The Palm Beach Post

McCabe ‘disappoint­ed’ in Comey comments

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — Andrew McCabe, the former FBI deputy director, is “very upset and disappoint­ed” by comments made by his former boss James Comey that contradict his account of a disclosure to the news media, McCabe’s lawyer said Friday.

“Andy has at all times attempted to, and believes he’s been successful in, playing it straight with Jim,” Bromwich told reporters as he again attacked an internal investigat­ion process that led to McCabe’s firing from the FBI last month and a criminal referral to federal prosecutor­s.

The disagreeme­nt involves conflictin­g recollecti­ons about a conversati­on the two men had after an October 2016 Wall Street Journal story about an FBI investigat­ion into the Clinton Foundation.

McCabe says he told Comey that he had authorized FBI officials to share informatio­n with the reporter — specifical­ly, details of a heated phone conversati­on with a senior Justice Department official — in order to push back against a story he felt was going to be unfair to the bureau and inaccurate.

Comey, however, has said McCabe did not acknowledg­e having done so and left the impression that he didn’t know who had shared the informatio­n with the journalist.

The Justice Department’s inspector general concluded that McCabe misled officials under oath about authorizin­g the disclosure. Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired him last month, and the inspector general’s office in recent weeks referred the matter to the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington for a possible criminal investigat­ion.

Bromwich, a former Justice Department inspector general himself, said Friday that the threshold for criminal referrals is very low and that they very rarely end up in prosecutio­ns. He said the investigat­ion that led to McCabe’s firing was “deeply flawed,” “unpreceden­ted” in its speed and accelerate­d so that McCabe could be dismissed before he could retire with full benefits.

Separately Friday, Bromwich announced the creation of a legal defense fund and said he was working with the law firm of Boies Schiller & Flexner to consider possible lawsuits on grounds such as wrongful terminatio­n and defamation. President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked McCabe and Comey by name, and those insults have been amplified by the inspector general’s findings.

The disagreeme­nt and contrastin­g memories have burst into public view this week, as Comey has insisted in television interviews that he stands by his account and that the FBI and Justice Department cannot tolerate lack of candor. He has said he feels conflicted about McCabe’s legal problems given that the two men worked closely together.

Bromwich also suggested that the disagreeme­nt was not personal, though he did note that McCabe feels “very upset and disappoint­ed” by some of Comey’s comments.

“Andy McCabe and Jim Comey had an excellent relationsh­ip. They worked closely with one another . ... So we are not for a moment suggesting that Jim Comey is making things up or lying,” Bromwich said. But, he added, “Nobody’s memory is perfect. People are fallible. And we think on this one that Andy McCabe has a strong and clear recollecti­on and Jim Comey does not.”

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