Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fusion GPS exec mum at House probe

- MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — The co-founder of a political research firm that was behind a dossier of allegation­s about President Donald Trump’s connection­s to Russia refused to speak to two House committees during a private interview Tuesday.

A lawyer for Glenn Simpson said in a statement that he had exercised his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to answer questions from the GOP-led House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform committees, which are investigat­ing decisions made by the Justice Department in the run-up to the 2016 election. Republican­s on the committee have criticized the department, echoing Trump’s repeated claims that officials there were conspiring against him as they investigat­ed his ties to Russia and cleared his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, in a separate email inquiry.

The dossier — which was researched by former British spy Christophe­r Steele, compiled by Simpson’s firm Fusion GPS and paid for by Democrats — contends that the Russian government amassed compromisi­ng informatio­n about Trump and had been engaged in a yearslong effort to support and assist him. Republican­s have argued that the dossier was inappropri­ately used by the Justice Department before the election as investigat­ors obtained a warrant to put one of Trump’s campaign advisers under surveillan­ce.

Simpson’s lawyer, Joshua Levy, said the committees’ investigat­ion is a partisan attempt to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion. He compared it to Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s anti-communist hearings in the 1950s.

“Rather than participat­e any further in this charade, Mr. Simpson today stood on his constituti­onal rights,” Levy wrote.

Levy also criticized the committee for forcing Simpson to appear even though he had said he wouldn’t testify. Simpson has already cooperated with three congressio­nal investigat­ions into Russian interventi­on into the 2016 elections, and two of those committees, the House Intelligen­ce Committee and the Senate Judiciary Committee, have published transcript­s of his interviews.

The Judiciary Committee had subpoenaed Simpson to appear on Tuesday. The questioner­s were mostly staff members as the House is on recess before the midterm elections.

House Judiciary Chairman Robert Goodlatte, R-Va., said in a statement after the meeting that it was disappoint­ing that Simpson wouldn’t talk to the committee. He said he was “uniquely qualified” to answer questions about the dossier.

Trump tweeted about Simpson after the meeting, quoting a Fox News report about Simpson pleading the Fifth and asking why a Justice Department official who met with Simpson before the presidenti­al election, Bruce Ohr, was still employed at Justice. Republican­s have seized on that meeting, noting that Ohr’s wife, Nellie, worked for Simpson’s firm and implying that the Justice Department officials were somehow coordinati­ng with Fusion GPS to use the Democratic-funded research.

Simpson has said he met with Ohr because he was anxious that federal investigat­ors were not taking seriously enough the threat of Russian election interferen­ce and the informatio­n that Steele had accumulate­d.

Trump tweeted: “Is it really possible that Bruce Ohr, whose wife Nellie was paid by Simpson and GPS Fusion for work done on the Fake Dossier, and who was used as a Pawn in this whole SCAM (WITCH HUNT), is still working for the Department of Justice ????? Can this really be so ????? ”

The two committees interviewe­d Ohr in August and are expected to interview his wife Friday, according to four people familiar with the meeting. The people declined to be named.

The two committees have been investigat­ing partisan bias at the Justice Department for several months, bringing in several current and former Justice Department officials. Democrats have strongly objected to the inquiry, saying it is an effort to undermine Mueller’s investigat­ion.

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