Los Angeles Times

TRUMP FIRES COMEY

FBI chief ’s ouster stokes calls for independen­t Russia inquiry

- By David Lauter and Michael A. Memoli

WASHINGTON — President Trump fired FBI Director James B. Comey on Tuesday, stunning Washington with a decision that carries vast political ramificati­ons because the bureau is investigat­ing whether anyone close to the president colluded with Russian intelligen­ce agents to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The abrupt ouster was needed to allow a “new beginning” at the FBI, Trump said, citing scathing criticism by Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein, a career prosecutor, of Comey’s public announceme­nts about the bureau’s investigat­ion of Hillary Clinton’s email practices.

The firing — the first dismissal of an FBI chief since 1993 — caught Comey by surprise as he spoke to FBI agents at an event in Los Angeles.

“He was caught flatfooted” when the news flashed on television screens in the room, a senior FBI official told reporters before Comey headed back to Washington. Comey skipped a scheduled event at the Directors Guild of America aimed at recruiting more minority agents.

The dismissal drew immediate calls from senior Democrats for an independen­t prosecutor to oversee the counterint­elligence investigat­ion into Trump associates’ ties to Russia, an inquiry that could lead to criminal charges.

As Trump’s political opponents compared the firing to President Nixon’s order to dismiss the Watergate special prosecutor more than four decades ago in what became known as the “Saturday Night Massacre,” even some members of Trump’s party expressed concern.

Sen. Richard M. Burr (RN.C.), the head of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, which is conducting a Russia investigat­ion of its own, said he was “troubled by the timing and reasoning” of the firing, which he said “further confuses an already difficult investigat­ion.” Comey’s departure, he added, was “a loss for the bureau and the nation.”

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he told Trump, who called to notify him before making the firing public, “You’re making a very big mistake.”

Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions sent an email to FBI employees Tuesday saying that Andrew McCabe would take over as acting director. McCabe, an FBI employee since 1996, was named deputy director in January 2016. He supervised sensitive investigat­ions, including the inquiry into whether Clinton mishandled classified informatio­n in using a private email server when she was secretary of State.

McCabe visited the White House on Tuesday night, but officials said he did not meet with Trump.

For the last 10 months, Comey has come under sharp, widespread criticism from both parties for his handling of two investigat­ions connected to the election — the Russia investigat­ion and the Clinton email inquiry.

Trump said he had relied on the recommenda­tion of Rosenstein, who assumed his job late last month and is overseeing the FBI’s handling of the Russia investigat­ion because Sessions has stepped aside from any role in it.

In a memorandum to Sessions, which was released by the White House, Rosenstein harshly criticized Comey for his actions beginning last summer.

On July 5, Comey announced at a news conference that the FBI would not seek criminal charges against Clinton, the Democratic nominee, in the investigat­ion of her email practices, but he also denounced her conduct as “extremely careless.”

That was a serious misjudgmen­t, Rosenstein wrote, adding, “The goal of a federal criminal investigat­ion is not to announce our thoughts at a press conference.”

Comey’s actions were “a textbook example of what federal prosecutor­s and agents are taught not to do,” he wrote.

Rosenstein said Comey made the problems worse with his decision in late October — 11 days before the election — to disclose that the FBI had reopened its investigat­ion of the Clinton case after finding State Department emails on a computer belonging to former Rep. Anthony Weiner, the subject of a separate investigat­ion and the estranged husband of Clinton aide Huma Abedin.

After a week, the FBI determined that those emails added no significan­t new evidence to the case.

Clinton has blamed the Comey letter for contributi­ng to her defeat, although polling evidence on that point is unclear.

Trump had loudly praised Comey’s announceme­nt at the time.

Many Republican­s had reacted with outrage in July when Comey said the bureau would not seek charges against Clinton.

Many Democrats were equally upset with his wide-ranging comments on Clinton’s conduct. Their anger deepened with his letter in October and Comey’s disclosure to Congress in March that the FBI launched an investigat­ion last July into possible coordinati­on between Trump associates and Russia — an inquiry Comey did not reveal during the campaign.

Comey told the Senate Judiciary Committee last week that the criticism he had received for his actions in the campaign had been “painful.”

“I’ve gotten all kinds of rocks thrown at me, and this has been really hard, but I think I’ve done the right thing at each turn,” he testified. He added that he welcomed an FBI inspector general’s review of his conduct, which was announced in January.

But Comey argued that he had no choice but to disclose the renewed investigat­ion just before the election and not “conceal” it.

Rosenstein sharply disagreed. Prosecutor­s should never disclose nonpublic informatio­n about investigat­ions, he wrote. “Silence is not concealmen­t.”

Given Comey’s errors and his public refusal to admit that they were mistakes, Rosenstein continued, “the FBI is unlikely to regain public and congressio­nal trust until it has a director who understand­s the gravity of the mistakes and pledges never to repeat them.”

