The Columbus Dispatch

Comey: Trump sought ‘loyalty’

- By Julie Pace and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — Fired FBI Director James Comey will testify under oath today that President Donald Trump repeatedly pressed him for his “loyalty” and directly pushed him to “lift the cloud” of investigat­ion shadowing his White House by declaring publicly that the president was not the target of the probe into his campaign’s possible Russia ties.

Comey’s detailed and vivid recollecti­ons of his one-onone conversati­ons with Trump were revealed in seven pages of prepared testimony released

Wednesday, the day before his much-anticipate­d appearance before the Senate intelligen­ce committee. Comey begins testifying at 10 a.m., and the major networks are carrying the coverage live.

His remarks paint a picture of an FBI director so disconcert­ed by his interactio­ns with the president that he began keeping written memos of their private discussion­s. He’ll tell lawmakers he believed the president was trying to create a “patronage relationsh­ip” with him and describe in detail an Oval Office meeting in which Trump urged him not to investigat­e ousted national security adviser Michael Flynn’s contacts with Russian officials.

But the ex-FBI director also will validate Trump’s assertion that he was not personally a target of the federal counterint­elligence investigat­ion into possible campaign collusion with Russia. Comey says he did offer the president that “assurance” but resisted Trump’s appeals to make that informatio­n public.

“The FBI and the Department of Justice had been reluctant to make public statements that we did not have an open case on President Trump for a number of reasons, most importantl­y because it would create a duty to correct, should that change,” Comey says in

the prepared remarks.

Trump’s personal lawyer said Trump was cheered by the testimony.

“The president is pleased that Mr. Comey has finally publicly confirmed his private reports that the president was not under investigat­ion in any Russian probe,” attorney Mark Kasowitz said in a statement. “The president feels completely and totally vindicated. He is eager to continue to move forward with his agenda.”

Comey has not spoken publicly since he was abruptly fired by Trump on May 9. His dismissal, four years into a 10-year term, fueled claims that Trump’s ultimate aim was to quash the investigat­ion and obstruct justice, potentiall­y a federal crime or an impeachabl­e offense. Some legal experts said Comey’s account could bolster such a case.

Ryan Goodman, a professor at New York University School of Law, said Trump’s efforts to protect Flynn provide “strong evidence” of obstructio­n of justice. However, Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University, said that while Trump’s dealings with Comey were inappropri­ate, “We do not indict people for being boorish or clueless.”

The ex-FBI director’s testimony recounts his conversati­ons with the apparent precision of a veteran lawman. Comey notes he had nine one-on-one interactio­ns with

Trump over a four-month stretch, compared with two private conversati­ons with President Barack Obama between September 2013 and the end of 2016. He also says he did not keep written memos of his interactio­ns with Obama.

The first meeting with Trump after the inaugurati­on occurred on Jan. 27, during a private dinner at the White House that Comey came to view as an attempt by the president to “create some sort of patronage relationsh­ip.”

According to Comey, Trump asked if he wanted to remain FBI director and declared: “I need loyalty. I expect loyalty.” Comey says he replied that he could offer his honesty, and that when Trump said he wanted “honest loyalty,” Comey paused and said, “You will get that from me.”

Comey also describes at length a Feb. 14 meeting in the Oval Office in which he believed Trump asked him to back off an investigat­ion into Flynn.

“He then said, ‘I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go,’” Comey says, according to the prepared remarks.

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said she was unsure if the president read Comey’s testimony after its release. Asked whether the president stood by earlier assertions that he

had neither sought Comey’s loyalty nor asked for the Flynn investigat­ion to be dropped, she said: “I can’t imagine the president not standing by his own statement.”

Trump allies have raised questions about Comey’s credibilit­y ahead of his testimony, noting that the FBI had to correct some of his remarks from his last appearance on Capitol Hill. They’ve also questioned why Comey did not raise his concerns about Trump publicly or resign.

Comey’s prepared testimony does not fully answer that question, though he does say he asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions to help prevent him from having any direct communicat­ion with the president in the future.

According to Comey, Trump was acutely aware of the political toll of the investigat­ion, complainin­g that the probe had left a “cloud” that was “impairing his ability to act on behalf of the country.”

In a phone call on March 30, Comey says the president asked him what could be done to “lift the cloud.” He says Trump also volunteere­d that “he had nothing to do with Russia, had not been involved with hookers in Russia, and had always assumed he was being recorded when in Russia” — referencin­g an unverified intelligen­ce dossier detailing compromisi­ng informatio­n Moscow had allegedly collected on Trump.

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