San Francisco Chronicle

GOP strategist denies campaign, Russia colluded

- By Tom Lobianco and Mary Clare Jalonick Tom Lobianco and Mary Clare Jalonick are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — Longtime Donald Trump associate Roger Stone said Tuesday he’s “aware of no evidence whatsoever” that Trump’s campaign coordinate­d with Russians during the 2016 election.

Stone spoke to the House Intelligen­ce Committee for more than three hours as part of the panel’s probe into Russian interferen­ce in the election. Afterward, he told reporters that the majority of lawmakers’ questions focused on his communicat­ions with Guccifer 2.0, the unnamed hacker who has taken credit for breaking into Democratic National Committee email servers. He said questions also focused on communicat­ions he had through an intermedia­ry with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Stone has long denied that he worked with Russian officials to influence the presidenti­al election. In a lengthy and combative statement released Monday night ahead of the interview, Stone said “there is one ‘trick’ that is not in my bag and that is treason.”

Stone, a Republican strategist who has known Trump for many years and informally advised him during the 2016 campaign, has denied that he had advance knowledge of the leak of former Clinton Campaign Chairman John Podesta’s emails and says he never colluded with Assange, who released Podesta’s emails on his website.

“While some may label me a dirty trickster, the members of this committee could not point to any tactic that is outside the accepted norms of what political strategist­s and consultant­s do today. I do not engage in any illegal activities on behalf of my clients or the causes in which I support,” he wrote in the statement.

Speaking to reporters after Stone, Rep. Adam Schiff, DBurbank, the top Democrat on the panel, said there was “one area” where Stone refused to cooperate and the committee may have to subpoena him. He didn’t say what area that was.

Stone has been heavily critical of Schiff ever since the Democrat suggested in March that Stone had a direct line to Russian hackers based on Stone’s August 2016 tweet “it will soon the Podesta’s time in the barrel.” Several weeks later, Assange released Podesta’s hacked emails.

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