Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Comey: FBI inquiry initially focused on 4 people

- ERIC TUCKER, CHAD DAY AND MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — The FBI’s counterint­elligence investigat­ion into potential ties between President Donald Trump’s campaign and Russia initially focused on four Americans and whether they were connected to Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidenti­al election, former FBI Director James Comey told lawmakers during hours of closed questionin­g.

Comey did not identify the Americans but said Trump, then the Republican candidate, was not among them.

The House Judiciary Committee released a transcript of the interview Saturday, just 24 hours after privately grilling the fired FBI chief about investigat­ive decisions related to Hillary Clinton’s email server, and Trump’s campaign and potential ties to Russia. The Russia investigat­ion is now being run by special counsel Robert Mueller, and

Comey largely dodged questions connected to that probe — including whether his May 2017 firing by Trump constitute­d obstructio­n of justice.

The Republican-led committee interviewe­d Comey as part of its investigat­ion into FBI actions in 2016, a year when the bureau — in the heat of the presidenti­al campaign — recommende­d against charges for Clinton and opened an investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the election.

The questionin­g largely centered on well-covered territory from a Justice Department inspector general report, Comey’s own book, and interviews and hours of public testimony on Capitol Hill.

But Comey also used the occasion to take aim at Trump’s public barbs at the criminal justice system, saying “we have become numb to lying and attacks on the rule of law by the president,” and Trump’s suggestion that it should be a crime for subjects to “flip” and cooperate with investigat­ors.

“It’s a shocking suggestion coming from any senior official, no less the president. It’s a critical and legitimate part of the entire justice system in the United States,” Comey said.

In offering some details of the investigat­ion’s origins, Comey said it had started in July 2016 with a look at “four Americans who had some connection to Mr. Trump during the summer of 2016” and whether they were tied to “the Russian interferen­ce effort.”

He reiterated that the investigat­ion was not prompted by Democratic­ally funded opposition research — often referred to as the “Steele dossier” — but rather contacts former Trump foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os had with an intermedia­ry during the campaign, a finding confirmed by House Republican­s.

The investigat­ion was prompted by “informatio­n we’d received about a conversati­on that a Trump foreign — campaign foreign policy adviser had with an individual in London about stolen emails that the Russians had that would be harmful to Hillary Clinton,” Comey said.

Papadopoul­os was released from prison Friday after serving a brief sentence for lying to the FBI about that conversati­on.

“It was weeks or months later that the so-called Steele dossier came to our attention,” Comey added.

He also said that President Barack Obama never ordered him to have the FBI surveil or infiltrate the Trump campaign.

Comey said that by the time of his firing, the FBI had not come to a conclusion about whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russia’s efforts to sway the presidenti­al election.

He insisted that the FBI would recover from the president’s steady attacks on the bureau.

“The FBI will be fine. It will snap back, as will the rest of our institutio­ns,” Comey said. “There will be short-term damage, which worries me a great deal, but in the long run, no politician, no president can, in a lasting way, damage those institutio­ns.”

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