Yuma Sun

Spying claim by Intel chair renews fight over Russia probe

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WASHINGTON — Private communicat­ions of Donald Trump and his presidenti­al transition team may have been scooped up by American intelligen­ce officials monitoring other targets and improperly distribute­d throughout spy agencies, the chairman of the House intelligen­ce committee said Wednesday — an extraordin­ary public airing of often-secret informatio­n that brought swift protests from Democrats.

Republican Rep. Devin Nunes’ comments led the committee’s ranking Democrat, Adam Schiff, to renew his party’s calls for an independen­t probe of Trump campaign links to Russia in addition to the GOP-led panel’s investigat­ion. Schiff also said he had seen “more than circumstan­tial evidence” that Trump associates colluded with Russia.

In back-to-back news conference­s at the Capitol and then the White House — where he had privately briefed the president — Nunes said he was concerned by officials’ handling of the communicat­ions in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion.

He said the surveillan­ce was conducted legally and did not appear to be related to the current FBI investigat­ion into Trump associates’ contacts with Russia or with any criminal warrants. And the revelation­s, he said, did nothing to change his assessment that Trump’s explosive allegation­s about wiretaps at Trump Tower were false.

Still, the White House immediatel­y seized on his statements in what appeared to be a coordinate­d public display.

Moments after Nunes spoke on Capitol Hill, Trump spokesman Sean Spicer read his statements from the White House briefing room podium. The California congressma­n quickly headed up Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to personally brief the president and to address reporters outside the West Wing. Nunes’ decision to brief the president was particular­ly unusual, given Trump almost certainly has access to the informatio­n from his intelligen­ce agencies.

Rep. Jackie Speier, DCalif., said Nunes’ disclosure could be a “weapon of mass distractio­n” in light of allegation­s of coordinati­on between Russians and the Trump campaign during the 2016 campaign against Democrat Hillary Clinton.

“This could be a lot of theatrics,” said Speier, also a member of the House intelligen­ce committee.

“This is a bizarre situation,” Sen. John McCain, RAriz., said in an interview on MSNBC. “I’m calling for a select committee because I think this back-and-forth shows that Congress no longer has the credibilit­y (to) handle this alone.”

Outside the White House, Nunes said, “What I’ve read bothers me, and I think it should bother the president himself and his team.”

Trump said he felt “somewhat” vindicated by the Republican’s revelation­s. “I very much appreciate­d the fact that they found what they found,” he said.

The disclosure came two days after FBI Director James Comey publicly confirmed the bureau’s own investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s connection­s with Russia and rejected Trump’s explosive claims that President Barack Obama wiretapped his New York skyscraper during the election. Comey’s comments came during the intelligen­ce committee’s first public hearing on Russia’s election interferen­ce, an investigat­ion being overseen by Nunes.

Nunes briefed reporters on the new informatio­n without consulting with Schiff, and that did not sit well with the top Democrat on the committee.

Schiff declared he now has “profound doubt” about the integrity and independen­ce of the committee’s probe. He said that “a credible investigat­ion cannot be conducted this way.”

Later, in an interview with MSNBC, Schiff said evidence “that is not circumstan­tial and is very much worthy of an investigat­ion” exists of Trump associates colluding with Russia as it interfered in last year’s election. He did not outline that evidence.

Nunes said he believed the Trump team’s communicat­ions were caught “incidental­ly.” But he suggested the contents may have been inappropri­ately disseminat­ed in intelligen­ce reports. He left open the possibilit­y the communicat­ions were spread for political reasons. Nunes would not disclose how he received the new informatio­n.

 ??  ?? BY THE NUMBERS Dow Jones Industrial­s: – 6.71 to 20,661.30 Standard & Poor’s: +4.43 to 2,348.45 Nasdaq Composite Index: +27.81 to 5,821.64
BY THE NUMBERS Dow Jones Industrial­s: – 6.71 to 20,661.30 Standard & Poor’s: +4.43 to 2,348.45 Nasdaq Composite Index: +27.81 to 5,821.64

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