Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Sessions denies lying about Russia

AG tells House panel ‘chaos’ of ’16 race behind his hazy recall

- By Joseph Tanfani and Cathleen Decker Washington Bureau joseph.tanfani@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions repeatedly denied Tuesday that he deliberate­ly misled or lied to Congress about the Trump campaign’s multiple contacts with Russia, saying he forgot that two aides told him about their meetings with Russian government officials during the 2016 presidenti­al race.

In an often-contentiou­s House Judiciary Committee hearing, Sessions sparred for more than five hours with both Democrats, who faulted him for changing his story each time he has testified under oath before Congress, and some Republican­s, who pushed him to appoint a second special counsel to investigat­e Hillary Clinton.

Sessions grew visibly angry at times, insisting again and again that he “always told the truth” as he recalled it, even as he confirmed for the first time that an aide offered to help arrange a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin last March. Sessions said he “pushed back” against the offer.

“In all of my testimony, I can only do my best to answer all of your questions as I understand them and to the best of my memory,” he said.

“But I will not accept, and reject accusation­s, that I have ever lied,” he added. “That is a lie.”

The hearing was the latest sign of how last year’s presidenti­al campaign has yet to recede. Harsh questions about the Democratic nominee’s alleged misdeeds collided with national security concerns of whether President Donald Trump’s current or former aides helped Russia meddle in a U.S. election — the focus of a special counsel investigat­ion led by former FBI Director Robert Mueller.

Sessions held firm against Republican­s who pressed him to swiftly appoint another special counsel to focus on Clinton. Senior prosecutor­s at the Justice Department were reviewing the record and it would “be done without political influence,” he said.

After Rep Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, laid out a list of allegation­s that he said indicated wrongdoing, Sessions responded sharply. “I would say ‘looks like’ is not enough basis to appoint a special counsel,” he said.

Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, the House committee’s top Democrat, said the allegation­s against Clinton — which chiefly involve her use of a private email server as secretary of state, fundraisin­g for the Clinton Foundation and an Obama administra­tion decision in 2010 to approve sales of uranium to a Russian company — have been “carefully examined and completely debunked” and said the threat of jailing political opponents after an election is something that would happen in “a banana republic.”

The often testy back-andforth on Russia largely echoed Sessions’ three previous appearance­s on Capitol Hill this year, creating more heat than light as lawmakers confronted Sessions with his previous statements and other evidence that contradict­ed his claims, and the attorney general insisting he did “not recall” dozens of times in response.

“I have been asked to remember details from a year ago, such as who I saw on what day, in what meeting, and who said what when,” he said.

He blamed his faulty memory on the political and organizati­onal maelstrom of Trump’s insurgent presidenti­al campaign. The fourterm senator from Alabama joined Trump’s side early on and became his top foreign policy adviser.

“It was a brilliant campaign in many ways,” he said. “But it was a form of chaos every day from Day One. We traveled all the time, sometimes to several places in one day. Sleep was in short supply.”

Sessions recused himself from overseeing Mueller’s investigat­ion last March because of his role as Trump’s campaign adviser — and he said in January that he shouldn’t supervise a Clinton investigat­ion for the same reason.

But, in the House hearing, he had to again revise his answers about his own meetings with Russia’s then-ambassador in Washington, as well as what he knew about other campaign aides’ meetings with Russians in London and Moscow.

During his Senate confirmati­on hearing in January, Sessions denied that he had met any Russians during the campaign. It later emerged that he had met three times with the Russian ambassador, including once in his Senate office to discuss Ukraine and other issues, he said Tuesday.

He said he stood by his initial denial because he thought he was being asked about improper contacts, and that his meetings with the ambassador were not improper.

Last month, Sessions told another Senate hearing that he was not aware of any campaign aides who might have met with Russian officials, repeating a claim he had previously made to Congress.

On Oct. 30, however, court papers in the criminal case against George Papadopoul­os, a campaign foreign policy aide, said that he bragged about his Russian connection­s at a meeting last March 31 with Trump, Sessions and other aides at the Trump Hotel in Washington.

According to the court documents, Papadopoul­os offered to help set up a meeting between Trump and Putin — and that Sessions quickly shut down the discussion.

“I pushed back, I would say it that way,” Sessions said Tuesday, saying he only remembered the incident after reading news reports about Papadopoul­os.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies for hours Tuesday at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington.
ALEX WONG/GETTY Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies for hours Tuesday at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States