Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Intelligen­ce briefing included allegation­s made against Trump

Salacious contents of document not verified

- DAVID JACKSON AND KEVIN JOHNSON USA TODAY

During a special briefing last Friday, leaders of the intelligen­ce community gave President-elect Donald Trump a synopsis of unsubstant­iated and salacious allegation­s that Russian operatives had obtained potentiall­y compromisi­ng personal and financial informatio­n about the president-elect, a U.S. official confirmed Tuesday.

The official, who is not authorized to comment publicly, said the document was provided along with the intelligen­ce community’s assessment that Russia had meddled in the U.S. election.

The document also includes allegation­s that informatio­n was exchanged over a long period of time

between the Russian government and Trump representa­tives.

The separate document presented to the president-elect represente­d a summary of a much larger 35-page compilatio­n of documents prepared by a former foreign intelligen­ce officer. The officer, the official said, is known to U.S. intelligen­ce, but the contents of the document have not been verified.

Trump responded Tuesday evening by Twitter, calling the report “FAKE NEWS - A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!”

The decision to present the informatio­n to Trump, first reported by CNN, was made after it was determined that the document — in many forms — had been circulated widely to political opposition researcher­s, U.S. lawmakers, journalist­s and others. CNN said it reviewed the compilatio­n of the memos, described as originatin­g as opposition research first commission­ed by antiTrump Republican­s, and later by Democrats. Buzzfeed has posted the intelligen­ce documents.

In the end, U.S. authoritie­s determined that Trump needed to know the informatio­n, if he didn’t know its existence already, the official said, adding that the contents remained the subject of investigat­ion. The official declined to comment on Trump’s reaction to the presentati­on.

Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, accused of meeting with a Russian operative in Prague last year, said in a tweet that “I have never been to Prague in my life.”

The news came on a day in which the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee conducted hearings into the reported Russian hacking of the Democratic National Committee and emails provided to the website WikiLeaks. Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.) said the panel will conduct an independen­t review of the intelligen­ce community’s report about Russian interferen­ce to help Trump.

FBI Director James Comey declined to answer questions from Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) about whether the FBI is investigat­ing possible contacts between the Trump campaign and the Russian government during the presidenti­al campaign.

“I think the American people have a right to know this,” Wyden said. “And if there is a delay in declassify­ing this informatio­n and releasing it to the American people, and it doesn’t happen before Jan. 20 (Inaugurati­on Day), I’m not sure it’s going to happen.” Then-Senate minority leader Harry Reid (DNev.), angry over FBI statements about the email investigat­ion of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, referenced these allegation­s in an October letter to the bureau. It said in part, “It has become clear that you possess explosive informatio­n about close ties and coordinati­on between Donald Trump, his top advisors, and the Russian government — a foreign interest openly hostile to the United States.”

Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez (DN.Y.) said late Tuesday that she finds the latest reports about Russia and Trump alarming and called on Attorney General Loretta Lynch to appoint a special counsel to continue investigat­ing the allegation­s “until all facts have been unearthed.”

“I find troubling these reports that Russian intelligen­ce apparatuse­s sought compromisi­ng informatio­n on the Republican candidate, as well, but released only informatio­n related to Democrats,” the congresswo­man said. “However, particular­ly alarming are suggestion­s that surrogates for an American presidenti­al campaign were actively exchanging informatio­n with Russian government intermedia­ries.”

She said the allegation­s “raise important legal issues that need to be investigat­ed quickly, thoroughly and impartiall­y, without political interferen­ce.”

“Particular­ly alarming are suggestion­s that surrogates for an American presidenti­al campaign were actively exchanging informatio­n with Russian government intermedia­ries.” REP. NYDIA M. VELÁZQUEZ (D-N.Y.)

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