The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

FBI’S Comey: ‘You’re stuck with me for another 6½ years’

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BOSTON >> FBI Director James Comey said Wednesday he plans to serve his entire 10-year term, even as controvers­y swirls over his attempt to rebut President Donald Trump’s claim that the Obama administra­tion tapped his phones during the election.

“You’re stuck with me for another 6½ years,” Comey said during a cybersecur­ity conference at Boston College.

Comey was appointed 3½ years ago by then-President Barack Obama.

Controvers­y erupted last weekend after Trump tweeted that Obama had tapped his phones at Trump Tower during the election. Trump offered no evidence of his claim. Comey asked the Justice Department to publicly reject the allegation as false.

Comey did not reference the wiretappin­g controvers­y during his speech to law enforcemen­t officials and private-sector business leaders.

He said the FBI is renewing a focus on the challenges posed by encryption. He said there should be a balance between privacy and the FBI’s ability to lawfully access informatio­n. He also said the FBI needs to recruit talented computer personnel who might otherwise go to work for Apple or Google.

“The cyberthrea­ts we face are enormous. I don’t know if we can stay ahead of them. And I think to say otherwise would be hubris,” Comey said.

“We need to ensure that cybersecur­ity is a priority for every enterprise in the United States at all levels. We need to get better and faster at sharing informatio­n in the appropriat­e ways. We need to make sure we have the right people on board to help fight that threat, and we need to build trust between the government and the private sector,” he said.

Probe sought after AP report on church abuse allegation­s

A district attorney has asked the state to investigat­e two assistant prosecutor­s after an Associated Press story that quoted former congregant­s of a North Carolina church as saying the men derailed criminal probes into allegation­s of abuse by sect leaders.

David Learner said Wednesday that he wants the State Bureau of Investigat­ion to look into the accusation­s against his employees, who are members of the evangelica­l Word of Faith Fellowship church.

The AP story, released Monday, cited nine former Word of Faith members who said Frank Webster and Chris Back provided legal advice, helped at strategy sessions and participat­ed in a mock trial for four congregant­s charged with harassing a former member.

The ex-congregant­s also said that Back and Webster, who is sect leader Jane Whaley’s son-in-law, helped derail a social services investigat­ion into child abuse in 2015 and attended meetings where Whaley warned congregant­s to lie to investigat­ors about abuse incidents.

Nathan Key, a spokesman for Learner, said in an email that Webster and Back will keep working during the investigat­ion but did not say if they will continue to prosecute cases. He did not respond to follow-up questions.

Under North Carolina law, prosecutor­s cannot provide legal advice or be involved in outside cases in any manner. Violation of those rules can lead to ethics charges, dismissal or disbarment. Offering legal advice in an ongoing investigat­ion to help a person avoid prosecutio­n could lead to criminal charges.

Learner read a statement to reporters on Monday saying he wasn’t aware of any investigat­ions into his employees. “As far as I am concerned, they are my employees and this is a personnel issue,” the statement said.

Back and Webster have not responded to several messages left by the AP about the allegation­s.

Learner is district attorney for Burke, Caldwell, and Catawba counties in western North Carolina. Word of Faith church is in Spindale in nearby Rutherford County.

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