Arab Times

‘Trump administra­tion spread lies’

Comey took Trump comments to drop Flynn probe as ‘direction’

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WASHINGTON, June 8, (Agencies): Former FBI Director James Comey accused the Trump administra­tion Thursday of spreading “lies, plain and simple” about him and the FBI in the aftermath of his abrupt firing, in dramatic testimony that exposed deep distrust between the president and the veteran lawman and threatened to undermine Donald Trump’s presidency.

Comey disputed the Trump administra­tion’s justificat­ion for his firing, declaring the administra­tion “defamed him and more importantl­y the FBI,” as he opened his much anticipate­d first public telling of his relationsh­ip with Trump. Comey described discomfort about their one-on-one conversati­ons, saying he decided he immediatel­y needed to document the discussion­s in memos.

“I was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting, so I thought it really important to document,” Comey said. “I knew there might come a day when I might need a record of what happened not only to defend myself but to protect the FBI.”

Comments

Comey made his comments as the packed hearing got underway, bringing Washington and parts of the country to a halt as all eyes were glued on television­s showing the hearing. He immediatel­y dove into the heart of the fraught political controvers­y around his firing as he elaborated on written testimony delivered Wednesday. In that testimony he had already disclosed that Trump demanded his “loyalty” and directly pushed him to “lift the cloud” of investigat­ion by declaring publicly the president was not the target of the FBI probe into his campaign’s Russia ties.

Comey also testified in his written testimony that Trump, in a strange

after Green first called for Trump to be impeached in a speech last month. Green, who is black, said his offices in Texas and Washington received phone calls from private encounter near the grandfathe­r clock in the Oval Office, pushed him to end his investigat­ion into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. Comey also confirmed Trump’s claim that he had told him three times the president was not directly under investigat­ion.

The Republican National Committee worked to lessen any damage from the hearing, trying to undermine Comey’s credibilit­y by pointing to a past instance where the FBI had had to clean up his testimony to Congress. And Trump himself was expected to dispute Comey’s claims that he demanded loyalty and asked the FBI director to drop the investigat­ion into Flynn, according to a person close to the president’s legal team who demanded anonymity because of not being authorized to discuss legal strategy.

Denied

Trump has not yet publicly denied the specifics of Comey’s accounts but has broadly challenged his credibilit­y, tweeting last month Comey “better hope there are no ‘tapes’” of the conversati­ons.

But it was a Democrat, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, who asked the question that many Republican­s have raised in the weeks since Comey’s firing as one media leak followed another revealing Comey’s claims about Trump’s inappropri­ate interactio­ns with him.

Alluding to the Oval Office meeting where Comey says Trump asked him to pull back the Flynn probe, Feinstein asked: “Why didn’t you stop and say, ‘Mr President, this is wrong,’?”

“That’s a great question,” Comey said. “Maybe if I were stronger I would have. I was so stunned by the conversati­on I just took it in.”

Comey was also asked if he believed he was fired because of the bureau’s

people calling him the N-word and saying he should be lynched.

He recently played tapes of several calls at a town hall meeting in his district. investigat­ion into Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election as well as Russia’s ties with Trump’s campaign.

“Yes,” Comey said. “Because I’ve seen the president say so.”

Comey described his concerns that Trump was trying to create a “patronage” relationsh­ip with him at a dinner where Trump asked him if he wanted to keep his job.

“The statue of justice has a blindfold on because you’re not supposed to be peeking out to see whether your patron is pleased or not with what you’re doing,” Comey said.

Committee

Senate intelligen­ce committee Chairman Richard Burr is leading the committee’s investigat­ion into Russia’s role in the 2016 election, which is proceeding even as a special counsel recently appointed by the Justice Department also investigat­es.

“We will establish the facts separate from rampant speculatio­n and lay them out for the American people to make their own judgment,” Burr said. “Only then will we be able to move forward and put this issue to rest.”

Comey said that after President Trump told him that he “hoped you can let” an investigat­ion into Michael Flynn go, he took it as a “direction.”

Comey was talking about a Feb 14 meeting with Trump, after the president cleared the Oval Office to have a private, one-on-one conversati­on with him.

Flynn had been forced to resign as national security adviser the day before, and during their conversati­on, Comey said that Trump told him that he hoped he could “see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go.” Although Comey said that Trump didn’t say so in words, “I took it as direction.”

Green said the US Capitol police dispatched two officers to his Houston district to guard him while Congress was in recess last week. (AP)

States review election systems:

Officials in some states are trying to figure out whether local election offices were targeted in an apparent effort by Russian military intelligen­ce to hack into election software last fall.

The efforts were detailed in a recently leaked report attributed to the US National Security Agency.

North Carolina is checking on whether any local systems were breached, while the revelation prompted an election security review in Virginia. Both are considered presidenti­al battlegrou­nd states.

In Illinois, officials are trying to determine which election offices used software from the contractor that the report said was compromise­d.

The three are among eight states where election offices had contracts with VR Systems, a Florida-based company that provided software to manage voter registrati­ons. The others are Florida, California, Indiana, New York and West Virginia.

The report, dated last month, asserts that hackers obtained informatio­n from company employees and used that to send phishing emails to 122 local election officials just before the election last November in an attempt to break into their systems. (AP)

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