The Record (Troy, NY)

Acting FBI chief contradict­s White House

- By Eileen Sullivan, Deb Reichmann and Julie Pace

WASHINGTON>> President Donald Trump said Thursday he would have fired FBI Director James Comey even without the recommenda­tion from his top political appointees at the Justice Department, contradict­ing earlier White House accounts.

He insisted anew that Comey had told him directly three separate times that he personally was not under investigat­ion.

“I was going to fire Comey,” Trump said in an interview with NBC. The White House and Vice President Mike Pence have said the president acted on the recommenda­tion of Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

“Regardless of recommenda­tion I was going to fire Comey,” Trump said.

Trump’s comments came amid increased criticism of the White House’s evolving explanatio­n of the firing.

In public testimony Thursday, the acting FBI director, Andrew McCabe, contradict­ed White House statements about why Comey was dismissed, particular­ly the assertion that Comey had lost the confidence of the rank and file of the FBI.

“That is not accurate,” McCabe said in response to a senator’s question. “I can tell you also that Director Comey enjoyed broad support within the FBI and still does to this day.”

In the NBC interview, Trump repeated his assertion that Comey three times assured him he was not under investigat­ion.

“He said it once at dinner, and then he said it twice during phone calls,” Trump said.

McCabe told senators it is not standard FBI practice to tell someone he or she is or isn’t under investigat­ion. He would not comment on conversati­ons between Trump and the FBI director.

The White House refused Wednesday to provide any evidence or greater detail. Former FBI agents said such a statement

by the director would be all but unthinkabl­e.

The dramatic firing of Comey has left the fate of the FBI’s probe into Russia’s election meddling and possible ties to the Trump campaign deeply uncertain. The investigat­ion has shadowed Trump from the outset of his presidency, though he’s denied any ties to Russia or knowledge of any campaign coordinati­on with Moscow.

McCabe called the Russia investigat­ion “highly significan­t” — another contradict­ion of the White House portrayal — and assured senators Comey’s firing will not hinder it. He promised he would tolerate no interferen­ce from the White House and would not provide the administra­tion with updates on its progress.

“You cannot stop the men and women of the FBI from doing the right thing,” he declared. He said there has been no interferen­ce so far.

Days before he was fired, Comey requested more re- sources to pursue his investigat­ion, U. S. officials have said, fueling concerns that Trump was trying to undermine a probe that could threaten his presidency. McCabe said he was not aware of any such request and said the Russia investigat­ion is adequately resourced.

It was unclear whether word of the Comey request, said to have been put to Rosenstein, ever made its way to Trump. But the revelation intensifie­d the pressure on the White House from both political parties to explain the motives behind Comey’s stunning ouster. The chairman and top Democrat on the Senate intelligen­ce committee abruptly left the hearing Thursday to meet with Rosenstein, who is McCabe’s boss. The senators said later that the Russia investigat­ions were discussed but Comey’s firing was not.

Trump is the first president since Richard Nixon to fire a law enforcemen­t official overseeing an investigat­ion with ties to the White House. Democrats quickly accused Trump of using Comey’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigat­ion as a pretext and called for a special prosecutor into the Russia probe. Republican leaders brushed off the idea as unnecessar­y. Defending the firing, White House officials said Trump’s confidence in Comey had been eroding for months. They suggested Trump was persuaded to take the step by Justice Department officials and a scathing memo, written by Rosenstein, criticizin­g the director’s role in the Clinton investigat­ion.

“Frankly, he’d been considerin­g letting Director Comey go since the day he was elected,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, a sharply different explanatio­n from the day before, when officials put the emphasis on new Justice complaints about Comey.

Outraged Democrats called for an independen­t investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s possible ties to Russia’s election interferen­ce, and a handful of prominent Republi- can senators left open that possibilit­y. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, with the support of the White House, brushed aside those calls, saying a new investigat­ion would only “impede the current work being done.”

The Senate intelligen­ce committee on Wednesday subpoenaed former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn for documents related to its investigat­ion into Russia’s election meddling. Flynn’s Russia ties are also being scrutinize­d by the FBI.

The White House appeared caught off guard by the intense response to Comey’s firing, given that the FBI director had become a pariah among Democrats for his role in the Clinton investigat­ion. In defending the decision, officials leaned heavily on a memo from Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, criticizin­g Comey’s handling of the Clinton investigat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States