Los Angeles Times

House inquiry clears Nunes

Informatio­n shared by the GOP congressma­n in Russia probe wasn’t classified, panel finds.

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — The House Ethics Committee on Thursday cleared Rep. Devin Nunes of allegation­s that he disclosed classified informatio­n related to the House investigat­ion of Russian meddling in last year’s election.

The committee said in a statement that experts it interviewe­d determined that the informatio­n the House Select Intelligen­ce Committee chairman divulged was not classified.

When the complaint was filed in April, the Tulare Republican said he would step away from leading the intelligen­ce committee’s Russia investigat­ion. But Nunes did not recuse himself, and many Democrats have complained he has been too involved in the investigat­ion.

In a statement thanking the committee for clearing him, Nunes did not address whether he would formally retake control of the investigat­ion.

The ethics complaint was filed after Nunes disclosed at a hastily called news conference that an unidentifi­ed source told him dozens of intelligen­ce reports included the names of Trump transition team members who Nunes alleged were unfairly revealed in the reports. He said that he immediatel­y went to the White House to brief President Trump on the informatio­n.

Nunes came under intense criticism and subsequent­ly admitted he had received the informatio­n in the White House complex, saying that it was the only safe place to examine the classified material.

Democrats on the intelligen­ce committee, including ranking Democrat Adam B. Schiff of Burbank, said Nunes had compromise­d the Russia investigat­ion and began calling on the congressma­n to recuse himself even before the ethics complaint was filed by two watchdog groups. Schiff did not immediatel­y return a request for comment Thursday.

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan said in a statement last spring that he supported Nunes’ decision to step aside from the Russia investigat­ion, adding that Nunes’ leadership during the ethics investigat­ion “would be a distractio­n.”

The allegation­s prompted the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee to put Nunes’ Central Valley district on its 2018 target list. His 2018 opponents have cited the complaint in their attacks on the congressma­n.

In his statement, Nunes thanked the ethics committee for “completely clearing me today of the cloud that was created by this investigat­ion, and for determinin­g that I committed no violation of anything — no violation of House rules, law, regulation­s, or any other standards of conduct.”

Nunes also said he was dismayed that the investigat­ion took an “unbelievab­le” eight months to complete, and that it was conducted by the full committee outside of its typical process, which includes a nonpartisa­n staff review of complaints before they are taken up by the committee. Nunes also asked the committee to release transcript­s related to its investigat­ion.

‘I committed no violation of anything — no violation of House rules, law, regulation­s, or any other standards of conduct.’

— Rep. Devin Nunes, House Select Intelligen­ce Committee chairman

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? REP. DEVIN NUNES, shown in October, did not say whether he would formally retake control of the House inquiry into Russian meddling in last year’s election.
Mark Wilson Getty Images REP. DEVIN NUNES, shown in October, did not say whether he would formally retake control of the House inquiry into Russian meddling in last year’s election.

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