Yuma Sun

Comey admits to ‘real sloppiness’ in Russia probe

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WASHINGTON — Former FBI Director James Comey acknowledg­ed Sunday that a Justice Department inspector general report identified “real sloppiness” in the surveillan­ce of a former Trump campaign aide and said he was wrong to have been “overconfid­ent” about how the Russia investigat­ion was handled.

But Comey also insisted he was right to feel some measure of vindicatio­n because the report did not find evidence for the most sensationa­l of President Donald Trump’s claims, including that he had been wiretapped and illegally spied on and that the FBI had committed treason in investigat­ing ties between Russia and his 2016 campaign.

“Remember how we got here,” Comey said in an interview on “Fox News Sunday.” “The FBI was accused of criminal misconduct. Remember, I was going to jail, and lots of other people were going to jail.”

The inspector general, he added, “did not find misconduct by FBI personnel, did not find political bias, did not find illegal conduct.” The significan­t mistakes the inspector general identified are “not something to sneeze at” but also not evidence of intentiona­l misconduct, Comey said.

In a tweet Sunday, Trump called for an apology from Comey, now that he “got caught red handed.”

“So now Comey’s admitting he was wrong,” Trump wrote. “So what are the consequenc­es for his unlawful conduct. Could it be years in jail? Where are the apologies to me and others, Jim?”

The report by Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded that the FBI opened the Russia investigat­ion for a legitimate reason and was not motivated by partisan bias when it did so.

But Horowitz also found major errors and omissions in applicatio­ns the FBI submitted to eavesdrop on former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. Those problems include the omission of key informatio­n about the reliabilit­y of a source whose informatio­n had been relied on for the warrant, and the altering of an email by an FBI lawyer.

Comey said in retrospect that he was wrong when he said last year that the applicatio­ns to the secretive Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court were handled in a “thoughtful, responsibl­e way.”

“I was overconfid­ent in the procedures that the FBI and Justice had built over 20 years. I thought they were robust enough. It’s incredibly hard to get a FISA. I was overconfid­ent in those,” Comey said Sunday.

“Because he’s right,” Comey added, referring to Horowitz. “There was real sloppiness, 17 things that either should’ve been in the applicatio­ns or at least discussed and characteri­zed differentl­y. It was not acceptable and so he’s right. I was wrong.”

Current FBI Director Christophe­r Wray told The Associated Press last week that the report identified problems that the report found problems that are “unacceptab­le and unrepresen­tative of who we are as an institutio­n.” The FBI is taking more than 40 steps to fix those problems, he said.

Horowitz told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday that no one who was involved in the warrant applicatio­n process should feel vindicated, rejecting claims of vindicatio­n that Comey had made earlier in the week.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS ACTIVISTS PROTEST outside of the COP25 climate talks congress in Madrid, Spain, Saturday. The United Nations SecretaryG­eneral has warned that failure to tackle global warming could result in economic disaster.
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JAMES COMEY

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