Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump dossier author worried about Russian blackmail

- Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON – The former British spy who compiled a dossier of allegation­s about Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia brought the document to the FBI in July 2016 because he was worried about “whether a political candidate was being blackmaile­d,” according to a congressio­nal interview transcript released Tuesday.

California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, revealed the transcript from an August closed-door interview with Glenn Simpson, a co-founder of the political opposition research firm Fusion GPS. The firm commission­ed the dossier, which was initially paid for by a conservati­ve website and then later by Democrats, including Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign.

Feinstein made the transcript public over the objections of Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, who called the move “confoundin­g” in a statement shortly after Feinstein made it public. Grassley said the release could undermine attempts to interview other witnesses in the committee’s investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

In the transcript, Simpson said Christophe­r Steele, the former British spy who wrote the dossier, took it to the FBI and said his concern was “whether or not there was blackmail going on, whether a political candidate was being blackmaile­d or had been compromise­d.”

The dossier is a compilatio­n of memos written by Steele during the 2016 campaign that contained allegation­s of connection­s between Trump and Russia, including that Trump had been compromise­d by the Kremlin.

Trump has derided the dossier as a politicall­y motivated hit job. Following his lead, several GOP-led committees are now investigat­ing whether the dossier formed the basis for the FBI’s initial investigat­ions. Simpson has denied that it did and would not name the source.

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