Santa Fe New Mexican

House Judiciary Committee subpoenas Comey, Lynch

- By Karoun Demirjian

WASHINGTON — The House Judiciary Committee has issued subpoenas for former FBI Director James Comey and former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch to appear for closed-door interviews in a probe of how federal law enforcemen­t officials handled investigat­ions of Hillary Clinton’s emails and the Trump campaign’s alleged Russia ties.

The orders direct Comey to appear Dec. 3, while Lynch is to appear Dec. 4, to speak with members of the House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform committees. Both have spoken with other congressio­nal panels looking into matters related to Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and have indicated they are willing to speak to the joint inquiry as well.

But Comey has already objected to the format of the interview, and on Thursday, his lawyer promised he would challenge the subpoena in court.

“While the authority for Congressio­nal subpoenas is broad, it does not cover the right to misuse closed hearings as a political stunt to promote political as opposed to legislativ­e agendas,” Comey’s lawyer, Daniel Richman, said in a statement. “The subpoena issued yesterday represents an abuse of process, a divergence from House rules and its presumptio­n of transparen­cy. Accordingl­y, Mr. Comey will resist in Court this abuse of process.”

Earlier Thursday, Comey tweeted his objection to the subpoena.

“I’m still happy to sit in the light and answer all questions. But I will resist a ‘closed door’ thing because I’ve seen enough of their selective leaking and distortion,” he wrote in a Thanksgivi­ng Day tweet, acknowledg­ing he had received the subpoena.

“Let’s have a hearing and invite everyone to see,” he added.

The panels’ inquiry has been driven by Republican­s and decried by Democrats, who charge that the Republican­s are using the investigat­ion as an excuse to pillory law enforcemen­t officials and cast doubt over the work that formed the basis of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe. The joint investigat­ion has drawn in senior members of the FBI and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, whom several Republican lawmakers want to bring back to Capitol Hill before the year ends.

The panels’ investigat­ion is set to either end or dramatical­ly change by the beginning of next year, when Democrats will hold the House majority and assume charge — and full subpoena power — of all House committees.

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