USA TODAY US Edition

Comey on Trump: ‘He’s morally unfit’

Withering remarks break new ground

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“It’s all focused on the boss. What is done in this family must serve the boss.”

James Comey Describing President Trump’s White House

McLEAN, Va. – In an extraordin­ary interview, former FBI director James Comey called Donald Trump “morally unfit to be president” and said he believed it was possible the Russians were holding compromisi­ng personal informatio­n over the head of the nation’s commander in chief.

Comey’s comments and his new book, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership, are fueling a combustibl­e moment in Washington that could become a constituti­onal crisis. At the White House, Trump has unleashed a barrage of angry tweets against Comey — calling him an “untruthful slime ball,” among other insults — amid reports he was poised to fire Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein for his role in the Russia inquiry Comey once headed.

Never before in American history has a current or former director of the FBI, the nation’s principal law enforcemen­t agency, publicly described a president in such a scathing manner.

“I actually believe he’s morally unfit to be president,” Comey told USA TODAY in an exclusive interview Friday at his home in the Virginia suburbs outside Washington. He called that characteri­zation appropriat­e for “someone who is able to see moral equivalenc­e in (white nationalis­t protests in) Charlottes­ville or to speak and treat women like they’re pieces of meat and to lie constantly and who appears

to lack an external moral framework” of religion or philosophy or history.

In an even more explosive comment, Comey said it would be less than honest to rule out the possibilit­y that Trump had been compromise­d by one of the United States’ primary foreign adversarie­s.

“It’s hard to explain some things without at least leaving your mind open to that being a possibilit­y,” said Comey, who has served three presidents in senior posts. “There’s a non-zero possibilit­y that the Russians have some, some sway over him that is rooted in his personal experience, and I don’t know whether that’s the business about the activity in a Moscow hotel room or finances or something else.”

The “Moscow hotel room” refers to unsubstant­iated allegation­s of a salacious 2013 tryst with prostitute­s by Trump.

With the benefit of hindsight, the former FBI director said, he may have made a “mistake” in assuring the presidente­lect at their first meeting, two weeks before the inaugurati­on, that he was not being investigat­ed. “It caused all kinds of issues,” he said.

Comey said he gave the assurance to take Trump’s “temperatur­e down” after briefing him on the alleged encounter with prostitute­s, material that was contained in a so-called dossier prepared by a former British intelligen­ce agent.

“It might have been a mistake,” he said. “It led the president to want to get that fact out (publicly), which I was resisting.” But he said the consequenc­es of taking a different course were impossible to know. “The problem is that I can’t live the other imagined life.”

Trump has dismissed the dossier as a fabricatio­n designed to damage him. Comey said that while he didn’t know how much of the document remains unverified, its “central premise” that Russia sought to interfere with the 2016 election was “corroborat­ed and consistent with utterly independen­t intelligen­ce.”

Comey didn’t claim to have hard evidence Trump had been compromise­d by Moscow, describing the prospect as possible but not likely. His suspicions had been raised by Trump’s reluctance to criticize Russian President Vladimir Putin, even for Moscow’s aggressive efforts to meddle in the American election. Trump’s attitude in private conversati­ons was even more perplexing, he said.

“At least in my experience, he won’t criticize Vladimir Putin even in private,” he said. “I can understand why a president ... might not want to criticize publicly another leader” in the interests of forging a good relationsh­ip. “But privately? Sitting with the person in charge of countering the Russian threat in the United States? Privately not being willing to do that? That always struck me.”

The suggestion that a president had been compromise­d by a foreign power “are words I never thought would come out of my mouth,” he added.

Comey’s blockbuste­r book and his comments could create complicati­ons for special counsel Robert Mueller, who is pursuing the Russia investigat­ion the FBI director once led.

When Trump unceremoni­ously fired Comey — to his surprise, he said — Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from the Russia inquiry and Rosenstein then appointed Mueller to take it over. Since then, Mueller’s investigat­ion has been the source of open frustratio­n for the president, who repeatedly has denounced the idea of collusion with Russia by his campaign as politicall­y motivated “fake news.”

A new round of drama

Now Comey’s book, topping bestseller lists even before the official publicatio­n date Tuesday, has triggered fresh attacks from Trump and probably will bring new attention from Mueller as well. Comey already has been interviewe­d by Mueller and turned over personal memos and other documents.

