Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House prober: Release transcript­s

Panel’s interviews in Russia inquiry part of Nunes’ push

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WASHINGTON — The House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman said Sunday that he plans to release the transcript­s of dozens of private interviews conducted during its investigat­ion into Russian election meddling and would push the director of national intelligen­ce to declassify others.

“I think full transparen­cy is in order here, so I expect to make those [transcript­s] available from our committee to the American public here in the next few weeks,” said Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., months after the GOP colleague who led the investigat­ion said such a release could have a “chilling impact” on testimony in future inquiries.

He said the committee interviewe­d nearly 70 people, and he estimated that about 70 percent to 80 percent of those interviews are not classified. “Those need to be published, and they need to be published, I think, before the election,” which is Nov. 6, Nunes told Fox News Channel’s Sunday Morning Futures.

Nunes said he hoped it would take

Dan Coats, the national intelligen­ce director, only “a matter of days” to act once Nunes made his request about the classified deposition­s, and “they don’t do their normal foot-dragging where they slow roll and we don’t get these before the election.”

Making the transcript­s available can only be done by committee vote. Committee Democrats have said they want the transcript­s made public.

The committee already has released a handful of transcript­s, but only in cases where the witness insisted on a public disclosure. GOP Rep. Mike Conaway of Texas, who led the investigat­ion, said in March, when the committee completed a draft of its final report that found no coordinati­on between Russia and the Trump campaign, that he decided against releasing the whole transcript­s for fear it could hinder future probes.

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the highest-ranking Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, called upon Nunes to schedule a meeting “immediatel­y” so members could vote on releasing the transcript­s. Schiff has favored complete disclosure so the public could make its own judgment about the witnesses.

“The American people deserve to see what we uncovered, the questions witnesses refused to answer,” Schiff said in a statement released Sunday.

That is the approach Nunes is taking, saying he wanted Americans to “see the work that we did and they can see all the people that were interviewe­d by us and their answers to those questions.”

Nunes said “there’s so much that’s out there that’s misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion on this ‘Russia-gate’ fiasco that we need this informatio­n out before the election.”

That both Republican­s and Democrats want the transcript­s released underscore­s the partisan lens through which each side has viewed the investigat­ion.

Republican­s are likely to say that the content of the interviews proves there was no evidence of collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia; Democrats probably would say it proves there was evidence.

The Senate Intelligen­ce Committee is still conducting its own investigat­ion and has interviewe­d far more witnesses than the shorter House probe. The chairman, Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, has said he won’t release committee documents, so it is unclear whether any of those interviews will ever become public.

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