The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Comey asks Justice Dept to refute Trump wiretappin­g claim

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PALM BEACH, United States: FBI director James Comey has asked the Justice Department to publicly refute President Donald Trump’s explosive, unsubstant­iated accusation that Barack Obama tapped his phone during last year’s election campaign, US media reported on Sunday.

Comey’s extraordin­ary measure questionin­g the president’s truthfulne­ss provides an indication of the implicatio­ns of Trump’s incendiary claim about his predecesso­r. The department has not made any statement.

Trump’s aides were scrambling on Sunday to limit the political fallout of Trump’s accusation 24 hours after it was made – admitting it was still unproven, and calling on Congress to investigat­e.

Citing still undefined ‘reports’ of ‘politicall­y motivated investigat­ions,’ press secretary Sean Spicer said Trump was calling on Congress to “determine whether executive branch investigat­ive powers were abused in 2016.”

Trump spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders echoed those comments. “If this happened,” she told ABC, “this would be the greatest abuse of power, and overreach, that has ever occurred in the executive branch.”

Trump, who has returned to Washington from a weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach, Florida, has not publicly commented further on his allegation­s. On Saturday, he tweeted: “How low has President Obama gone to tapp my phones during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!” He provided no evidence to back up the claim.

Watergate is the generic term for the scandal that brought down president Richard Nixon in 1974. It began with the revelation of a secret wiretap in the offices of the Democratic National Committee at Washington’s Watergate Hotel.

Obama, via a spokesman, denied Trump’s new allegation as ‘simply false.’ US presidents can’t legally order such wiretaps, which require the approval of a federal judge and reasonable grounds for suspicion.

Obama’s director of national intelligen­ce James Clapper told NBC there was “no such wiretap activity mounted against the president-elect at the time as a candidate or against his campaign.”

Trump’s comments appear to have been based on unverified claims made by the right-wing Breitbart News outlet. His chief strategist, Steve Bannon, used to run it. The New York Times, citing senior US officials, first reported that Comey believes Trump’s claim to be false.

The FBI director made the request on Saturday because “there is no evidence to support it, and it insinuates that the FBI broke the law,” the paper reported the officials as saying.

Previous media reports have indicated that US prosecutor­s investigat­ed communicat­ions between a server registered to the Trump Organisati­on and a Russian bank.

In his roles as a reality TV showman and presidenti­al candidate, and now as president, Trump has repeatedly embraced conspiracy theories, including the suggestion that Obama was not born in America. Obama was born in Hawaii, a US state.

Trump leveled the latest charges in a string of tweets early Saturday, at the end of a week in which his administra­tion was battered by controvers­y over links between his advisors and Russian officials.

Trump was said to be furious that good reviews of his maiden speech to Congress on Tuesday were overtaken by a series of revelation­s about aides’ meetings with Russian officials.

The president was also said to be angry that Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from any campaign or Russia-related investigat­ions.

Sessions’ recusal came after it emerged that, speaking under oath during his Senate confirmati­on hearings about campaign contacts with Russia, he failed to disclose two meetings with Moscow’s ambassador in Washington.

Amid that and several other revelation­s of Trump aides holding meetings with Russian officials, the White House has denied allegation­s of collusion. — AFP

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James Comey

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