The Denver Post

Inspector general report says Trump involved in FBI decision

- By Matthew Barakat

MCLEAN, VA.» President Donald Trump was directly involved in meetings where officials decided to move forward with a controvers­ial plan to build a new FBI headquarte­rs in the nation’s capital, according to a government report.

Monday’s report from the General Services Administra­tion inspector general cites two White House meetings in January and June of this year in which Trump participat­ed.

In the first of those meetings, participan­ts agreed to move forward on a proposal to demolish the existing J. Edgar Hoover building in downtown Washington and build a new headquarte­rs in the same spot.

While there is widespread agreement that the Hoover Building — a crumbling, sprawling piece of Brutalist architectu­re built in 1974 — does not meet the FBI’s needs, the plan to keep the FBI in Washington scraps a long held plan to move the FBI to the Maryland or Virginia suburbs.

Rep. Gerry Connolly, a northern Virginia Democrat who supports moving the FBI to the suburbs, called for additional congressio­nal hearings to uncover the extent of Trump’s involvemen­t. He said the project is rife with conflicts of interest for Trump, whose Trump Internatio­nal Hotel is essentiall­y across the street from the FBI headquarte­rs.

“When we began this investigat­ion, the prospect that President Trump was personally involved in the government-led redevelopm­ent of a property in close proximity to the Trump Hotel was dismissed as a conspiracy theory,” Connolly said.

The extent of Trump’s involvemen­t in the decision is unclear. The report indicates that while GSA employees confirmed the White House meetings with Trump, they received instructio­ns not to divulge any statements Trump made at those meetings.

The first meeting in which Trump’s participat­ion was documented, according to the IG report, came in January 2018. That was before the GSA proposed a plan to raze the Hoover building and build a new headquarte­rs in its place, but after the GSA announced in 2017 that it was scrapping its plans for a move to the suburbs.

The IG report also concludes that officials are greatly underestim­ating the cost of keeping the headquarte­rs in Washington. In particular, the report concludes that GSA is not taking into account the money that could be realized by selling the land under the Hoover building to private developers.

The GSA issued a statement in response to the IG report saying its estimates “are accurate, transparen­t, and more representa­tive of the full costs of the project than the analysis put forth in the IG review.”

There is also some question about whether GSA administra­tor Emily Murphy was forthcomin­g about Trump’s role when she testified about the relocation decision to Congress.

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