Chattanooga Times Free Press

White House defends contacts with FBI over Russia reports

- BY JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON — The White House on Friday defended chief of staff Reince Priebus against accusation­s he breached a government firewall when he asked FBI Director James Comey to publicly dispute media reports Trump campaign advisers had been frequently in touch with Russian intelligen­ce agents.

President Donald Trump’s spokesman, Sean Spicer, argued Priebus had little choice but to seek Comey’s assistance in rebutting what Spicer said were inaccurate reports about contacts during last year’s presidenti­al campaign. The FBI did not issue the statement requested by Priebus and has given no sign one is forthcomin­g.

“I don’t know what else we were supposed to do,” Spicer said.

The Justice Department has policies in place to limit communicat­ions between the White House and the FBI about pending investigat­ions. Trump officials on Friday not only confirmed contacts between Priebus and the FBI, but engaged in an extraordin­ary public airing of those private conversati­ons.

Spicer said it was the FBI that first approached the White House about the veracity of a New York Times story asserting Trump advisers had contacts with Russian intelligen­ce officials during the presidenti­al campaign. Spicer said Priebus then asked both FBI Director James Comey and Deputy Director Andrew McCabe if they would condemn the story publicly, which they declined to do.

“The chief of staff said, well, you’ve put us in a very difficult situation,” Spicer said. “You’ve told us that a story that made some fairly significan­t accusation­s was not true. And now you want us to just sit out there.”

The FBI would not comment on the matter or verify the White House account.

Friday’s revelation­s were the latest wrinkle in Trump’s already complicate­d relationsh­ip with the FBI and other intelligen­ce agencies. He’s accused intelligen­ce officials of releasing classified informatio­n about him to the media, declaring in a tweet Friday morning the FBI was “totally unable to stop the national security ‘leakers’ that have permeated our government for a long time.”

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi accused Priebus of “an outrageous breach of the FBI’s independen­ce” and called on the Justice Department’s inspector general to look into all conversati­ons Priebus and other White House officials have held with the FBI on ongoing investigat­ions.

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