Lodi News-Sentinel

Sessions denies lying on Russia

- By Eric Tucker and Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday displayed a hazy memory of the Trump campaign’s discussion­s about and dealings with Russians in the 2016 election, denying he ever lied to Congress about those contacts but blaming the chaos of the race for fogging his recollecti­ons.

During more than five hours of testimony to Congress, Sessions sought to explain away apparent contradict­ions in his earlier accounts by citing the exhausting nature of Donald Trump’s upstart but surging bid for the White House. He also denied under repeated questionin­g from Democrats that he had been influenced by Trump.

But after saying under oath months ago that he was unaware of any relationsh­ip between the campaign and Russia, Sessions acknowledg­ed for the first time that the arrest of a low-level campaign adviser reminded him after all of a meeting at which the aide, George Papadopoul­os, proposed setting up a get-together between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“After reading his account and to the best of my recollecti­on,” Sessions told the House Judiciary Committee, “I believe that I wanted to make clear to him that he was not authorized to represent the campaign with the Russian government or any other foreign government for that matter.

“But I did not recall this event, which occurred 18 months before my testimony of a few weeks ago,” he added, “and I would gladly have reported it had I remembered it because I pushed back against his suggestion that I thought may have been improper.”

Papadopoul­os was arrested by the FBI and pleaded guilty last month to lying to authoritie­s about his own foreign contacts during the campaign. That guilty plea came in a wide-ranging criminal investigat­ion led by former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who as the Justice Department’s special counsel is looking into whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russia to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidenti­al election and into whether the firing of James Comey as FBI director was an effort to obstruct justice.

During the Trump campaign, Sessions, then an Alabama senator, led a campaign foreign policy advisory council on which Papadopolo­us served. The attorney general has struggled since January to move past questions about his own foreign contacts and about his knowledge of Russian outreach efforts during the election effort.

Each congressio­nal hearing, including Tuesday’s, has focused on Sessions’ own recollecti­ons, and he recused himself in March from the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into election meddling after acknowledg­ing two previously undisclose­d encounters during the campaign with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

Questions for Sessions have only deepened since the guilty plea last month of Papadopoul­os and recent statements to congressio­nal investigat­ors by another foreign policy adviser, Carter Page, who has said he alerted Sessions last year about a trip he planned to take to Russia during the campaign. Sessions insisted Tuesday that he did not recall that conversati­on with Page at all and appeared incredulou­s at times that he could be expected to remember the details of conversati­ons from more than a year ago.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS ?? U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies Tuesday during a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies Tuesday during a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C.

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