Los Angeles Times

FBI director rejects claim by president

Comey wants the Justice Department to say publicly that Trump’s wiretap assertion is false.

- By Laura King and Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — A combative White House refused to back down from President Trump’s unsubstant­iated assertion that his predecesso­r ordered the wiretappin­g of Trump Tower, demanding a congressio­nal investigat­ion into his claims, even as the director of the FBI took the extraordin­ary step of asking the Justice Department to publicly repudiate the president’s charge.

The statement Sunday by the White House and the appeal by FBI Director James B. Comey, which was confirmed by a Justice Department official, came on the heels of flat denials from former President Obama that he or his staff had authorized any such surveillan­ce, and from the former director of national intelligen­ce, who said no wiretappin­g had taken place.

The developmen­ts added a bizarre new element to the swirl of intrigue surroundin­g Russia’s role in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

The president’s Demo-

cratic opponents called the White House’s intimation of wrongdoing by Obama a bid to deflect attention from growing scrutiny of Trump associates’ ties to Russian officials during the campaign. Trump and the Kremlin have called the investigat­ions into Russian influence a “witch hunt.”

At least some Republican­s signaled willingnes­s to weigh Trump’s allegation. Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), the head of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a statement that an existing investigat­ion by his panel would now also encompass “inquiries into whether the government was conducting surveillan­ce activities on any political party’s campaign officials or surrogates.”

Other Republican­s expressed more skepticism. If Trump has evidence of wrongdoing by Obama, “it would probably be helpful if he gave more informatio­n,” said Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, a member of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. “But it would also be helpful if he just didn’t comment further and allowed us to do our work.”

The most striking repudiatio­n came from Comey, who privately asked Justice Department officials to issue a statement rebutting Trump’s assertion.

Comey argued that the Justice Department should publicly reject the claim as false because it impugned the integrity of the FBI by raising the specter that agents had broken the law by tapping Trump’s phones.

The Justice Department has taken no action on Comey’s request.

Mike Kortan, an FBI spokesman, and Sarah Isgur Flores, a Justice Department spokeswoma­n, declined to comment.

Despite Trump’s allegation­s made on Twitter, the president and his campaign were not targeted in wiretaps, according to current and former U.S. officials.

The FBI, however, is investigat­ing Russia’s meddling in the U.S. election and its potential ties to the Trump campaign or Trump associates, U.S. officials have said.

With authorizat­ion from the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, the FBI has long been permitted to conduct electronic surveillan­ce on Russian officials, suspected operatives and spies in the United States. It was that surveillan­ce that picked up conversati­ons Trump’s former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, had in December with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak.

Getting approval from the court to gather electronic surveillan­ce on Trump or his campaign would require a finding by a judge of probable cause to believe either that they were involved in a crime or that they were agents of a foreign power.

James R. Clapper, Obama’s director of national intelligen­ce, said no such warrant was obtained during his tenure to tap the phones of Trump or his campaign. He also said he had no knowledge of evidence that Trump’s campaign colluded with the Russians.

Speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Clapper said that he would have been in a position to know if any surveillan­ce warrant of Trump’s headquarte­rs had been issued, and that none had been.

“There was no such wiretap activity mounted against the president-elect at the time, as a candidate, or against his campaign,” Clapper said.

In a statement calling for a congressio­nal inquiry of the former president, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer cited unspecifie­d but “very troubling” reports of “politicall­y motivated” investigat­ions by Obama’s executive branch, but he did not offer any evidence to back up the claim or say where the reports originated.

The White House statement added that there would be no further comment from Trump or his team on the matter until congressio­nal oversight of Obama’s actions had taken place, a stance that appeared designed not only to forestall opponents’ questions, but also perhaps to head off any further talk — or Twitter commentary — by the president himself.

Trump spent the weekend at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago.

His string of tweets on Saturday, alleging wiretappin­g and personally attacking Obama as a “bad (or sick) guy,” seemed to have caught his own staff flatfooted — a pattern that has occurred frequently in his still-young administra­tion, as aides have struggled to publicly parse unsupporte­d Trump assertions without directly contradict­ing the president.

