Baltimore Sun

Trump makes Russia probe documents public

FBI text messages, surveillan­ce warrant to be declassifi­ed

- By Chad Day

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Monday declassifi­ed a trove of documents related to the early days of the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion, including portions of a secret surveillan­ce warrant and former FBI Director James Comey’s text messages.

Trump made the extraordin­ary move in response to calls from his allies in Congress who say they believe the Russia investigat­ion was tainted by anti-Trump bias within the ranks of the FBI and Justice Department.

It also came as Trump continued his efforts to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe in the wake of the guilty plea of his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and amid the ongoing grand jury investigat­ion into a longtime associate, Roger Stone.

Trump’s decision will result in the release of text messages and documents involving several top Justice Department and FBI officials who Trump has repeatedly attacked over the last year.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders announced Trump’s decision in a written statement, saying the president had directed the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce and the Justice Department to declassify the documents “at the request of a number of committees of Congress, and for reasons of transparen­cy.”

According to the statement, Trump declassifi­ed about 20 pages of the warrant obtained under the President Donald Trump declassifi­ed text messages sent by FBI and Justice Department officials. Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page and FBI interviews conducted to secure that warrant.

He also is declassify­ing all FBI reports documentin­g interviews with senior Justice Department official Bruce Ohr, who was in contact with ex-British spy Christophe­r Steele. Steele was a longtime FBI informant whose Democratic-funded research into Trump ties to Russia was compiled into a dossier that has become a partisan lightning rod since its publicatio­n in January 2017.

According to Sanders’ statement, Trump also directed the Justice Department to publicly release in full the text messages of Comey, Ohr, former acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe, former FBI lawyer Lisa Page and former FBI special agent Peter Strzok.

The declassifi­cation of the documents was quickly praised by Trump allies in Congress and attacked by Democrats.

“Transparen­cy wins. This is absolutely the right call from #POTUS,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, a North Carolina Republican, on Twitter. Meadows, who had pushed for the documents’ release, said it will allow the American people to decide “what happened at the highest levels of their FBI and Justice Department.”

But Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat on the House intelligen­ce committee, called Trump’s decision a “clear abuse of power” intended to advance a “false narrative” to help in his defense from Mueller’s probe.

Schiff said the FBI and Justice had said releasing the documents would cross a “red line” because doing so would compromise sources and methods.

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EVAN VUCCI/AP

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