Porterville Recorder

Trump claims FBI ’plotting’ though report found no bias

- By ANNE FLAHERTY ERIC TUCKER and CHAD DAY

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump disputed findings by the Justice Department on Friday that former FBI Director James Comey’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email probe was not politicall­y motivated, declaring that there was “total bias” at the FBI and that the “top people” at the agency were “plotting against my election.”

The department’s inspector general report, while critical of the FBI and Comey personally, did not find evidence that political bias tainted the investigat­ion of Clinton’s email practices in the months and days leading up to Trump’s election.

But on Friday, after tweeting that he did a “great service” to the nation by firing Comey, Trump marched out to the White House North Lawn to talk with “Fox & Friends” for more than half an hour, claiming the report “totally” exonerated him, then pointing to accomplish­ments he said he’s achieved and complainin­g about not getting proper credit.

Then he turned to other reporters and went over the same list for another 20 minutes.

On the inspector general report that found no political bias in the FBI’S final conclusion­s, he said, “The end result was wrong. There was total bias.”

“Comey was the ring leader of this whole, you know, den of thieves. It was a den of thieves,” he said.

Trump’s comments followed the IG’S 500-page report that said Comey was “insubordin­ate” in his handling of the Clinton investigat­ion because he broke agency protocol. The report also rebuked FBI officials for exchanging anti-trump text messages during the 2016 campaign.

But it said, “We found no evidence that the conclusion­s by the prosecutor­s were affected by bias or other improper considerat­ions; rather, we determined that they were based on the prosecutor­s’ assessment of the facts, the law and past department practice.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI ?? President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House, Friday, June 15, in Washington.
AP PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House, Friday, June 15, in Washington.

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