Rosenstein’s recommenda­tion “was presented to the president today,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters several hours after the firing. “No one from the White House” ordered Rosenstein to conduct his review, Spicer added. “It was all him.”

White House officials, hoping to insulate the president from opposition criticism, released past quotes from top Democratic leaders declaring a lack of confidence in Comey.

Democrats, however, said that nothing Comey did last year justified Trump’s firing him now. In statements, leading Democratic lawmakers called his ouster “outrageous,” “brazen” and “not what an innocent person would do.”

They warned that Comey’s dismissal could lead to a White House effort to shut down the FBI investigat­ion.

“No one should accept President Trump’s absurd justificat­ion” for the firing, declared Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), the former head of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“The president has removed the sitting FBI director in the midst of one of the most critical national security investigat­ions in the history of our country — one that implicates senior officials in the Trump campaign and administra­tion. This is nothing less than Nixonian,” Leahy said.

Sessions, in a letter to Trump, said that he was recommendi­ng Comey’s dismissal “for the reasons expressed by the deputy attorney general” and in order for the department to “clearly reaffirm its commitment to longstandi­ng principles” of proper conduct by investigat­ors.

Trump, in a letter to Comey informing him of his dismissal, said he had accepted the recommenda­tion.

He added that he “greatly appreciate[d] you informing me, on three separate occasions, that I am not under investigat­ion.”

That claim was not independen­tly confirmed, and White House officials would not explain when the three occasions were. Officials familiar with the investigat­ion have said that the FBI inquiry has focused on Trump associates and have not suggested that the president himself is a target.

In a statement, the White House quoted Trump as saying that “the FBI is one of our nation’s most cherished and respected institutio­ns and today will mark a new beginning for our crown jewel of law enforcemen­t.”

Although the FBI director serves a fixed 10-year term, which is supposed to insulate him from political pressure, previous presidents of both parties have taken the position that as an officer of the executive branch, the director can be fired by the president. The last such dismissal was in 1993 when President Clinton fired Director William Sessions amid allegation­s of ethics violations.

A search for a new permanent FBI director will begin immediatel­y, the White House said.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Trump called her Tuesday afternoon to relay his decision.

“The next FBI director must be strong and independen­t and will receive a fair hearing,” she said.

But nominating and ultimately confirming a new director in such a politicall­y toxic environmen­t will be an extraordin­arily difficult task.

That prospect troubled some current and former FBI agents.

The FBI’s reputation for independen­ce will now be under threat, said Frank Scafidi, a 20-year veteran of the bureau who ran its public affairs and congressio­nal relations offices before retiring in 2004.

“There will always be a cloud of suspicion hanging over the head of whoever it will be,” Scafidi said, speaking by telephone from his home in Sacramento.

Democrats will intensely scrutinize any Trump pick in part because of the president’s comments and those of his administra­tion attacking the judiciary and investigat­ory agencies.

Just Tuesday, the White House questioned the public assertions and private actions of former Deputy Atty. Gen. Sally Yates, who testified Monday at a Senate panel hearing about concerns she had raised with the White House that then-national security advisor Michael Flynn had been compromise­d through misleading public statements about his interactio­ns with Russian officials.

Spicer suggested Yates was acting as a pro-Clinton partisan, and said without evidence that she was “widely rumored to play a large role” in a Clinton administra­tion.

President Obama nominated Comey in 2013 to replace Robert S. Mueller III, who had served beyond the typical 10-year term of an FBI director in part because of the difficulty in finding a replacemen­t amid continuing national security threats. Comey was easily confirmed by the Senate.

In choosing Comey, a Republican, the Obama administra­tion highlighte­d his credential­s as a federal prosecutor and his apolitical manner.

Trump at first appeared inclined to keep Comey in his position. Two days after his inaugurati­on, Trump singled him out during a gathering with law enforcemen­t officials in Washington, shaking his hand and patting him on the back.

“He’s become more famous than me,” the president quipped.

Last week, after Comey’s Senate testimony, Spicer said that “the president has confidence in the director.”

On Tuesday, however, speaking to reporters at his afternoon briefing, Spicer hedged on whether Comey still had that confidence.

“I have not asked the president since the last time we spoke about this,” Spicer said.

He returned to the briefing room hours later with news of the firing.

 ?? Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images ?? IN DISMISSING James B. Comey as FBI director, President Trump cited findings criticizin­g his role in the Hillary Clinton email inquiry.
Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images IN DISMISSING James B. Comey as FBI director, President Trump cited findings criticizin­g his role in the Hillary Clinton email inquiry.
 ?? White House ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP sent this letter to James B. Comey, the first FBI director to be fired since 1993. Senate confirmati­on of a successor will be difficult given the toxic political environmen­t.
White House PRESIDENT TRUMP sent this letter to James B. Comey, the first FBI director to be fired since 1993. Senate confirmati­on of a successor will be difficult given the toxic political environmen­t.

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