Imperial Valley Press

Comey: Trump’s attacks on the FBI make America less safe

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s political attacks on the FBI make America less safe because they undermine public confidence that the bureau is an “honest, competent and independen­t” institutio­n, fired director James Comey told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

In a telephone interview, Comey also said it was logical that special counsel Robert Mueller would seek to interview Trump since the president is a subject of an investigat­ion into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Comey ruled out seeking elected office and said that, as a leader, he took responsibi­lity for some of the turmoil that has surrounded the FBI in recent months.

The ex-FBI chief said it was clear the president’s blistering attacks on the bureau, including Trump’s calls for scrutiny of his political opponents and his suggestion that Comey should be jailed, affect public safety in “hundreds and thousands of ways” — especially if crime victims no longer believe that an agent knocking on their door will help them or that an agent testifying before a jury can be believed.

“To the extent there’s been a marginal decrease in their credibilit­y at that doorway, in that courtroom and in thousands of other ways, their effectiven­ess is hit. So it’s hard,” Comey said.

“You’re not going to be able to see it, but logic tells me that it’s there, which is why it’s so important that we knock it off as a political culture.”

Trump fired Comey last May, an act now under investigat­ion by Mueller for possible obstructio­n of justice.

The White House initially said Trump had fired him over his handling of the Hillary Clinton email case, but the president later said he was thinking of “this Russia thing” when he made the move.

Comey is now promoting his new book, “A Higher Loyalty,” and has given a series of interviews in which he has described his interactio­ns with the president and characteri­zed him as morally unfit for office.

But his departure from the bureau has also been followed by a cascade of negative headlines that seem to have given ammunition to critics of the FBI, including Trump.

For one thing, Comey is involved in an unusually public disagreeme­nt with his former deputy director, Andrew McCabe, over the authorizat­ion of a news media disclosure. McCabe was fired in March amid a report from the Justice Department’s inspector general that concluded he had misled internal affairs investigat­ors.

Comey declined to say if he thought McCabe’s firing was appropriat­e, but he did say the FBI should hold people accountabl­e “in situations where they think they’ve been less than candid.”

In addition, the watchdog office is examining how Comey wrote and stored memos that documented his conversati­ons with Trump. He provided one of the memos to a friend and told him to disclose the substance of it to the media in hopes of getting a special counsel appointed. That memo was unclassifi­ed, but Trump has repeatedly criticized Comey as a “leaker.”

The FBI also has been besieged by allegation­s of political bias following anti-Trump text messages between two senior FBI officials who were, for a time, working on Mueller’s investigat­ion. Comey told the AP the text exchanges reflected “extremely poor judgment” on the part of the officials.

“The question I have to answer is: ‘Should I have done more to communicat­e to — especially to the people working on the most sensitive matters — a standard of behavior?’ And that’s a fair question,” Comey said.

But he also said many of the attacks, including on McCabe, were politicall­y motivated and driven by “the president’s effort to undermine the rule of law and the credibilit­y of the entire institutio­n.”

Asked about his interactio­ns with the president, Comey defended his decision to brief Trump as president-elect on the existence of salacious allegation­s in a dossier compiled as political opposition research. And he said he probably made the right call by informing Trump that he wasn’t personally under investigat­ion even though he declined to give Congress the same public reassuranc­e.

“If I was still going to be in the position of having to brief him privately, had I not said that, what would have happened thereafter?” Comey said.

Comey declined to discuss details of Mueller’s investigat­ion, but he praised Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who wrote a memo used to justify Comey’s firing.

“I think he’s conducted himself honorably since my firing, especially in regard to protecting the special counsel, the department and the rule of law,” Comey said. He also praised his own replacemen­t, Christophe­r Wray, calling him a “person of integrity.”

“This is a person of deep values,” he said. “I would rather be FBI director, but if I can’t be, I would want it to be someone like Chris.”

Comey wouldn’t say what questions he’d ask Trump if he were Mueller, but said it makes sense for Mueller to seek to question the president.

 ?? LUIS MAGANA ?? Former FBI director James Comey speaks during a stop on his book tour Monday in Washington. AP PHOTO/JOSE
LUIS MAGANA Former FBI director James Comey speaks during a stop on his book tour Monday in Washington. AP PHOTO/JOSE

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