Los Angeles Times

Fox News pulls analyst

Andrew Napolitano had made unverified claims that supported Trump’s accusation­s.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com

Former judge Andrew Napolitano had made unverified claims that supported President Trump’s wiretappin­g accusation­s.

Fox News senior judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano is being kept off the air indefinite­ly amid the controvers­y over his unverified claims that British intelligen­ce wiretapped Trump Tower at the behest of former President Obama.

Fox News did not respond to inquiries about Napolitano’s status Monday. Napolitano was conspicuou­sly missing from the network’s coverage of the confirmati­on hearings on Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch — an event in which he typically would have played a significan­t role. He has not been on the air since Thursday.

People familiar with the situation who could speak only on the condition of anonymity said Napolitano is not expected to be on Fox News Channel any time in the near future. Napolitano was not available for comment. On March 4, President Trump first tweeted the accusation that Obama ordered his “‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower just before the victory.”

“Nothing found,” Trump tweeted. “This is McCarthyis­m!”

The tweet has been widely discredite­d, but last week, Napolitano heightened the controvers­y — and caused a major embarrassm­ent for Fox News — when he presented a scenario on several programs that backed the accusation.

The former New Jersey Superior Court judge, citing unnamed sources, said that the British foreign surveillan­ce agency, the Government Communicat­ions Headquarte­rs, “most likely” provided Obama with transcript­s of Trump’s recorded calls.

“By bypassing all American intelligen­ce services, Obama would have had access to what he wanted with no Obama administra­tion fingerprin­ts,” Napolitano wrote in a column on FoxNews.com.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer cited Napolitano’s charge last week when asked why President Trump continues to stand by his initial claim. The British spy agency sharply denounced Napolitano’s allegation­s, saying they are “utterly ridiculous and should be ignored.”

That rebuttal did not stop President Trump from citing Napolitano as a source again when he was asked about the wiretappin­g claims at a Friday news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

“You shouldn’t be talking to me; you should be talking to Fox News,” said Trump, who described Napolitano as “a very talented lawyer.”

Fox News gives its analysts much more latitude than correspond­ents and anchors in regard to what they can say on the network.

But Napolitano said on one program that “Fox News has spoken to intelligen­ce community members who believe that surveillan­ce did occur, that it was done by British intelligen­ce.”

Fox News, however, did no such thing, forcing its anchors to walk back Napolitano’s statement.

“Fox News knows of no evidence of any kind that the now-president of the United States was surveilled at any time, in any way,” Shepard Smith told viewers Friday.

In a statement read on the Fox News program “MediaBuzz” on Sunday, Napolitano defended his comments. He said he “reported what the sources told me, reported it accurately and I do believe the substance of what they told me.”

On Monday, FBI Director James Comey testified before Congress that he had “no informatio­n” supporting Trump’s claims. He testified that the Obama administra­tion did not ask the British agency to spy on Trump — nor would it ever make such a request because it would be “expressly against the construct” of intelligen­ce agreements between the U.S. and its allies.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? ANDREW NAPOLITANO, above in 2011, cited unnamed sources when saying that British intelligen­ce “most likely” provided former President Obama with transcript­s of Donald Trump’s recorded calls in Trump Tower.
Richard Drew Associated Press ANDREW NAPOLITANO, above in 2011, cited unnamed sources when saying that British intelligen­ce “most likely” provided former President Obama with transcript­s of Donald Trump’s recorded calls in Trump Tower.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States