Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

IRS asks probe into Comey and McCabe audits

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON >> The IRS commission­er has asked the Treasury Department’s internal watchdog to immediatel­y review the circumstan­ces surroundin­g intensive tax audits that targeted ex-FBI Director James Comey and former Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, frequent targets of Donald Trump’s ire during his presidency.

IRS spokespers­on Jodie Reynolds said Thursday the agency has officially referred the matter to the inspector general for tax administra­tion after Commission­er Charles Rettig, who was nominated to the job by Trump and is a close ally of the former president, personally reached out.

Reynolds insisted it is “ludicrous and untrue to suggest that senior IRS officials somehow targeted specific individual­s” for such audits.

The New York Times reported Wednesday that the former FBI leaders were subjected to rare IRS audits of their tax returns. The newspaper said Comey was informed of the audit in 2019 and McCabe learned he was under scrutiny in 2021. Rettig, who term is set to expire in November, faced blistering criticism from Democrats for helping to shield Trump’s tax returns from the public.

Trump repeatedly attacked Comey and McCabe over the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion that shadowed his presidency for years. Trump fired Comey in 2017 in the midst of that investigat­ion, which ultimately was taken over by special counsel Robert Mueller, named to that job by Trump’s Justice Department.

Comey

McCabe

The FBI inquiry began in the summer of 2016, months before Trump was elected. The bureau had learned that a former Trump campaign aide had been saying, before it was publicly known, that Russia had dirt on Trump’s Democratic rival for the White House, Hillary Clinton, in the form of stolen emails.

Those emails were hacked from Democratic email accounts by Russian intelligen­ce. They were released by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks before the election in what U.S. officials have said was an effort to harm Clinton’s campaign and help Trump’s.

A 2019 review by the Justice Department’s inspector general knocked down multiple lines of attack against the Russia investigat­ion, finding that officials properly opened the inquiry and that law enforcemen­t leaders were not motivated by political bias. The watchdog did identify a number of problems in the investigat­ion, leading the FBI to take steps aimed at fixing some fundamenta­l operations, such as applying for surveillan­ce warrants and interactin­g with confidenti­al sources.

McCabe was fired in March 2018 after the Justice Department’s inspector general concluded he had authorized the release of informatio­n to a newspaper reporter and then misled internal investigat­ors about his role in the leak.

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