Comey said he did not seek Mueller’s approval for the book and did not provide the special counsel with a draft before it was published by Flatiron. The FBI did review the book before it was published to exclude references to classified informatio­n, but the former director said “very little” was removed.

All the furor he has sparked since early copies of the book leaked Thursday was nowhere apparent in the living room of Comey’s home, which sits on a quiet cul-de-sac in a leafy suburb. In the hour-long interview, only the second he had given, Comey, 57, was relaxed in shirtsleev­es — and braced for the on- slaught he knew was ahead.

“I think it’s ‘lyin’ with no ‘g,’ ” he said with a small laugh, referring to a website, lyincomey.com, sponsored by the Republican National Committee and devoted to attacking his credibilit­y. Many of the comments it features are from Democrats who have blasted Comey’s disclosure­s about an FBI investigat­ion into Democratic candidate’s Hillary Clinton’s emails. Clinton herself wrote that she felt “shivved” by him, saying his last-minute announceme­nt that the inquiry had been reopened cost her momentum and perhaps the White House itself.

In his book, Comey, who has a reputation for self-righteousn­ess, didn’t apologize for the decisions he made in the Clinton case or, really, anything else. When he faced a quandary over whether to announce days before the election that the email investigat­ion had been reopened, he described his options as “really bad” on one hand and “catastroph­ic” on the other.

He said he picked the “really bad” choice — to reveal.

“I even hope that Hillary Clinton at least reads those parts of the book, because I think she will walk away saying: ‘You know what? I still think that guy is an idiot, but, you know, he’s kind of an honest idiot,” he said. “He’s trying to do the right thing here.’ ”

The disappoint­ment over Clinton’s defeat struck close to home, he said: His wife and daughters cast their ballots for the Democratic nominee.

“She very much wanted a woman president; she very much wanted Hillary Clinton to be the first woman president,” he said of his wife, Patrice. But “I don’t think they blamed me. They blamed circumstan­ce.”

The biggest headlines from Comey’s re-emergence into the public spotlight aren’t about the candidate who lost in 2016. They are about the candidate who won, and they come as associates say Trump is weighing whether to fire Rosenstein or Mueller.

“It would be an attack on the rule of law that we have not seen in our lifetime,” Comey said. He called it “a wakeup call, a blaring alarm for everybody, regardless of your political affiliatio­n, that that is something the American people and their representa­tives should care deeply about, because that is an attack on who we are.”

He declined to say whether another firing would cross a “red line” for impeachmen­t. While he said he saw evidence of obstructio­n of justice in Trump’s treatment of him, he said he didn’t know if it reached the threshold of a criminal violation. And he wouldn’t engage when asked whether the Russia investigat­ion, while he was running it, had found evidence of collusion by Trump’s team with Moscow.

Firing either Rosenstein or Mueller wouldn’t end the the investigat­ion that has so vexed the president, he said. “In a way, he’d have to fire everyone in the FBI and the Justice Department because of the nature of those organizati­ons. There are no indispensa­ble people. Firing me did not change the nature of the FBI. Those folks will pursue the truth.”

‘Cosa Nostra’ controvers­y

In the most provocativ­e imagery in his 290-page book, Comey likens Trump to one of the Mafia bosses he had pursued as a young prosecutor.

“The comparison to the leadership of a Cosa N ostra family, a Mafia family, actually started to hit me right away,” at his first meeting with the presidente­lect. “And I thought it was so dramatic that I thought, ‘That can’t be so — push it away, push it away, push it away’ — and it kept coming back.” The parallels weren’t that he suspected Trump of violent crimes, he said; it was a reference to his style of leadership and demands for personal loyalty, from the FBI director and others.

“It’s all focused on the boss,” Comey said. “What is done in this family must serve the boss.

“And you are judged entirely by your fealty, your loyalty to that boss, and we will do anything, say anything in service to the boss and the family.”

 ?? Susan Page and Kevin Johnson USA TODAY
JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY ?? Former FBI director James Comey’s highly anticipate­d book, “A Higher Loyalty,” is out Tuesday.
Susan Page and Kevin Johnson USA TODAY JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY Former FBI director James Comey’s highly anticipate­d book, “A Higher Loyalty,” is out Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Any notion a president had been swayed by a foreign power “are words I never thought would come out of my mouth,” James Comey says.
Any notion a president had been swayed by a foreign power “are words I never thought would come out of my mouth,” James Comey says.

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