On Sunday, Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, under extended questionin­g by ABC’s Martha Raddatz on “This Week,” seemed at a loss when asked how exactly the president had learned of the purported surveillan­ce.

“I think he’s going off informatio­n that he’s seen,” she finally said, without providing any detail. Although he has access to detailed intelligen­ce briefings, Trump is known to be an avid consumer of reports generated by conspiracy-minded websites and talk shows operating outside the journalist­ic mainstream.

An article published Friday on the Breitbart News website repeated a claim by conservati­ve radio host Mark Levin about surveillan­ce of the Trump campaign, although it is unclear whether the president was responding to that.

Russia’s role in the campaign has been a source of concern and confusion for months, beginning with Trump’s often-expressed affinity for Russian President Vladimir Putin and continuing apace as the president denigrated the NATO alliance, declared he held Putin and close U.S. ally Angela Merkel in equal esteem, and suggested he would consider accepting Russia’s 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula.

Questions over whether Trump’s transition team sought to assure Putin that Obama-imposed sanctions would be lifted after the president-elect took office led investigat­ors to pore over phone conversati­ons between Flynn and Ambassador Kislyak.

The national security advisor was forced out last month after only 24 days on the job when it emerged he had misled Vice President Mike Pence about the nature of his discussion­s with Kislyak.

Russia questions also tripped up Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, who during his confirmati­on hearings said he had not met with any Russians. In fact, he had met at least twice with Kislyak in the summer and fall.

Sessions is to provide amended testimony on Monday in writing.

Amid the burgeoning scandal, even Republican­s seemed to be hoping the president would not repeat the wiretap claim in such a seemingly offhand fashion.

Sen. Marco Rubio (RFla.) said of Trump’s claim: “I’m not sure what it is he is talking about.”

“Perhaps the president has informatio­n that is not yet available to us or the public,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Nation.” If the allegation is true, “obviously we’re going to find out very quickly, and if it isn’t, then obviously he’ll have to explain what he meant by it.”

Democrats saw an effort by Trump to create a distractio­n from persistent questions about the Russian role in the campaign. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco called Trump the “deflector in chief.”

“You make up something, then you have the press write about it, and then you say, ‘Everybody’s writing about this charge,’” she said, also on CNN. “It’s the tool of an authoritar­ian.”

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank), a ranking member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, called Trump’s wiretappin­g claim baseless — but raised the possibilit­y that looking into it could be a way to widen the door to a bigger investigat­ion of Russian involvemen­t.

If the White House wanted answers to questions about alleged surveillan­ce, Schiff said in a statement, Comey should be summoned to “answer any question put to him that is pertinent to the Russia investigat­ion.”

Democrats also signaled they were not ready to let the Sessions’ statements drop despite his agreement to recuse himself from campaign-related investigat­ions. Sen. Al Franken (DMinn.) said on “This Week” that after seemingly making misleading statements to the Senate Judiciary Committee, the attorney general should make a return appearance to “explain himself.”

Sessions has not signaled any willingnes­s to do so.

 ?? T. Katopodis AFP/Getty Images ?? JAMES COMEY says Trump has impugned the integrity of the FBI.
T. Katopodis AFP/Getty Images JAMES COMEY says Trump has impugned the integrity of the FBI.
 ?? Photograph­s by Molly Riley AFP/Getty Images ?? PROTESTERS march against President Trump at the Russian Embassy in Washington on Saturday. Republican lawmakers were divided on Trump’s claim.
Photograph­s by Molly Riley AFP/Getty Images PROTESTERS march against President Trump at the Russian Embassy in Washington on Saturday. Republican lawmakers were divided on Trump’s claim.
 ??  ?? A RALLY in support of Trump outside the White House on Saturday. Democrats said the president was trying to create a distractio­n with his allegation.
A RALLY in support of Trump outside the White House on Saturday. Democrats said the president was trying to create a distractio­n with his allegation.

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