Los Angeles Times

New twist further roils inquiry into Trump team

Rep. Devin Nunes reveals secret meeting at the White House.

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), conceded Monday that the source for a dramatic statement he made last week about possible intelligen­ce surveillan­ce of members of President Trump’s transition team was someone he had met with at the White House.

The disclosure, showing coordinati­on between the White House and Nunes, added to questions about whether the congressma­n could lead the intelligen­ce panel in an impartial investigat­ion of Russian involvemen­t in the presidenti­al election and possible links to Trump’s advisors. The panel’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Adam B. Schiff of Burbank, said in a statement Monday that Nunes should step aside from the investigat­ion.

Nunes and his spokesman said he went to the White House to meet his source because there was a facility there for reviewing classified informatio­n.

“Chairman Nunes met with his source at the White House grounds in order to have proximity to a secure location where he could view the informatio­n provided by the source,” said the spokesman, Jack Langer.

A similar facility exists on Capitol Hill, however, which Nunes would routinely have access to.

Langer said the source of Nunes’ informatio­n was not a White House staff member. Any person entering the White House complex to meet with Nunes, however, would need to have been cleared by White House officials, who also control access to the secure facilities there.

Separately, the leaders of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, which is conducting its own inquiry into possible links between the Trump campaign and Rus-

sia, said Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, had agreed to answer the panel’s questions about his contacts with Russia.

“We expect him to be able to provide answers to key questions that have arisen in our inquiry,” Chairman Richard M. Burr (R-N.C.) and Sen. Mark R. Warner (DVa.), the top Democrat on the committee, said in a statement.

“The timing of Mr. Kushner’s testimony is still being determined, but will only come after the committee determines that it has received any documents or informatio­n necessary to ensure that the meeting is productive for all sides,” the lawmakers said.

During the transition, Kushner was one of several Trump associates who met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

The New York Times reported that Kushner, at Kislyak’s request, also met with Sergey N. Gorkov, the chief of Vneshecono­mbank, a Moscow-based stateowned bank that was placed on a U.S. sanctions list after Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Kushner had “volunteere­d to go in and sit down with” the committee members “based on the questions that surround this.”

Meeting with individual­s from foreign government­s was “part of his job,” Spicer said.

The disclosure­s involving Nunes added another twist to a bizarre series of events last week that roiled the House intelligen­ce panel’s investigat­ion.

On Monday, FBI Director James B. Comey testified before Nunes’ committee that his investigat­ors were looking at possible “coordinati­on” during the presidenti­al campaign between Russian officials and people close to Trump.

On Tuesday night, according to his latest statement, Nunes went to the White House, where someone showed him documents related to U.S. intelligen­ce surveillan­ce. The documents included references to some Trump transition officials, he later said.

On Wednesday, Nunes announced to reporters that he had seen evidence indicating that people close to Trump had been subjects of surveillan­ce during the transition. He announced that he was going to the White House to brief Trump about the revelation­s and suggested that some of Trump’s aides might have been improperly subject to surveillan­ce or had their names “unmasked” in intelligen­ce reports.

Later that day, Trump said he felt partly vindicated by Nunes’ disclosure, saying that it backed up his previous claim that he had been “wiretapped” before the election by President Obama. Nunes, however, said that “never happened” and that the surveillan­ce he referred to took place after the election and was legal.

On Thursday, Nunes apologized to committee members for not having shown the evidence to them before briefing Trump.

And his spokesman conceded that Nunes did not know “for sure” that any Trump aides had actually been subject to surveillan­ce, only that their names had appeared in intelligen­ce reports, which could have resulted from other people talking about them.

Nunes’ evolving accounts appeared to raise at least two possible explanatio­ns that could cause political damage to him and the White House:

One possibilit­y is that his statement was an authorized leak by the White House, aimed at shifting attention away from Trump’s wiretappin­g claim.

Nunes has denied that the White House orchestrat­ed his statements.

Another is that the informatio­n was an unplanned disclosure from someone with White House access that Nunes immediatel­y disclosed to Trump, despite the fact that the president and his aides are subjects of the Intelligen­ce Committee’s investigat­ion. In addition to Schiff, several Democrats said Nunes should be disqualifi­ed from heading an inquiry into whether Trump’s aides had improper contacts with Russia, though there is no sign that House leaders are considerin­g replacing him.

“The chairman can no longer continue in that position,” Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a CNN interview. Getting documents at the White House raised “very serious questions” about Nunes’ independen­ce, Cardin said. Senate Democratic leader Charles E. Schumer of New York also called for Nunes to be replaced.

In a CNN interview, asked why he needed to go to the White House rather than use the secure intelligen­ce facility at the Capitol, Nunes said, “Congress has not been given this informatio­n, these documents.” His spokesman, Langer, said in an email that “because of classifica­tion rules, the source could not simply put the documents in a backpack and walk them over to the House Intelligen­ce Committee space.”

“The White House grounds was the best location to safeguard the proper chain of custody and classifica­tion of these documents, so the chairman could view them in a legal way,” he said.

Another unresolved question is who were the targets of the surveillan­ce? Nunes said he believed the Trump aides mentioned in the reports he saw were there because they had contacts with people covered by foreign intelligen­ce surveillan­ce. U.S. intelligen­ce conducts surveillan­ce on citizens of a large number of foreign countries. Nunes has not said which countries were involved in this case except that it was not Russia.

Another question is whether any Trump aides actually had their names improperly unmasked in the documents.

Langer said that Nunes was “extremely concerned by the possible improper unmasking of names of U.S. citizens.” But in his CNN interview, asked about the people referred to in the report, Nunes said “it was pretty clear who they were talking about,” but “for the most part they were masked.”

Schiff noted that he had not seen the documents Nunes claims to have seen. After Nunes apologized to members of his committee Thursday and promised to “thoroughly investigat­e” the surveillan­ce, several lawmakers said Nunes had promised to provide them the surveillan­ce informatio­n he had received. That has not occurred yet.

Last week, Spicer had dismissed speculatio­n that the White House had supplied Nunes with the informatio­n, saying that the suggestion did not pass the “smell test.” He added, however, that he did not know for sure what Nunes had told Trump or where his informatio­n came from.

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? HOUSE INTELLIGEN­CE COMMITTEE Chairman Devin Nunes went to the White House on Wednesday to brief President Trump. The night before, he said, he met a source there who showed him secret documents.
Mark Wilson Getty Images HOUSE INTELLIGEN­CE COMMITTEE Chairman Devin Nunes went to the White House on Wednesday to brief President Trump. The night before, he said, he met a source there who showed him secret documents.

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