The Mercury News

House Judiciary Committee subpoenas FBI official who sent anti-Trump texts

- By Karoun Demirjian and Matt Zapotosky

The House Judiciary Committee issued a subpoena Tuesday for former top FBI counterint­elligence official Peter Strzok’s public testimony next week, after Strzok’s lawyer accused the panel of subjecting his client to “Kabuki theater” and threatened not to show up.

The subpoena is an attempt to force Strzok to appear before the committee on July 10, a date upon which Strzok’s attorney, Aitan Goelman, has already said he is not available. In a statement, Goelman said that Strzok would testify publicly at some point but would not commit to doing so on that date or before the Judiciary Committee.

“If the committees were actually interested in making sure the American people knew the truth, they would release the tran- script of Pete’s previous testimony,” Goelman said. “Pete wants the American people to hear his testimony for themselves, instead of having his words leaked, twisted and mischaract­erized by Members of Congress. The only question is when and before what committee.”

Strzok has come under scrutiny for a series of antiTrump texts he sent to former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was having an affair. The texts included disparagin­g comments about then-candidate Donald Trump and his supporters, and included one message in which Strzok told Page that “we’ll stop” Trump from becoming president.

During a closed-door grilling last week, Strzok told lawmakers that his personal political opinions never had any effect on the FBI’s investigat­ions into then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server or the possibilit­y of Russian ties to the Trump campaign, probes in which he played a leading role. Republican­s said they did not find the argument that bias could not have influenced the investigat­ions plausible.

Strzok is undergoing internal review at the FBI over his conduct.

In a sharply-worded email to committee counsels, Goelman accused Republican members of the panel of trying to “trap” Strzok with a public hearing that they initially denied him until he first spoke to members behind closed doors. Goelman surmised that the Republican­s would try to “seize on any tiny inconsiste­ncies” between Strzok’s private and public testimony “to ‘prove’ that he perjured himself or made false statements.”

“Given that the Committee has proven it is playing political games, violating both our trust and its own rules, it no longer makes sense for us to keep playing along,” Goelman said.

Committee Chairman Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., responded by issuing the subpoena for Strzok’s testimony. Though the scheduled July 10 hearing will involve both the House Judiciary and the Oversight and Government Reform committees, only the Judiciary Committee issued the subpoena.

 ?? AL DRAGO — BLOOMBERG ?? Peter Strzok, center, has come under scrutiny for a series of anti-Trump texts he sent to former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was having an affair.
AL DRAGO — BLOOMBERG Peter Strzok, center, has come under scrutiny for a series of anti-Trump texts he sent to former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was having an affair.

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