USA TODAY International Edition

We’re running a full, fair inquiry

Chairman Nunes saw it as his duty to inform the president

- Jack Langer Jack Langer is communicat­ions director for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce.

House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes received vital informatio­n about incidental collection related to President- elect Donald Trump and his associates.

To protect the privacy and constituti­onal rights of U. S. citizens, the intelligen­ce community has very strict procedures on how informatio­n gained through incidental collection of those citizens can be handled and disseminat­ed.

Because of his concern that these procedures may have been violated, and that Americans’ identities may have been impermissi­bly identified and their informatio­n improperly disseminat­ed for political purposes, Chairman Nunes directly informed key leaders about this informatio­n, including directors of U. S. intelligen­ce agencies and the speaker of the House. He also viewed it as his duty to inform President Trump, since this sort of informatio­n rightly should be furnished to the president.

As Chairman Nunes repeatedly said in his public comments on this issue, the informatio­n he received did not pertain to a criminal investigat­ion or to Russia, which is the subject of the Intelligen­ce Committee’s investigat­ion. Therefore, sharing this informatio­n did not affect the credibilit­y of our investigat­ion, which is ongoing.

The committee has repeatedly stated it is running a full, fair and bipartisan investigat­ion into the measures taken by Russia during the 2016 election campaign, and it will follow the evidence wherever it leads.

We have held classified briefings as well as an open hearing, and we are closely examining reams of documents related to our investigat­ion. We intend to pursue this matter until we have a clear picture of exactly what happened with regard to Russian measures against the U. S. election, and we aim to make our findings as public as possible while still protecting classified informatio­n.

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