Texarkana Gazette

Trump lawyers call Comey ‘Machiavell­ian’ in note to Mueller

- By Eric Tucker and Chad Day

WASHINGTON—Lawyers for President Donald Trump unleashed a blistering attack on former FBI Director James Comey in a confidenti­al memo last year to the special counsel, casting him as “Machiavell­ian,” dishonest and “unbounded by law and regulation” as they sought to undermine the credibilit­y of a law enforcemen­t leader they see as a critical witness against the president.

The letter, obtained by The Associated Press, underscore­s the intense effort by Trump’s legal team over the last year to tarnish Comey’s reputation and pit the president’s word against that of the former FBI director. Comey’s firing in May 2017 helped set in motion the appointmen­t of special counsel Robert Mueller, and one-on-one conversati­ons with Trump that Comey documented in a series of memos helped form the basis of Mueller’s inquiry into whether the president obstructed justice.

The June 27, 2017, letter was written by Marc Kasowitz, then the president’s lead lawyer, as Mueller and his team were in the early stages of their investigat­ion into Trump associates and as they had begun examining whether the president, by firing Comey, had sought to stymie an FBI investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia. The White House initially pointed as justificat­ion for the firing to a Justice Department memo that faulted Comey for his handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigat­ion, though Trump later said that “this Russia thing” was on his mind when he made the move.

It’s not clear to what extent, if any, the attacks on Comey have resonated with Mueller’s team, which is broadly investigat­ing Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election and continues to seek an interview with the president to assess whether he had a corrupt intent when he fired the FBI director. And even in the face of withering criticism, Comey has been largely consistent in his telling of his interactio­ns with Trump in his memos, his book and numerous press interviews he’s given in recent months.

The 13-page document provides a window into the formation of a legal strategy that remains in use today by Trump’s lawyers—to discredit Comey’s value as a witness. It could have new relevance in the aftermath of a Justice Department inspector general report that criticized Comey for departing from establishe­d protocol in the Clinton investigat­ion.

The letter aims to identify for Mueller what the lawyers believe are grievous errors both in how Comey handled the Clinton investigat­ion and in his early, and limited, encounters with the president. In it, Kasowitz argues that Comey cannot be trusted as a witness because he repeatedly embellishe­d his testimony before Congress, put his “own personal interests and emotions” above FBI protocol and left a cloud of undue suspicion above the president’s head.

“Over the last year, Mr. Comey has engaged in a pattern of calculated unilateral action unbounded by governing law, regulation and practice, and plainly motivated by personal and political self-interest,” wrote Kasowitz, who has since stepped aside as lead lawyer.

The document, unlike other correspond­ence between Trump lawyers and Mueller’s team, does not dwell on questions of Trump’s guilt or innocence. Instead, it casts in a negative light actions that Comey has said he carefully reasoned and that he has vigorously defended in his book and interviews. Those include the decision to announce without Justice Department consultati­on the conclusion of the Clinton investigat­ion, and the decision months later to brief Trump on salacious allegation­s about him in a dossier.

Among the principal lines of attack are Comey’s acknowledg­ment that he provided his lawyers with contempora­neous memos about his interactio­ns with Trump and authorized one of them to share details with the news media. In one such encounter, Comey said the president asked him at a private dinner for his loyalty and that Comey offered him “honest loyalty” instead.

“There is no ‘honest loyalty’ in an FBI Director surreptiti­ously leaking to civilians his privileged and confidenti­al conversati­ons with the president, or misappropr­iating and disseminat­ing his confidenti­al FBI memos or their contents about those meetings,” Kasowitz wrote. “There is no ‘honest loyalty’ in using those civilians as surrogates to feed stolen informatio­n and memos to the press to achieve a personal, political, and retributiv­e objective of harming a sitting president.”

The New York Times earlier reported that Kasowitz had written two letters to Mueller in June 2017, and published one in which he rejected the idea that Comey’s firing could constitute obstructio­n of justice. The AP obtained a copy of the other document, along with a two-page memo from September in which Trump lawyers lament to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein that Mueller was “inexplicab­ly” not investigat­ing Comey’s “misconduct” they had earlier raised.

In the Kasowitz letter, he says Comey stonewalle­d the president’s request to clear his name in order to “sustain an investigat­ive cloud” over his head that would make it hard for Trump to fire him. Comey has said he had already told congressio­nal leaders who was and was not under investigat­ion, and that he was reluctant to make public statements in case something changed and he needed to correct the record.

The letter also castigates Comey for usurping the authority of his Justice Department bosses by announcing the conclusion of the Clinton investigat­ion without seeking their approval, a criticism echoed by the inspector general last month. Comey has said he made the announceme­nt alone because of concern that Justice Department leadership was seen as politicall­y compromise­d.

The letter says Comey “confronted” the president-elect in a January 2017 Trump Tower meeting “with phony but highly embarrassi­ng allegation­s concerning his personal life” from a dossier compiled by a former British spy. It was the first in a series of conversati­ons Comey documented in writing, something Trump lawyers say he did with the ultimate goal of underminin­g the president. Comey has said he told Trump about the dossier allegation­s because they were widely known in Washington, including by the media, and that he kept his memos because he was concerned that Trump might lie about their conversati­ons.

In the September memo obtained by AP, Dowd, who left the legal team in March, expressed dismay to Rosenstein that there was no grand jury investigat­ion into “the obviously corrupt conclusion” of the Clinton investigat­ion, suggesting it was improper that Comey had begun drafting a statement closing the probe even before Clinton was interviewe­d.

“Today, you are faced with a terrible blight on our Department of Justice which must be addressed to restore and inspire confidence in the Department,” Dowd said in calling for the grand jury investigat­ion.

Though the inspector general’s office faulted Comey for some of his decisions, it did not find that FBI or Justice Department actions in the case were tainted by political bias.

 ?? AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File ?? ■ In this Jan. 10, 2017, file photo, then-FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File ■ In this Jan. 10, 2017, file photo, then-FBI Director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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