Los Angeles Times

Ex-official on Benghazi panel calls it partisan

- By Evan Halper evan.halper@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — A former investigat­or with the Republican-led congressio­nal committee examining the attacks in Benghazi in 2012 says he was fired after resisting pressure to narrowly focus his investigat­ive work on Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Maj. Bradley Podliska, who describes himself as a conservati­ve Republican, told CNN that in March the panel abandoned its broader investigat­ion of the events that led to the deaths in Benghazi, Libya, of four Americans, including Ambassador J. Christophe­r Stevens, to focus instead on Clinton’s use of a private email server while secretary of State.

He said that by the time he was dismissed, the work of the House Select Committee on Benghazi had become “a partisan investigat­ion.”

The intelligen­ce officer in the Air Force Reserve is planning to file a wrongfulte­rmination suit in federal court next month, as first reported by CNN and the New York Times. He said he was fired for refusing to go along with the new direction of the committee’s work, as well as for taking leave to meet his military service requiremen­ts.

Democrats have long said that the investigat­ion into the attacks on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi was driven by politics.

The committee forcefully denied those allegation­s. It said in a statement that Podliska never raised such concerns while with the panel, and that he himself had inappropri­ately used committee resources to create a PowerPoint “hit piece” on members of the Obama administra­tion, including then-Secretary of State Clinton.

The committee’s work has been a point of focus in the presidenti­al campaign. Clinton, who is seeking the Democratic nomination, is set to testify Oct. 22. Democrats have described the inquiry as a partisan witch hunt and a waste of taxpayer money, and party members are considerin­g resigning from the panel in protest.

The Clinton campaign’s charges of bias on the committee were bolstered recently by comments on Fox News by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (RBakersfie­ld). He boasted that the committee’s work had driven down Clinton’s popularity with voters.

Podliska told CNN he does not support Clinton and will support whoever wins the GOP nomination. He said, “The victims’ families, they deserve the truth — whether or not Hillary Clinton was involved, whether or not other individual­s were involved.”

“Hillary Clinton has a lot of explaining to do,” he said in the CNN interview, which will air at 9 a.m. Sunday. “We, however, did not need to shift resources to hyper-focus on Hillary Clinton. We didn’t need to de-emphasize and in some cases drop the investigat­ion on different agencies, different organizati­ons and different individual­s. … There’s wrongdoing here, and I think it needs to stop.”

Podliska, who said he was reprimande­d for using his work email to invite colleagues to a nonwork event, said there was an “Animal House” atmosphere, but he was not part of it.

He described to CNN an office environmen­t in which employees spent their days Web surfing and sometimes drinking at work.

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