Gulf News

Defending truth and transparen­cy needs fortitude

Department of Justice report faulting me also found no evidence of political bias or improper motivation

- By James Comey ■ James Comey was the former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) from 2013 until 2017.

The US Department of Justice’s independen­t watchdog, the inspector general, has released a report that is critical of my decisions as FBI director during the investigat­ion of Hillary Clinton’s email account. The report concludes that I was wrong to announce the FBI’s completion of the investigat­ion without coordinati­ng with the attorney general and that I was wrong to inform Congress in late October that we had reopened the investigat­ion. In both situations, the inspector general’s team concludes, I should have adhered to establishe­d norms, which they see as mandating both deference to the attorney general on the public announceme­nt and silence about an investigat­ion so close to an election.

I do not agree with all of the inspector general’s conclusion­s, but I respect the work of his office and salute its profession­alism. All of our leaders need to understand that accountabi­lity and transparen­cy are essential to the functionin­g of our democracy, even when it involves criticism. This is how the process is supposed to work. This report is important for two reasons.

First, the inspector general’s team went through the FBI’s work with a microscope and found no evidence that bias or improper motivation affected the investigat­ion, which I know was done competentl­y, honestly and independen­tly. The report also resounding­ly demonstrat­es that there was no prosecutab­le case against Clinton, as we had concluded. Although that probably will not stop some from continuing to claim the opposite is true, this independen­t assessment will be useful to thoughtful people and an important contributi­on to the historical record.

Second, this report is vital in shedding light for future leaders on the nature and quality of our investigat­ion and the decisions we made.

In 2016, my team faced an extraordin­ary situation — something I thought of as a 500-year flood — offering no good choices and presenting some of the hardest decisions I ever had to make. We knew that reasonable people might choose to do things differentl­y and that a future independen­t reviewer might not see things the way we did. Yet I always believed that an inspector general report would be crucial to understand­ing and evaluating our actions.

After Attorney General Loretta Lynch announced she would not recuse herself from the Clinton email investigat­ion and would instead rely primarily on my recommenda­tion, I chose to do something unpreceden­ted: In July 2016, I separately and transparen­tly announced to the American people what we had done, what we had found and our view that Clinton should not be prosecuted. Before 2016, I could never have imagined doing such a thing, because the normal practice was always for the FBI director to coordinate statements with the attorney general and for leaders of the Justice Department to report the details of the completed investigat­ion.

But even in hindsight I think we chose the course most consistent with institutio­nal values. And nothing in the inspector general’s report makes me think we did the wrong thing.

Similarly, I never imagined the FBI would face a choice in late October 2016 either to tell Congress we had restarted the email investigat­ion in a significan­t way or to conceal that fact. But to have concealed it would have meant to hide vital informatio­n: That what I and others had said publicly and under oath to Congress was no longer true. I chose to speak and tell the truth.

The inspector general’s conclusion­s are important. But the real, historical value of the report is its collection of facts, which, as John Adams said, “are stubborn things”. If a future FBI leadership team ever faces a similar situation — something I pray never happens — it will have the benefit of this important document.

This is what institutio­ns devoted to the rule of law and accountabi­lity look like. They look back at their hardest decisions and collect the facts, and are transparen­t with the world about those facts and decisions. The leaders of those institutio­ns are best served by welcoming that oversight and that process of second-guessing. That’s why I urged the investigat­ion in the first place.

As FBI director, I wanted a second set of eyes on the agonising decisions we made during the 2016 election, knowing full well the inspector general’s office could draw different conclusion­s. I also was confident that even if it disagreed with our decisions, it would find the FBI team made them without regard for political favour or partisansh­ip. The inspector general’s office has now reached that very conclusion. Our nation’s institutio­ns of justice are up to the task of protecting the rule of law and defending truth and transparen­cy. All of us should stand up and support them.

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