Houston Chronicle

FBI fires agent who criticized Trump

Strzok under fire for inflammato­ry text messages

- By Adam Goldman and Michael S. Schmidt

WASHINGTON — Peter Strzok, the FBI senior counterint­elligence agent who disparaged President Donald Trump in inflammato­ry text messages and helped oversee the Hillary Clinton email and Russia investigat­ions, has been fired for violating bureau policies, Strzok’s lawyer said Monday.

Trump and his allies seized on the texts — exchanged during the 2016 campaign with a former FBI lawyer, Lisa Page — in assailing the Russia investigat­ion as an illegitima­te “witch hunt.” Strzok, who rose over 20 years at the FBI to become one of its most experience­d counterint­elligence agents, was a key figure in the early months of the inquiry.

Along with writing the texts, Strzok was accused of sending a highly sensitive search warrant to his personal email account.

The FBI had been under immense political pressure by Trump to dismiss Strzok, who was removed last summer from the staff of special counsel Robert Mueller. The president has repeatedly denounced Strzok in posts on Twitter and on Monday expressed satisfacti­on that he had

been sacked.

“Agent Peter Strzok was just fired from the FBI — finally. The list of bad players in the FBI & DOJ gets longer & longer. Based on the fact that Strzok was in charge of the Witch Hunt, will it be dropped? It is a total Hoax. No Collusion, No Obstructio­n — I just fight back!” Trump wrote.

He continued, “Just fired Agent Strzok, formerly of the FBI, was in charge of the Crooked Hillary Clinton sham investigat­ion. It was a total fraud on the American public and should be properly redone!”

Trump’s victory traces back to June, when Strzok’s conduct was laid out in a wide-ranging inspector general’s report on how the FBI handled the investigat­ion of Clinton’s emails in the run-up to the 2016 election. The report was critical of Strzok’s conduct in sending the texts, and the bureau’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity said that Strzok should be suspended for 60 days and demoted. Strzok had testified before the House in July about how he had not allowed his political views to interfere with the investigat­ions he was overseeing.

But Strzok’s lawyer said the deputy director of the FBI, David Bowdich, had overruled the Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity and fired Strzok.

A spokeswoma­n for the FBI did not respond to a message seeking comment about why Strzok was dismissed rather than demoted. Firing Strzok, however, removes a favorite target of Trump from the ranks of the FBI and gives Bowdich and the FBI director, Christophe­r Wray, a chance to move beyond the president’s ire.

Aitan Goelman, Strzok’s lawyer, denounced his client’s dismissal. “The decision to fire Special Agent Strzok is not only a departure from typical bureau practice, but also contradict­s Director Wray’s testimony to Congress and his assurances that the FBI intended to follow its regular process in this and all personnel matters,” Goelman said.

“This decision should be deeply troubling to all Americans,” Goelman added. “A lengthy investigat­ion and multiple rounds of congressio­nal testimony failed to produce a shred of evidence that Special Agent Strzok’s personal views ever affected his work.”

Strzok’s text exchanges with Page demonstrat­ed animosity toward Trump. In one, Page asks: Trump is “not ever going to become president, right? Right?!” Strzok responds: “No. No he won’t. We’ll stop it.” The inspector general, who uncovered the messages, found no evidence that the pair imposed their political views on their investigat­ive decisions but cited that exchange as “not only indicative of a biased state of mind but, even more seriously, implies a willingnes­s to take official action to impact the presidenti­al candidate’s electoral prospects.”

The report by the inspector general, Michael Horowitz, that preceded Strzok’s firing not only criticized his conduct in sending the texts but also his use of personal email accounts to handle sensitive informatio­n. In addition, the inspector general criticized Strzok’s decision not to move swiftly to examine new emails related to the Clinton investigat­ion just weeks before the 2016 election.

Strzok became emblematic of Trump’s unfounded assertions that a so-called deep state of bureaucrat­s opposed to him was underminin­g his presidency. Strzok told lawmakers that he never leaked informatio­n about the Russia inquiry, which could have upended the election and hurt Trump’s chances of becoming president.

After Horowitz uncovered the texts, Mueller, who had by then taken over the inquiry, removed Strzok from his team.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Peter Strzok was an early figure in the Russia probe.
Associated Press Peter Strzok was an early figure in the Russia probe.

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