Miami Herald

FBI’s probe into Trump’s Russia connection­s was out of bounds

- BY JAY AMBROSE Tribune News Service

We’ve long known, haven’t we, that federal bureaucrat­s increasing­ly run the American show. But did we expect an FBI investigat­ion that stepped out of bounds to see if our president was a Russian agent? Such a heinous crime, if true, could obviously spell his end, but such a probe is a slur on democracy.

As a matter of separation of powers, Congress can do it, yes, but the FBI needs actual hard evidence of a crime to proceed. Otherwise, what we have on our hands is an agency that can search out pretty much any soul it wants whenever it wants, the sort of thing you get in tyrannies. If you dislike a leader, someone whose politics you find threatenin­g, for instance, then search here, there and everywhere for something foul.

According to the New York Times, which broke the story, the instigatin­g factor was President Trump firing FBI Director James Comey. This was seen as just maybe obstructio­n of justice, a means of ending any further exploratio­ns of Russian interferen­ce with the 2016 presidenti­al election. But, first, the president had the right to fire the guy. Second, the Department of Justice itself said he deserved as much for one haughty transgress­ion after another. Third, the investigat­ion continued. Nothing was obstructed.

What is more, the Times story tells us, there has been no revelation of Trump yapping in secret with Russian agents or of his scooting along in designated directions. If there is an implicatin­g fact or dozens, how about letting them loose as a replacemen­t for guesses and prejudice? Sadly, the Department of Justice is keeping them in a cage where they are unlikely to infect the rest of us with truth.

So worry, please worry, worry a lot because, for one thing, Congress has allowed an ever more powerful administra­tive state in which prohibitio­ns can often come in second to bureaucrat­ic druthers. For something else, consider that some big-brother intelligen­ce agents have likely committed felonies by leaking classified informatio­n never exactly making Trump look sane or decent or trustworth­y. Consider that, even during the election campaign, you had intelligen­ce agency bigwigs plotting how to handle this character they feared, checking out this, that and the other in suspect ways.

The Department of Justice has meanwhile played games with congressio­nal oversight. Partisan, getTrump advocates were part of what was supposed to be an unbiased special counsel probe. The FBI seemed to depend on a fraudulent Russian document that may have been used illegally. Then there were the blindfolds strapped on when looking at the Hillary Clinton campaign organizati­on and the Clinton Foundation.

The FBI investigat­ion was short-lived because then we got the investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller, who has spent 20 months and $25 million driving the allpowerfu­l federal government bulldozer to smashes aplenty. The thing is, there are all sorts of questions about its validity, and so far the smashes have seemed mostly irrelevant to the probe’s central point. We’ll have reports soon. They will either be killers or nothing much, according to different leaks the Mueller team denies having made.

It also seems the case that the Democratic-controlled House is prepared to eschew a lot of timewastin­g public policy questions to focus on probing Trump until the 2020 election is decided for good. Something real could be there, but chances are not bad that this will be the equivalent of another government shutdown showing Trump’s foes can be worse than he is.

Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service.

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