Chattanooga Times Free Press

FBI’s use of informants as old as the agency itself

- BY ANNE FLAHERTY

WASHINGTON — Snitches, moles, spies, whistleblo­wers. Government informants are an age-old investigat­ive tool that’s as much a part of the FBI’s 110 years of history as J. Edgar Hoover or its “10 Most Wanted” list.

In the case of President Donald Trump, the FBI called on a longtime informant — identified by several news outlets as an American professor living in Britain — to ascertain whether Trump’s campaign aides accepted help from the Russian government to sink Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al ambitions. That jury is still out, with a special counsel appointed to investigat­e.

In the meantime, Trump and closely aligned Republican­s in Congress have flipped the tables on the politicall­y damaging Russia probe by calling for a new investigat­ion — this time into whether the FBI spied on his presidenti­al campaign in its own bid to sway the 2016 election.

“If the FBI or DOJ was infiltrati­ng a campaign for the benefit of another campaign, that is a really big deal,” Trump wrote last weekend in a tweet punctuated with his campaign slogan: “Drain the Swamp!”

CRAZY? MAYBE NOT.

The FBI has successful­ly investigat­ed big-city mobsters, the Ku Klux Klan and domestic terrorists. But it also has probed the work of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and the Beatles’ John Lennon.

Claiming that the civil rights movement was under communist influence and a threat to national security, Hoover’s FBI closely monitored King and others with surveillan­ce, informants and wiretaps. At one point, the head of the FBI’s intelligen­ce operations told a congressio­nal committee that King was subjected to the same tactics as Soviet agents and, “No holds were barred.”

The secret recording campaign failed to prove King was a communist, but it did provide evidence of the civil rights leader’s extramarit­al affairs — informatio­n that could have been used by his political opponents in government.

Since Hoover’s death, the FBI has enacted several reforms including 10-year term limits on its director and new rules about domestic investigat­ions intended in part to insulate the agency from politics.

HAVING SAID THAT …

The mere existence of a government informant in an investigat­ion doesn’t mean a probe is tainted. It’s a legal and widely accepted practice that’s hardly a secret. And Trump’s accusation that the FBI “planted” a source on his campaign doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.

The agency itself addresses the practice on its web site, noting “special care is taken to carefully evaluate and closely supervise their use so the rights of individual­s under investigat­ion are not infringed.”

Informants “may receive compensati­on in some instances for their informatio­n and expenses,” the FBI writes, but they aren’t considered employees.

The agency seemed acutely aware of the political pitfalls of investigat­ing Trump’s campaign, keeping it under wraps in its early stages and, according to reports, sending a longtime source to question lower level aides.

THE FINE PRINT

While legal, employing an informant is tricky tradecraft. Government informants often have sketchy dealings and their own agendas.

In the 1960s, it was New York mobster Joe Valachi who peeled back the inner workings of the crime families who employed him. In the 1980s, Henry Hill became the FBI’s prized informant on the mob before disappeari­ng into the Witness Protection Program, his life later portrayed in the film “Goodfellas.”

According to news reports, the FBI informant on the Russia investigat­ion was a longtime U. S. government insider tied to the 1980 “debategate” scandal in which aides to Ronald Reagan obtained documents Jimmy Carter was using to prepare for a presidenti­al debate.

WHERE WE GO FROM HERE

In Trump’s corner are several House Republican­s who are demanding access to the FBI’s closely guarded secrets in the Russia probe, including details on the Russia informant.

“Let’s cut through the recalcitra­nt bureaucrac­y, get the truth, and hold people accountabl­e!” tweeted GOP Rep. Ron DeSantis of Florida.

Top FBI and Justice Department officials have already agreed to meet with congressio­nal leaders and “review” highly classified documents in the case. Also, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said the Justice Department’s inspector general will look into whether any surveillan­ce was politicall­y motivated.

But DeSantis and other Trump supporters, including Rep. Lee Zeldin of New York and Mark Meadows of North Carolina, are suggesting that might not be good enough. They want their own special counsel to investigat­e misconduct at the FBI and Justice Department under President Barack Obama — a tactic that would flip the political narrative back to Obama and Clinton and energize conservati­ve voters ahead of this fall’s midterm elections.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Conservati­ve pundits say liberals would be outraged had the FBI put Obama’s campaigns under surveillan­ce. Liberal pundits counter that conservati­ves would be outraged if Clinton’s campaign aides sought or accepted the help of the Russian government ahead of the election, and the FBI ignored it.

All of this puts pressure on special counsel Robert Mueller to conclude his investigat­ion in what has become the most politicall­y charged atmosphere in Washington in decades.

“Spying on campaigns is extraordin­ary. Mueller better have the goods,” tweeted Ari Fleischer, the White House press secretary under President George W. Bush, on Tuesday.

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