Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sessions will testify before Senate panel

He will address Comey matters

- CARLY MALLENBAUM

After former FBI Director James Comey made headlines with his testimony last week, the spotlight is now on Jeff Sessions. The attorney general said Saturday he will accept an invitation to appear before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Tuesday.

“In light of reports regarding Mr. Comey’s recent testimony,” the attorney general wrote in a letter to Sen. Richard Shelby, chairman of the Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee on justice, “it is important that I have an opportunit­y to address these matters in (the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, which) has been conducting an investigat­ion and has access to relevant, classified informatio­n.”

Sessions’ testimony is expected to occur Tuesday in a closed meeting and to focus on the moments leading up to the private Feb. 14 conversati­on where, according to Comey, President Donald Trump pressed the then-FBI director to drop the investigat­ion into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

Comey has testified that he thought it was improper for his thenboss Sessions to have been excluded from that meeting, and he has said that he did not want to be alone with the president again to avoid the appearance of undue influence. Comey also testified that he wrote memos detailing that meeting and others with Trump because he was concerned that the president “might lie about the nature of our meeting,” he told the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Thursday.

“We also were aware of facts that I can’t discuss in an open setting that would make (Sessions’) continued engagement in a Russiarela­ted investigat­ion problemati­c,’’ Comey added.

Those undisclose­d “facts” may have to do with a possible third meeting Sessions had with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, after Sessions belatedly disclosed two other meetings with Kislyak.

Though contact between the White House and the FBI has long been routed through the attorney general or deputy attorney general, Sessions recused himself from overseeing the FBI investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce with last year’s election after failing to disclose meetings with Kislyak during his January confirmati­on hearing.

Sessions had previously been scheduled to testify before the Senate and House Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ees Tuesday, but now that he’s appearing before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will testify before those panels instead.

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