The Day

Ex-FBI lawyer to plead guilty in Trump-Russia probe review

Kevin Clinesmith accused of altering a government email about a former campaign adviser who was target of secret FBI surveillan­ce

- By ERIC TUCKER and MICHAEL BALSAMO

Washington — A former FBI lawyer plans to plead guilty to making a false statement in the first criminal case arising from U.S. Attorney John Durham’s investigat­ion into the probe of ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign, his lawyer said Friday.

Kevin Clinesmith is accused of altering a government email about a former Trump campaign adviser who was a target of secret FBI surveillan­ce, according to documents filed in Washington’s federal court. His lawyer, Justin Shur, told The Associated Press that Clinesmith intends to plead guilty to the single false statement count and that he regrets his actions.

The case against Clinesmith was cheered by President Donald Trump and his supporters as they look to the Durham investigat­ion to lift Trump’s wobbly reelection prospects and to expose what they see as wrongdoing as the FBI opened an investigat­ion into whether the Trump campaign was coordinati­ng with the Kremlin to sway the outcome of the 2016 election.

“The fact is they spied on my campaign and they got caught,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday. His political campaign issued its own statement saying “abuses of power” in the Russia investigat­ion “represent the greatest political crime in American history” and everyone involved should be held accountabl­e.

Yet the five-page charging document is limited in scope and does not allege criminal wrongdoing by anyone other than Clinesmith, nor does it offer evidence to support Trump’s assertions that the Russia probe was tainted by widespread political bias in the FBI. It makes clear that the FBI relied on Clinesmith’s own misreprese­ntations as it sought to renew its surveillan­ce of former Trump campaign aide Carter Page.

The Durham probe, which is also examining the intelligen­ce community’s assessment about Russian election interferen­ce, has caused concern among Democrats, who view it as a politicall­y charged exercise meant to relitigate an already closed investigat­ion. They fear that charges or public reports issued so close to the 2020 election could be timed to affect November’s vote.

The investigat­ion has proceeded alongside a parallel effort by Senate Republican­s to discredit the Russia probe and as Attorney General William Barr has escalated his own criticism of the FBI’s probe. Documents released in recent months have called into question the validity of informatio­n the FBI relied on, particular­ly from a dossier of Democratic-funded research, when the agency applied for applicatio­ns to surveil Page.

Durham, the U.S. attorney for Connecticu­t, had no comment, a spokesman said. It remains unclear what additional charges, if any, Durham might bring, though he has been closely scrutinizi­ng how intelligen­ce agencies arrived at the conclusion that Russia had interfered in 2016 to benefit Trump.

Justice Department policy directs prosecutor­s to not take investigat­ive actions aimed at affecting an election, or that could advantage or disadvanta­ge a candidate. But Barr has said he does not feel constraine­d by that policy in part because the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, is not a target of Durham’s investigat­ion.

Durham’s work parallels in some respects a separate investigat­ion into the Russia probe by the Justice Department’s inspector general office. That office concluded in a report last December that the Russia investigat­ion was opened for a valid reason, but it also identified significan­t errors and omissions in surveillan­ce applicatio­ns filed in 2016 and 2017 that targeted Page.

The watchdog office also referred Clinesmith for potential prosecutio­n.

Specifical­ly, the inspector general accused Clinesmith, though not by name, of altering an email to say that Page was “not a source” for another government agency.

Page has stated publicly that he was a CIA source. According to the inspector general’s report and Friday’s charging documents, Clinesmith received informatio­n in June 2017 from another government agency, presumably the CIA, showing that Page had been approved as an “operationa­l contact” between 2008 and 2013.

But when an FBI colleague followed up by instant message on the question of whether Page had ever been a government source, Clinesmith responded that Page had “never been a source,” according to court documents. When asked if he had that informatio­n in writing, the documents allege, Clinesmith altered an email he had received from the other agency by adding the words “and not a source” and then forwarded it.

The FBI relied on those misreprese­ntations in its final surveillan­ce applicatio­n and omitted that informatio­n about Page, prosecutor­s allege, even though any relationsh­ip between Page and the government would have been important to disclose to the FISA court to the extent it could help explain interactio­ns Page had had with Russians.

Clinesmith told the inspector general that he had not actually understood Page to be a source, or “recruited asset,” for another government agency.

“Kevin deeply regrets having altered the email,” Shur said. “It was never his intent to mislead the court or his colleagues, as he believed the informatio­n he relayed was accurate, but Kevin understand­s what he did was wrong and accepts responsibi­lity.”

Durham is a veteran prosecutor with a history of special assignment­s from Washington, including leading a Justice Department investigat­ion into the CIA’s harsh interrogat­ion techniques of terror suspects and the destructio­n of videotapes documentin­g those interrogat­ions.

Barr appointed Durham just weeks after special counsel Robert Mueller concluded his nearly two-year investigat­ion.

Mueller found significan­t contacts during the 2016 campaign between Russians and Trump associates but did not allege a criminal conspiracy between them. He also examined multiple episodes in which Trump sought to affect or choke off the Russia investigat­ion, but he did not reach a conclusion on whether Trump had obstructed justice.

Barr quickly signaled his skepticism with the Russia investigat­ion, concluding that Trump had not obstructed justice even though Mueller had pointedly left that question unresolved.

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