Los Angeles Times

Justice Dept. gives more documents to GOP lawmakers

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WASHINGTON — The Justice Department says it has given House Republican­s new classified informatio­n related to the Russia investigat­ion after lawmakers had threatened to hold officials in contempt of Congress or even impeach them.

A spokeswoma­n for House Speaker Paul D. Ryan said Saturday that the department has partially complied with subpoenas from the House intelligen­ce and judiciary committees after officials turned over more than a thousand new documents last week.

House Republican­s had given the Justice Department and FBI a Friday deadline for all documents, most of which are related to the origins of the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion and the handling of its inquiry into Democrat Hillary Clinton’s emails when she was secretary of State. Ryan spokeswoma­n Ash Lee Strong said the department asked for more time and will get it, at least for now.

“Our efforts have resulted in the committees finally getting access to informatio­n that was sought months ago, but some important requests remain to be completed,” Strong said in a statement Saturday. “Additional time has been requested for the outstandin­g items, and based on our understand­ing of the process we believe that request is reasonable. We expect the department to meet its full obligation­s to the two committees.”

The efforts by the Justice Department over the last week to deliver documents to the House Republican­s appear to have at least temporaril­y defused a monthslong standoff with Congress. Democrats have criticized the multiple document requests, charging that they are intended to discredit the department and distract from or undermine special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s possible role in Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election and whether the president obstructed justice.

In a letter sent to House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (RTulare) late Friday, the Justice Department said it had that day provided a classified letter to his panel regarding whether the FBI used “confidenti­al human sources” before it officially began its Russia investigat­ion in 2016. Bolstered by President Trump, Nunes has been pressing the department about an informant who spoke to members of Trump’s campaign as the FBI began to explore the campaign’s ties to Russia.

Trump has criticized the FBI’s role in the matter, deriding it as “Spygate,” but both Democrats and Republican­s who were briefed on related classified material have disputed the president’s assertion that the FBI did anything improper.

In the letter to Nunes, the Justice Department’s acting assistant director of congressio­nal affairs, Jill Tyson, said the congressma­n had also asked for transcript­s of conversati­ons between confidenti­al human sources and Trump campaign officials. She said the department had referred that request to Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats.

Tyson’s letter said the department had also given Nunes materials related to the department’s guidelines under the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act. Republican­s have suggested for months that the department abused that act when prosecutor­s and agents in 2016 applied for and received a secret warrant to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign associate Carter Page, who the FBI suspects may have acted as a Russian agent.

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