Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia probe dossier questioned

New material suggests possibilit­y of Kremlin disinforma­tion

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Newly released material raises the possibilit­y that Russian disinforma­tion made its way into a dossier of opposition research that the FBI relied on when applying for warrants to eavesdrop on a former campaign adviser to President Donald Trump.

The new material, contained in footnotes to a Justice Department watchdog report that were recently declassifi­ed by the Trump administra­tion, indicates the FBI was advised even as it sought the warrants that some of the informatio­n included in the dossier was not accurate or was potentiall­y influenced by Russian disinforma­tion.

It may add to accusation­s that the FBI did not take seriously enough concerns that were raised about the dossier’s reliabilit­y as it investigat­ed ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. The Justice Department inspector general report from December that included the blacked-out footnotes faulted the FBI for failing to reassess the credibilit­y of the dossier after receiving informatio­n that called into question some of its reporting.

The FBI did not rely on the dossier when it opened the Russia investigat­ion in July 2016, instead relying on other informatio­n about possible Trump campaign links to Russia. But it did rely in part on the document a couple months later when it applied for a warrant to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. The fact that the dossier was used at all is one of the main points cited by Trump supporters in challengin­g the legitimacy of the probe.

The footnotes were released by two Republican senators, Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who said in a statement that the informatio­n makes clear that the FBI’s justificat­ion in targeting Page “was riddled with significan­t flaws.”

One of the footnotes says the FBI was alerted in 2017 that a particular allegation included in the dossier was “part of a Russian disinforma­tion campaign to denigrate U.S. foreign relations.”

It also cites a February 2017 U.S. intelligen­ce report saying that an individual with reported ties to Trump and Russia had cautioned that certain allegation­s related to Trump’s behavior during a trip to Moscow four years earlier were false and the product of Russian intelligen­ce “infiltrate(ing) a source into the network.”

An FBI spokeswoma­n declined to comment Thursday. The FBI has acknowledg­ed problems during the Russia investigat­ion and has instituted a series of changes designed to make its surveillan­ce applicatio­ns more accurate and thorough.

The dossier of informatio­n was compiled during the course of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign by Christophe­r Steele, a former British spy whose research into ties between Trump and Russia was financed by Democrats.

The FBI relied in part on informatio­n from the dossier during multiple applicatio­ns to the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court in 2016 and 2017 to monitor the communicat­ions of Page on suspicion that he was an agent of a foreign power. Page has denied any wrongdoing and was never charged.

Inspector General Michael Horowitz said in his report that, though there was no evidence that the FBI was motivated by political bias during the investigat­ion, the bureau made serious errors during the applicatio­n process, including by omitting informatio­n that called into question the reliabilit­y of certain reporting included in the dossier.

The inspector general’s report said the FBI could not corroborat­e certain allegation­s from the Steele dossier and did contemplat­e the possibilit­y “that Russia was funneling disinforma­tion to Steele, and the possibilit­y that disinforma­tion was included in his election reports.”

But, Horowitz said, more should have been done by the FBI to determine if that was the case.

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