Chattanooga Times Free Press

COMEY: I WAS FIRED FOR RUSSIA PROBE

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND ERICA WERNER

WASHINGTON — Former FBI Director James Comey asserted Thursday that President Donald Trump fired him to interfere with his investigat­ion of Russia’s role in the 2016 election and its ties to the Trump campaign.

“It’s my judgment that I was fired because of the Russia investigat­ion,” Comey told the Senate intelligen­ce committee in explosive testimony that threatened to undermine Trump’s presidency.

“I was fired in some way to change, or the endeavor was to change, the way the Russia investigat­ion was being conducted,” Comey testified under oath. “That is a very big deal, and not just because it involves me.”

Comey also accused the Trump administra­tion of spreading “lies, plain and simple” about him and the FBI in the aftermath of his abrupt firing last month, declaring the administra­tion then “chose to defame me and, more importantl­y, the FBI” by claiming the bureau was in disorder under his leadership. And in testimony that exposed deep distrust between the president and the veteran lawman, Comey described intense discomfort about their one-on-one conversati­ons, saying he decided he immediatel­y needed to document the discussion­s in memos.

“I was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting, so I thought it really important to document,” Comey said. “I knew there might come a day when I might need a record of what happened not only to defend myself but to protect the FBI.”

The revelation­s came as Comey delivered his much anticipate­d first public telling of his relationsh­ip with Trump, speaking at a packed Senate intelligen­ce committee hearing that brought Washington and parts of the country to a standstill as all eyes were glued to screens showing the testimony.

The former director immediatel­y dove into the heart of the fraught political controvers­y around his firing and whether Trump interfered in the bureau’s Russia investigat­ion, as he elaborated on written testimony delivered Wednesday. In that testimony he had already disclosed that Trump demanded his “loyalty” and directly pushed him to “lift the cloud” of investigat­ion by declaring publicly the president was not the target of the FBI probe into his campaign’s Russia ties.

Comey said he declined to do so in large part because of the “duty to correct” that would be created if that situation changed. Comey also said in his written testimony that Trump, in a strange private encounter near the grandfathe­r clock in the Oval Office, pushed him to end his investigat­ion into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia asked Comey the key question: “Do you believe this rises to obstructio­n of justice?”

“I don’t know. That’s Bob Mueller’s job to sort that out,” Comey responded, referring to the newly appointed special counsel who has taken over the Justice Department’s Russia investigat­ion.

In a startling disclosure, Comey revealed that after his firing, he actually tried to spur the special counsel’s appointmen­t by giving one of his memos about Trump to a friend of his to release to the press.

“My judgment was I need to get that out into the public square,” Comey said.

Trump’s private attorney, Marc Kasowitz, seized on Comey’s affirmatio­n that he told Trump he was not personally under investigat­ion. Though Comey said he interprete­d Trump’s comments as a directive to shut down the Flynn investigat­ion, Kasowitz also maintained in his written statement that Comey’s testimony showed the president “never, in form or substance, directed or suggested that Mr. Comey stop investigat­ing anyone, including suggesting that Mr. Comey ‘let Flynn go.’”

The Republican National Committee and other White House allies worked feverishly to lessen any damage from the hearing, trying to undermine Comey’s credibilit­y by issuing press releases and even ads pointing to a past instance where the FBI had had to clean up the director’s testimony to Congress. Republican­s and Trump’s own lawyer seized on Comey’s confirmati­on, in his written testimony, of Trump’s claim that Comey had told him three times the president was not directly under investigat­ion.

Trump himself was expected to dispute Comey’s claims the president demanded loyalty and asked the FBI director to drop the investigat­ion into Flynn, according to a person close to the president’s legal team who demanded anonymity because of not being authorized to discuss legal strategy. The president has not yet publicly denied the specifics of Comey’s accounts but has broadly challenged his credibilit­y, tweeting last month Comey “better hope there are no ‘tapes’” of the conversati­ons.

“Lordy, I hope there are tapes,” Comey remarked at one point Thursday, suggesting such evidence would back up his account over any claims from the president.

Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California asked the question that many Republican­s have raised in the weeks since Comey’s firing as one media leak followed another revealing Comey’s claims about Trump’s inappropri­ate interactio­ns with him.

Discussing the Oval Office meeting where Comey said Trump asked him to back off Flynn, Feinstein asked: “Why didn’t you stop and say, ‘Mr. President, this is wrong,’?”

“That’s a great question,” Comey said. “Maybe if I were stronger I would have. I was so stunned by the conversati­on I just took it in.”

The hearing unfolded amid intense political interest, and within a remarkable political context as Comey delivered detrimenta­l testimony about the president who fired him, a president who won election only after Comey damaged his opponent, Hillary Clinton, in the final days of the campaign. Clinton has blamed her defeat on Comey’s Oct. 28 announceme­nt he was re-opening the investigat­ion of her email practices. “If the election were on Oct. 27, I would be your president,” Clinton said last month.

Thursday’s hearing included discussion of that email investigat­ion, as Comey disclosed that then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch instructed him to refer to the issue as a “matter,” not an “investigat­ion.”

“That concerned me because that language tracked how the campaign was talking about the FBI’s work and that’s concerning,” Comey said. “We had an investigat­ion open at the time so that gave me a queasy feeling.”

Many Democrats still blame Comey for Clinton’s loss, leading Trump to apparently believe they would applaud him for firing Comey last month. The opposite was the case as the firing created an enormous political firestorm that has stalled Trump’s legislativ­e agenda on Capitol Hill and taken over Washington.

Under questionin­g Thursday, Comey strongly asserted the intelligen­ce community’s conclusion that Russia did indeed meddle in the 2016 election.

“There should be no fuzz on this. The Russians interfered,” Comey stated firmly. “That happened. It’s about as unfake as you can possibly get.”

Trump has begrudging­ly accepted the U.S. intelligen­ce assessment that Russia interfered with the election. But he has also suggested he doesn’t believe it, saying Russia is a “ruse” and calling the investigat­ion into the matter a “witch hunt.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former FBI Director James Comey is questioned Thursday at a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on Capitol Hill.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former FBI Director James Comey is questioned Thursday at a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on Capitol Hill.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former FBI Director James Comey speaks during a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing Thursday on Capitol Hill.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former FBI Director James Comey speaks during a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing Thursday on Capitol Hill.

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