New York Post

FBI ‘hang’ time with journos

Don-probe fed’s fun

- By BEN FEUERHERD

A top FBI official repeatedly violated bureau policy by hobnobbing with journalist­s while overseeing the controvers­ial investigat­ion into Donald Trump’s suspected ties to Russia — and then retired before he could be interviewe­d by ethics probers, a newly released Justice Department report revealed.

Michael Steinbach “had numerous unauthoriz­ed contacts with the media” that began when he was the bureau’s assistant counterter­rorism director and continued after he was named executive assistant director of its National Security Bureau in February 2016, according to the heavily redacted DOJ Inspector General report obtained by The Post through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

The “hundreds of contacts” included “soliciting” an unidentifi­ed reporter for a $300 ticket to the 2016 White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n gala after earlier getting invited by a different reporter to the 2015 Radio and Television Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n dinner.

“Lots of [redacted] reporters here. May have to branch out!” Steinbach wrote to the unidentifi­ed reporter in a text message on the night of the 2015 dinner.

“Absolutely not!!! But curious to know who you’ve met so far?” the reporter responded, adding: “well they will never be as good as me! and don’t you get the big head! ;)”

“But they are promising the WH Correspond­ents dinner,” Steinbach replied.

The following year, Steinbach attended the White House Correspond­ents’ Dinner and a reception party as a guest of a reporter — and boasted about it in a text to an unidentifi­ed CNN reporter.

“I put you on the map and now you’re cheating on me with [redacted],” the CNN reporter wrote in a text message to Steinbach.

“I kept waiting for my invite from you,” Steinbach responded.

‘Thanks for hanging out’

After the $300-a-ticket event, Steinbach sent an email to a reporter with the subject line “Great Night” that included a photo of an unidentifi­ed person standing with the journalist in front of the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n banner.

“Thanks for hanging out with us last night [redacted] and I had a great time,” the email read in part.

Steinbach, who did not respond to a request for comment, retired from the FBI in February 2017 and declined to be interviewe­d in the OIG probe.

The report noted that the watchdog concluded Steinbach violated federal regulation­s and FBI protocol and its findings would be delivered to the FBI.

“Prosecutio­n was declined,” the Justice Department wrote.

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