The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MCCABE’S FIRING: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

- Matt Apuzzo, New York Times

Andrew G. McCabe, the former FBI deputy director, was fired recently on the eve of his retirement. Here’s what we know:

Who Is Andrew McCabe?

McCabe is a 21-year FBI veteran who joined the bureau out of law school and rose to its No. 2 position in 2016. The deputy director is essentiall­y the FBI’s chief operating officer.

Why does he matter?

He oversaw two of the most politicall­y charged cases in FBI history: the investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, and the investigat­ion of Donald Trump’s campaign ties to the Russian government.

Why was he fired?

McCabe was questioned as part of a wide-ranging internal inquiry into the FBI’s handling of the Clinton investigat­ion and other matters. During the internal investigat­ion, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said, McCabe “lacked candor - including under oath - on multiple occasions.” That is a fireable offense, and Sessions said that career, apolitical employees at the FBI and Justice Department agreed that McCabe should be fired.

At issue is whether McCabe was forthcomin­g with investigat­ors about what Sessions said was an “unauthoriz­ed disclosure to the news media.”

Was he leaking informatio­n to damage Trump?

Not as far as anyone can tell. The story at the heart of the case was published in The Wall Street Journal in October 2016, just days before the election as the FBI raced to review newly discovered emails from Clinton’s server. The Journal revealed a dispute between the FBI and the Justice Department over how to handle a separate Clinton investigat­ion, one into her family’s foundation.

McCabe authorized an FBI spokesman and lawyer to speak to the Journal to rebut suggestion­s that he had put the brakes on the investigat­ion. These types of interactio­ns between journalist­s and government officials — known as “background calls” — are common in all federal agencies and administra­tions as officials try to correct inaccuraci­es or provide details and nuance before reporters publish informatio­n.

The Journal ultimately reported that while Justice Department officials did not authorize subpoenas, the FBI in fact had pressed ahead with the case — a detail that if anything was damaging to Clinton, not Trump.

Did the White House fire McCabe?

No. As a career civil servant, McCabe is not a political appointee who can be summarily dismissed by the president. But this is where the situation gets complicate­d. Trump has repeatedly used his Twitter account to attack McCabe. Months before the firing, he taunted McCabe about his pension.

And he goaded Sessions into taking action against McCabe. On the eve of McCabe’s firing, the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, called him a “bad actor.” Taken together, this unusual level of White House commentary created a political backdrop to what should have been an independen­t government personnel decision. McCabe’s lawyers seized on that as evidence of improper influence.

“This distortion of the process begins at the very top, with the president’s repeated offensive, drive-by Twitter attacks on Mr. McCabe,”said Michael R. Bromwich, a lawyer for McCabe.

Why was he fired so quickly?

That is one of the big unknowns. FBI disciplina­ry matters can drag out for extended periods, and it is not uncommon for officials to retire during that process. That did not happen here, and it is not clear why. The workings of the FBI’s disciplina­ry office are kept confidenti­al.

McCabe’s lawyers say they were given little time to read and respond to the final report. Why the rush, they ask, if not to make sure that McCabe was fired?

What’s Trump’s beef with McCabe?

Trump has seized on the fact that McCabe’s wife, Jill, ran for a Virginia state Senate seat as a Democrat and received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign donations from a political ally of Clinton. He says Andrew McCabe never should have been allowed to oversee the Clinton investigat­ion. He says the campaign donations are proof that a pro-Clinton bias within the FBI explains why Clinton was never charged.

Does Trump’s criticism have merit?

Yes and no. McCabe did not begin supervisin­g the Clinton investigat­ion until after his wife had lost the race, and records show that he sought ethics and legal advice inside the FBI before deciding not to recuse himself.

When he ultimately recused himself, late in the investigat­ion, it only fueled the argument that he should have stepped aside from the beginning.

Trump’s theory of McCabe as a pro-Clinton partisan, however, is on far shakier ground. McCabe has identified himself as a lifelong Republican and did not vote in the 2016 election. The newspaper story that McCabe authorized FBI officials speak about was not a positive one for Clinton.

And, perhaps most importantl­y, in the months before the election, when the FBI publicly disclosed informatio­n about its work on the Clinton investigat­ion, it never revealed the existence and scope of a full-throated investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s Russia ties.

What does this possibly have to do with Russia?

Like so much at the FBI, McCabe’s firing has become inextricab­ly entangled in presidenti­al politics and the investigat­ion by the special counsel, Robert Mueller.

McCabe was one of only a handful of FBI officials involved in the Russia investigat­ion from the first days. He supervised it at every step and was involved in the decision to seek a wiretap on Carter Page, a former Trump foreign adviser. That wiretap applicatio­n was approved by senior Justice Department officials, was reapproved by Trump’s own Justice Department and was signed by a federal judge based on evidence that Page was a Russian agent. Trump has declared that wiretap to be improper, however, and points to it as evidence of political surveillan­ce by the FBI.

McCabe also worked alongside FBI Director James Comey, who accused Trump of seeking a loyalty oath and pressing him to end the investigat­ion. McCabe kept memos on his conversati­ons with Comey, which could help investigat­ors corroborat­e Comey’s account.

McCabe argues that the Trump administra­tion is trying to discredit him as a potential witness. The real target, McCabe said, is Mueller’s investigat­ion.

What’s next?

We won’t be able to assess the allegation­s, or McCabe’s defense, until the inspector general’s report is released.

 ?? NURPHOTO / SIPA ?? Andrew McCabe oversaw the investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server and the investigat­ion of Donald Trump’s campaign ties to the Russian government.
NURPHOTO / SIPA Andrew McCabe oversaw the investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server and the investigat­ion of Donald Trump’s campaign ties to the Russian government.

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