told senators of the detailed memos he had written after his conversati­ons with Mr Trump and said he hoped those conversati­ons were taped because he is confident of their veracity.

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