Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

President seethes over probe, alleged ‘spy’

Accusation­s against FBI part of new bid to discredit probe

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Jonathan Lemire

Donald Trump calls his attempt to discredit the special counsel’s Russia inquiry “spygate.”

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has branded his latest attempt to discredit the special counsel’s Russia investigat­ion as “spygate,” part of a newly invigorate­d strategy embraced by his Republican colleagues to raise suspicions about the probe that has dogged his presidency since the start.

Trump now is zeroing in on — and at times embellishi­ng — reports that a longtime U.S. government informant approached members of his 2016 campaign during the presidenti­al election in a possible bid to glean intelligen­ce on Russian efforts to sway the election. He tweeted Wednesday morning that the FBI has been caught in a “major SPY scandal.”

Trump’s latest broadsides set the stage for an unusual decision by the White House to arrange a briefing about classified documents for just two Republican House members, both Trump allies, in a meeting expected Thursday, as Trump and his supporters in Congress press for informatio­n on the outside informant.

After Democratic complaints, the White House said late Wednesday that it would also give an additional briefing to a group of lawmakers known as the “Gang of Eight” after the Memorial Day recess. That group includes the top Republican­s and Democrats in each chamber and the top Republican­s and Democrats on the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees.

It remains unclear what, if any, spying was done. The White House has given no evidence to support Trump’s claim that the Obama administra­tion was trying to spy on his 2016 campaign for political reasons. It’s long been known that the FBI was looking into Russian meddling during the campaign and that part of that inquiry touched on the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russian figures.

Trump has told confidants in recent days that the revelation of an informant was potential evidence that the upper echelon of federal law enforcemen­t has conspired against him, according to three people familiar with his recent conversati­ons but not authorized to discuss them publicly. Trump told one ally this week that he wanted “to brand” the informant a “spy,” believing the more nefarious term would resonate more in the media and with the public.

Democrats said Wednesday that the briefing — held as special counsel Robert Mueller investigat­es Trump’s campaign and whether it was involved in Russian meddling in the U.S. election — was highly inappropri­ate and asked for the “Gang of Eight” briefing instead of Thursday’s GOPonly meeting.

After negotiatio­ns with leaders on Capitol Hill on Wednesday afternoon, White House spokesman Raj Shah announced the additional bipartisan meeting but said Thursday’s briefing would go on.

Some Senate Republican­s have asked to be invited to the meeting as well, arguing that they should be included. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and Texas Sen. John Cornyn made that request to White House chief of staff John Kelly on Tuesday.

The meeting scheduled for Thursday was encouraged by Trump and brokered by the White House. Expected attendees are FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, National Intelligen­ce Director Dan Coats, Justice Department official Edward O’Callaghan, House intelligen­ce committee Chairman Devin Nunes and House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Trey Gowdy.

Trump escalated his efforts to discredit that investigat­ion Wednesday, tweeting: “Look how things have turned around on the Criminal Deep State. They go after Phony Collusion with Russia, a made up Scam, and end up getting caught in a major SPY scandal the likes of which this country may never have seen before! What goes around, comes around!”

The back and forth between Congress and the Justice Department over the Nunes request has been simmering for weeks.

The department originally rejected Nunes’ appeal, writing in a letter in late April that his request for informatio­n “regarding a specific individual” could have severe consequenc­es, including potential loss of human life.

Separately on Wednesday, Mueller’s prosecutor­s asked a federal judge to start the process of sentencing former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoul­os, who has been a key witness in the investigat­ion since his plea last year to lying to the FBI.

Prosecutor­s had been pushing off Papadopoul­os’ sentencing for months as he cooperated in the probe. Informatio­n about Papadopoul­os’ contact with people linked to Russia during the 2016 campaign triggered the FBI counterint­elligence investigat­ion that Mueller took over.

Also Wednesday, the president reaffirmed his condemnati­on of immigrant gang members as “animals” as he pressed his call for tougher border security at a Long Island forum with public officials and victims’ parents.

He also threatened to cut foreign aid to the immigrants’ countries of origin unless those nations do more to stop traffic to the United States.

Decrying the “menace” of MS-13 gangs that he said had “transforme­d our neighborho­ods into bloodstain­ed killing fields,” the president assailed critics who have complained that his recent comments had gone too far.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y. talks to reporters. He called for a special counsel to investigat­e the Department of Justice and FBI.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y. talks to reporters. He called for a special counsel to investigat­e the Department of Justice and FBI.

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