The Palm Beach Post

Comey speculates Russians may have dirt on president

‘It’s possible,’ former FBI boss Comey tells ABC in an interview.

- By Catherine Lucey and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — In his scathing appraisal of the man who fired him as FBI chief, James Comey cited “some evidence of obstructio­n of justice” in President Donald Trump’s actions and speculated that Russians might have dirt on the president. Trump struck back, branding Comey a criminal.

Their war of words escalated Monday after Comey, in an ABC interview broadcast the night before, labelled Trump “morally unfit” for office.

Trump tweeted that Comey drafted an exoneratio­n of Hillary Clinton long before he talked to her as part of an investigat­ion into her email practices. He labelled Comey “disgruntle­d” and accused him and allies of having “committed many crimes.” For his part, Comey has said that nine or 10 months into the Clinton probe, he had a “clear picture” where it was going and it’s common to draft statements before an investigat­ion is complete.

Comey’s remarks, coupled with the release of his forthcomin­g book, offer his version of events surroundin­g his firing and the investigat­ions into Russian election meddling and Clinton’s email practices. Several of the episodes he describes in detail, including a private conversati­on about former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn, are central to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion and his recollecti­ons are presumably valuable for prosecutor­s examining whether the president’s actions constitute obstructio­n of justice.

The ex-FBI director, who until his firing in May led an investigat­ion into possible ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, acknowledg­ed it was “stunning” to think Russia could have damaging informatio­n about a U.S. president. But he said that in Trump’s case, he could not discount the possibilit­y the president had been compromise­d.

“These are more words I never thought I’d utter about a president of the United States, but it’s possible,” Comey told ABC News’ chief anchor George Stephanopo­ulos. He acknowledg­ed he had no proof that Russia has dirt on Trump: “I think it’s possible. I don’t know.”

He also answered “possibly” when asked if the president was attempting to obstruct justice when he cleared the Oval Office of other officials in February 2017 before encouragin­g him to close the investigat­ion into Flynn, who by that point was suspected of lying to the FBI about his Russian contacts. The retired general pleaded guilty in December and is now cooperatin­g with Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Comey also said he believed Trump treated women like “pieces of meat.”

“A person who sees moral equivalenc­e in Charlottes­ville, who talks about and treats women like they’re pieces of meat, who lies constantly about matters big and small and insists the American people believe it — that person’s not fit to be president of the United States, on moral grounds,” Comey said.

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