Houston Chronicle

Fired FBI chief set to testify next Thursday

Democrats raise new questions about Sessions

- By Eric Tucker and Deb Riechmann

James Comey will testify at a hearing in Congress that could shed light on his private conversati­ons with the president.

WASHINGTON — James Comey, fired last month as FBI director amid a federal investigat­ion into connection­s between Russia and the Trump campaign, is set to testify next Thursday at a highly anticipate­d congressio­nal hearing that could shed light on his private conversati­ons with the president in the weeks before his dismissal.

The Senate intelligen­ce committee announced Comey’s appearance, and a Comey associate said he had been cleared to testify by Robert Mueller, another former FBI director now overseeing that investigat­ion as special counsel.

Also on Thursday, Democrats raised more questions about contacts during the campaign between the Russian ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak, and President Donald Trump’s attorney general, former Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.

Sessions, a close Trump adviser, withdrew from the Russia investigat­ion in March after acknowledg­ing two previously undisclose­d contacts with Kislyak last summer and fall.

Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Al Franken, D-Minn., released a letter urging the FBI to investigat­e whether Sessions had falsely testified under oath when he said at his January confirmati­on hearing that he hadn’t had any contacts with Russia.

‘Needs to resign’

“If it is determined that the attorney general still has not been truthful with Congress and the American people about his contacts with Russian officials during the campaign, he needs to resign,” the senators wrote.

In addition to the two meetings that Sessions has acknowledg­ed, the senators pointed to the possibilit­y of a separate encounter at an April 2016 Trump campaign event that Sessions and Kislyak attended.

The Justice Department has acknowledg­ed that Sessions was at the Mayflower Hotel event in Washington, but said there were no private or side conversati­ons that day.

Focus on Trump talks

Comey’s testimony probably will focus on the private meetings the former FBI director had with Trump and subsequent­ly chronicled in internal memos and recounted to associates who have divulged their contents to media outlets.

Comey’s associates have said Comey told them that Trump asked him at a January dinner to pledge his loyalty to the president and, at an Oval Office meeting weeks later, asked Comey to consider ending an FBI investigat­ion into Trump’s first national security adviser, Michael Flynn.

The White House has denied those characteri­zations.

The scope of Comey’s testimony was not exactly clear, though Mueller was permitting him to speak publicly. Mueller’s investigat­ion could include a look at the circumstan­ces of Comey’s firing, especially since Trump has said publicly that he was thinking of “this Russia thing” when he made the move.

It is possible that the Trump White House could try to raise executive privilege claims in arguing that any conversati­ons with the president could not be discussed publicly.

A similar back-andforth occurred before the testimony last month of former acting Attorney General Sally Yates, though the White House said it did not try to block her appearance.

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