Albuquerque Journal

Ex-Senate aide charged in FBI probe

Committee employee tied to contact with reporters

-

WASHINGTON — A former employee of the Senate intelligen­ce committee has been arrested on charges of lying to the FBI about contacts he had with multiple reporters, federal prosecutor­s said Thursday.

James A. Wolfe, the longtime director of security for the committee — one of multiple congressio­nal panels investigat­ing potential ties between Russia and the Trump campaign — was indicted on three false statement counts after prosecutor­s say he misled agents about his relationsh­ips with reporters.

Though Wolfe is not charged with disclosing classified informatio­n, prosecutor­s say he was in regular contact with multiple journalist­s who covered the committee, including meeting them at restaurant­s, in bars, private residences and in a Senate office building. He also maintained a yearslong personal relationsh­ip with one reporter, which prosecutor­s say he lied about until being confronted with a photograph of him and the journalist.

Wolfe, of Ellicott City, Maryland, is due in court Friday. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if he had a lawyer.

Each false statement count is punishable by up to five years in prison, though if convicted, Wolfe would almost certainly face only a fraction of that time.

The criminal case arises from a December 2017 FBI interview with Wolfe in which prosecutor­s say he was shown a news article that contained classified informatio­n and was authored by three journalist­s. He checked “no” in a written questionna­ire when asked if he had any contact with the reporters, even though records obtained by the government show he had been in regular contact with them — including through encrypted messaging platforms.

The indictment was announced soon after The New York Times revealed that the Justice Department had secretly seized the phone records of one of its journalist­s, Ali Watkins, as part of the same leak investigat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States