Los Angeles Times

Documents still don’t support Trump’s claims

Newly released informatio­n sheds light on FBI surveillan­ce controvers­y

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — As someone who was swept into the White House on a tide of grievances — voters’ and his own — President Trump labors to keep alive any perceived slight. He routinely assails “Crooked Hillary” Clinton despite defeating her nearly two years ago, blasts profession­al football players for kneeling during the national anthem months after the season ended, and constantly complains about other countries taking advantage of the United States even when facts argue otherwise.

The controvers­y over the FBI’s secret surveillan­ce of former campaign advisor Carter Page has proved to be no different: Stoking it gives the president a tool to contend he’s been persecuted by the ongoing Russia investigat­ion. Yet, his claims to the contrary, new documents released by his administra­tion over the weekend still don’t bear out Trump’s assertions about illegal spying.

The issue returned to the spotlight Saturday evening when the Justice Department published a heavily redacted version of the pre-election applicatio­n to eavesdrop on Page, a foreign policy advisor who was suspected of being a Russian agent.

The department also released three renewal applicatio­ns, which also were submitted to a special federal court that approves surveillan­ce warrants. All four submission­s were approved by Republican­appointed federal judges, most recently in June 2017.

The publicatio­n of the documents, paperwork that’s required of the government under the fourdecade­s-old Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, was extremely unusual, even in censored form.

Such materials are considered some of the government’s most closely held secrets, often describing clandestin­e sources and methods.

But conservati­ve activists and media organizati­ons had sued for their release, with the first group hoping to vindicate Trump’s claims that his campaign was improperly spied on and the latter seeking a clearer picture of a hotly debated episode.

Trump tweeted a mix of untrue and unsubstant­iated assertions about the documents Monday, saying the original warrant applicatio­n “was knowingly & falsely submitted” by the FBI and it “was responsibl­e for starting the totally conflicted and discredite­d” special counsel investigat­ion into Russia’s election interferen­ce and his campaign’s possible complicity.

The redactions in the released documents make it impossible to settle the debate once and for all — if such an outcome is even possible in today’s polarized politics — but some informatio­n can be gleaned from the documents.

Little of it supports the already shaky foundation laid by Trump and his allies.

Republican­s led by Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, have insisted that the warrant was improperly obtained because the applicatio­n relied on Democrats’ opposition research collected by Christophe­r Steele, a former British spy, on behalf of Clinton’s campaign.

They also have accused the Justice Department of failing to disclose to judges that Steele was paid by Democrats. The allegation­s were laid out in a four-page memo released by House Republican­s this year.

The documents released over the weekend confirm that some of Steele’s research was used to justify the applicatio­n for a warrant, but it was far from the only piece of informatio­n included. Other material included suggestion­s that Page had previously been targeted for recruitmen­t by Russian spies, and details on his various business dealings in Moscow.

Also, the documents do make clear that Steele, who is not named, was doing political work. Steele — identified as “Source #1” in the applicatio­n — is described as someone hired to find “informatio­n that could be used to discredit Candidate #1’s campaign,” a reference to Trump.

The Democrats who hired him aren’t named either, but neither are Republican­s or Trump identified by name, a common practice in such documents.

Even as Trump and his allies claimed vindicatio­n from the documents, legal experts said they showed the exact opposite.

“The released applicatio­ns further reinforce the misleading qualities of the Nunes memo, including its central claim that the FBI did not reveal to the FISA court that Christophe­r Steele was working for political opponents of thencandid­ate Trump,” said David Kris, a former assistant attorney general for national security.

People who assist law enforcemen­t often have various motivation­s — sometimes idealistic, sometimes selfish — and authoritie­s believed Steele’s informatio­n was reliable regardless.

“Notwithsta­nding Source #1’s reason for conducting the research into Candidate #1’s ties to Russia, based on Source #1’s previous reporting history with the FBI, whereby Source #1 provided reliable informatio­n to the FBI, the FBI believes Source #1’s reporting herein to be credible,” the applicatio­n said.

In other words, despite Steele’s anti-Trump assignment, his record of reliabilit­y for the FBI made him credible in this case, authoritie­s argued.

It’s unclear what, if anything, the Justice Department learned by eavesdropp­ing on Page. He has not been charged with any crimes, and prosecutor­s have not cited him in other cases brought by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who is leading the investigat­ion.

However, the applicatio­ns to renew the warrant grew in length each time, a suggestion that the case for eavesdropp­ing grew over time. The new segments are redacted.

‘The released applicatio­ns further reinforce the misleading qualities of the [Rep. Devin] Nunes memo.’ David Kris, former assistant attorney general for national security

 ?? Pavel Golovkin Associated Press ?? CARTER PAGE, shown speaking in Moscow in 2016, was a foreign policy advisor for candidate Donald Trump. He was suspected of being a Russian agent.
Pavel Golovkin Associated Press CARTER PAGE, shown speaking in Moscow in 2016, was a foreign policy advisor for candidate Donald Trump. He was suspected of being a Russian agent.

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