The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Comey: FBI probing Trump-Russia links, wiretap claims bogus

- By Eric Tucker and Eileen Sullivan

WASHINGTON >> The FBI is investigat­ing whether Donald Trump’s associates coordinate­d with Russian officials in an effort to sway the 2016 presidenti­al election, Director James Comey said Monday in an extraordin­ary public confirmati­on of a probe the president has refused to acknowledg­e, dismissed as fake news and blamed on Democrats.

In a bruising five-hour session, the FBI director also knocked down Trump’s claim that his predecesso­r had wiretapped his New York skyscraper, an assertion that has distracted White House officials and frustrated fellow Republican­s who acknowledg­e they’ve seen no evidence to support it.

The revelation of the investigat­ion of possible collusion with Russians, and the first public confirmati­on of the wider probe that began last summer, came in a remarkable hearing by one branch of government examining serious allegation­s against another branch and the new president’s election campaign.

Tight-lipped for the most part, Comey refused to offer details on the scope, targets or timeline for the FBI investigat­ion, which could shadow the White House for months, if not years. The director would not say whether the probe has turned up evidence that Trump associates may have schemed with Russians during a campaign marked by email hacking that investigat­ors believe was aimed at helping the Republican defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

“I can promise you,” the FBI director vowed, “we will follow the facts wherever they lead.”

Comey for the first time put himself publicly at odds with the president by contradict­ing a series of recent tweets from Trump that asserted his phones had been ordered tapped by President Barack Obama during the campaign.

“With respect to the president’s tweets about alleged wiretappin­g directed at him by the prior administra­tion, I have no informatio­n that supports those tweets, and we have looked carefully inside the FBI,” Comey said. The same was true, he added, of the Justice Department.

His confirmati­on of the Russia-links investigat­ion was striking given the FBI’s historic reluctance to discuss its work. But Comey said the intense public interest in the matter — and permission from the Justice Department — made it appropriat­e to do so.

Comey said the collusion inquiry began last July as part of a broader probe into Russian meddling in American politics, meaning Trump was elected president as associates remained under investigat­ion for possible connection­s to Russia.

Clinton allies on Monday contrasted Comey’s silence during the campaign with public comments he made last year when closing out an investigat­ion into Clinton’s email practices and then, shortly before Election Day, announcing that the probe would be revived following the discovery of additional emails. Many Democrats blame Comey’s public updates with stoking worries about Clinton’s trustworth­iness and turning voters against her.

Comey acknowledg­ed that “some folks may want to make comparison­s to past instances” where he and other officials were more open, but he said those were about concluded investigat­ions.

In the current case, it’s not clear how long it will take for the FBI to decide if a crime was committed, but counterint­elligence investigat­ions are known for being complicate­d and time-intensive — and for frequently concluding without charges. Comey would not commit to a timetable.

Regardless of the outcome, the investigat­ion is unquestion­ably an unwelcome distractio­n for an administra­tion that has struggled to move past questions about ties to Russia. The White House tried anew Monday to distance itself from two former senior members of Trump’s team, Paul Manafort and Michael Flynn, who have been under scrutiny for foreign contacts.

Rep. Devin Nunes, the California Republican, told Comey that revelation­s about the investigat­ion had placed a “big gray cloud” over people trying to lead the country.

“The faster you can get to the bottom of this, it’s going to be better for all Americans,” he said.

The hearing quickly divided along partisan lines, Democrats pressing for details on the status of the FBI’s investigat­ion while Republican­s focused on news coverage and possible improper disclosure­s of classified informatio­n developed through surveillan­ce.

Comey is the latest government official to reject Trump’s claims, made without any evidence, that Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower, his campaign headquarte­rs. Rep. Nunes rejected them earlier in the hearing.

Comey testified along with National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers, who also disputed allegation­s that British intelligen­ce services could have been involved in such wiretappin­g. The White House last week pointed to a report of British involvemen­t in an attempt to bolster the president’s claim. The move only angered an ally.

Trump took to Twitter before Monday’s hearing began, accusing Democrats of making up allegation­s about his campaign associates. He said Congress and the FBI should be going after media leaks and maybe even Clinton instead.

“The real story that Congress, the FBI and others should be looking into is the leaking of Classified informatio­n. Must find leaker now!” Trump tweeted early Monday as news coverage on the Russia allegation­s dominated the morning’s cable news.

The president continued to tweet throughout the hearing, creating a unusual public conversati­on between the embattled president and his FBI director.

After Trump tweeted that the FBI and NSA had told Congress that Russia did not influence the electoral process, Comey disputed that descriptio­n. The FBI has offered no opinion and has no view and no informatio­n on the potential impact on the election because that’s not something the bureau has looked at, he said.

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