The Mercury News Weekend

Trump denies Comey duress

President says he didn’t ask FBI chief to back off on probe of ex-security adviser Flynn

- By Sari Horowitz, Ashley Parker and Ed O’Keefe

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday said there was no collusion between his campaign and Russia, while adding the caveat that he can only speak for himself, and denied ever asking FBI Director James Comey to back off his agency’s investigat­ion into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Trump spoke in the wake of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s decision to appoint a special counsel to investigat­e any coordinati­on between Trump associates and Russian officials.

“The entire

thing has been a witch hunt, and there is no collusion between — certainly myself and my campaign, but I can only speak for myself and the Russians.” — Donald Trump

“I respect the move, but the entire thing has been a witch hunt, and there is no collusion between — certainly myself and my campaign, but I can only speak for myself and the Russians. Zero,” Trump said, at a joint news conference Thursday afternoon with President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia. “Believe me, there’s no collusion.”

Asked whether he urged Comey — as the fired FBI chief said he did in notes written after a meeting with the president — to drop the Flynn investigat­ion, Trump said, “No, no,” before ordering the media to move on to the “next question.”

Also Thursday afternoon, Rosenstein went to Capitol Hill and indicated to the full Senate that the White House’s initial account of Comey’s firing was not accurate because he said he knew that Comey would be fired before he wrote a controvers­ial memo that the White House initially used as its justificat­ion for the dismissal.

Rosenstein did not reveal any more significan­t details about the Comey firing, his decision to appoint a special counsel or the ongoing Russia investigat­ion during the unusual 90-minute closed briefing with most of the 100 senators, according to interviews with several senators afterward.

Rosenstein did, however, emphasize to the senators the independen­t authority that the new special counsel — former FBI director and federal prosecutor Robert Mueller III — has in the Russian investigat­ion.

“If one thing is clear from the meeting we just had, it is that Mr. Mueller has broad and wide-ranging authority to follow the facts wherever they go,” said Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

“That gives me confidence and should give the American people some confidence.”

Because of Mueller’s wide scope in the Russian probe, Rosenstein referred several of the senators’ questions to the new special counsel, frustratin­g many of the senators who wanted to learn more.

Rosenstein “was very careful about not going into any details surroundin­g the removal because he wants to give Robert Mueller the opportunit­y to make an independen­t decision” about how to proceed, said Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., as she emerged from the briefing.

Rosenstein received strong support from the Senate a month ago when he was confirmed by a vote of 94 to 6 to be the Justice Department’s second-highest-ranking official. But his reputation has come under fierce attack in the past week over the memo he wrote about Comey.

Since Comey’s firing May 9, the calls for Rosenstein to appoint a special counsel intensifie­d, especially from Democratic lawmakers who said he could no longer be impartial in the Russia investigat­ion.

Rosenstein had been put in charge of the probe as soon as he was confirmed because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself after The Washington Post reported on contacts he had with the Russian ambassador that he had not disclosed when asked about it during his Senate confirmati­on hearing.

Rosenstein did not notify White House counsel Don- ald McGahn of his special counsel decision until 5:30 p.m., the same time Justice Department officials were briefing reporters and 30 minutes before the news became public.

Why Rosenstein felt compelled to write the memo remains unknown. Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said that Rosenstein told the senators that he was not pressured into writing it.

“He learned the president’s decision to fire him and then he wrote his memo with his rationale,” Durbin said.

According to a person close to the White House, Rosenstein was upset about the narrative that emerged from the White House the evening of May 9. White House officials cast Rosenstein as the prime person behind the decision to fire Comey, even though Trump had already decided to terminate the director. Rosenstein threatened to resign from the Justice Department because of the explanatio­n that White House officials were giving reporters about the firing, said a person close to the White House, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

By May 10, White House officials had backed off blaming Rosenstein for the firing, and the next day, Trump contradict­ed his own officials and told NBC News that the decision to fire Comey was his alone and that he was thinking of “this Russia thing with Trump” when he made it.

On Thursday, Trump contradict­ed both his own account and that of Rosenstein. “Director Comey was very unpopular with most people,” Trump said.

“I also got a very, very strong recommenda­tion, as you know, from the deputy attorney general, Rod J. Rosenstein.” Trump had earlier in the morning lashed out on Twitter at the news of the special prosecutor, calling the move a politicall­y motivated “witch hunt” by his Democratic rivals.

The president’s anger contrasted with a more measured written statement released by the White House on Wednesday, when Trump declared that a thorough investigat­ion would find “no collusion between my campaign and any foreign entity.”

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