Santa Fe New Mexican

Nunes met surveillan­ce source on White House grounds

Admission triggers calls for his removal as head of House intelligen­ce committee

- By Karoun Demirjian, Greg Miller and Philip Rucker

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee acknowledg­ed Monday that he had made a secret visit to the White House last week to view intelligen­ce files he then cited as proof of potentiall­y improper spying activity against President Donald Trump, casting new doubt on the independen­ce of a congressio­nal investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce. The admission by Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., triggered calls among Democrats for his removal as chairman of the House panel and bipartisan appeals for an independen­t probe of Kremlin meddling in the 2016 election and potential connection­s between Russia and Trump associates.

The committee’s ranking Democrat, Adam Schiff, Calif., called late Monday for Nunes to “recuse himself from any further involvemen­t in the Russia investigat­ion” and all “oversight matters pertaining to any incidental collection of the Trump transition,” noting Nunes was a member of Trump’s transition team.

Nunes has denied any wrongdoing and dismissed calls for him to step down Monday night, saying on Fox News that “I’m sure that the Democrats

do want me to quit because they know that I’m effective at getting to the bottom of things.”

The developmen­t coincided with the disclosure that Trump’s son-in-law and close adviser, Jared Kushner, had privately met in December with the chief executive of a Russian bank being targeted by U.S. sanctions and that Kushner has agreed to discuss such contacts with the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee.

Trump administra­tion officials sought to play down the significan­ce of both developmen­ts, describing Kushner’s contacts as inconseque­ntial and refusing to answer questions about the Nunes visit. “I’m not going to get into who he met with or why he met with them,” White House press secretary Sean Spicer said.

Trump, in his response, sought to pressure the House committee, arguing that the panel should be probing Bill and Hillary Clinton’s ties to Russia instead of those of his campaign advisers.

In a pair of evening tweets, Trump wrote that the “Trump Russia story is a hoax” and listed a string of financial and other connection­s the Clintons have had over the years with Russia. He asked why the House Intelligen­ce Committee is not investigat­ing the former president and former secretary of state.

Nunes’ meeting with a source and his review of intelligen­ce material apparently occurred in a secure space for handling classified files within the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House. Nunes returned to the White House the next day — bypassing colleagues on the House committee — supposedly to brief Trump on what he had learned.

The attempts to keep such matters hidden from public view, however, added to the perception that the Trump administra­tion has failed to be forthcomin­g about contacts with Russia and is working with allies on Capitol Hill to blunt congressio­nal probes.

The Senate’s top Democrat said that House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., should remove Nunes to salvage that chamber’s investigat­ion of Moscow influence. “If Speaker Ryan wants the House to have a credible investigat­ion, he needs to replace Chairman Nunes,” Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said.

Schiff said: “There was no legitimate justificat­ion for bringing that informatio­n to the White House instead of the committee. That it was also obtained at the White House makes this departure all the more concerning.”

Asked about Nunes’ White House visit, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said, “Not good. It’s not a confidence builder.” He said “we’re rapidly getting” to the point where a select committee or independen­t commission is need to conduct the investigat­ion into Russian meddling.

Nunes said in an interview Monday that no one in the Republican leadership had asked him to step aside, and he defended his actions as part of an attempt to investigat­e potential misconduct by U.S. spy agencies against Trump associates.

“Everybody is worried by process and they should be worried about what I’ve actually said about what I’ve seen,” Nunes said, when asked whether it was proper for him to visit the White House under those circumstan­ces. “Why all the worry about where I saw informatio­n? We go to the White House all the time, our job is providing oversight of the executive branch.”

Nunes had previously refused to say how or where he had seen classified files he cited in a hastily arranged news conference last week, saying that he had obtained troubling evidence that U.S. spy agencies “incidental­ly collected informatio­n about U.S. citizens involved in the Trump transition.”

At a time when the White House was struggling to defend Trump’s baseless accusation that he had been wiretapped under orders issued by then-President Barack Obama, the Nunes assertion helped shift public attention and, to some, cast Trump as a victim of espionage abuse.

In reality, Nunes appeared to be referring to legitimate intelligen­ce operations against foreign individual­s who were either in contact with Trump associates or mentioned them in conversati­ons that were monitored as part of routine U.S. surveillan­ce. Nunes reiterated Monday that he has seen no evidence of illegality.

Current and former national security officials described Nunes’s trip to the White House complex, apparently late in the evening after he had slipped away from his staff, as highly unusual. Doing so would ordinarily require Nunes and the person he met with to have been cleared in advance and accompanie­d by an escort — requiremen­ts that seemed to undercut White House claims to have no informatio­n about the encounter.

“How incredibly irregular,” said Matt Olsen, who served in the Obama administra­tion as the head of the National Counterter­rorism Center and the general counsel at the National Security Agency. “The only explanatio­n you’re left with is that this is all being orchestrat­ed by the White House.”

Nunes again declined to disclose with whom he met, citing the need “to protect people who bring informatio­n to the committee, and I’m going to protect my source.” His office said he met the source on the White House grounds.

The House Intelligen­ce Committee is authorized to handle classified informatio­n and routinely meets with officials — including whistleblo­wers — from U.S. spy agencies.

Nunes spokesman Jack Langer said that because of limitation­s on House computer systems, Nunes could not have used secure facilities at the Capitol to review the files. He added that “the White House grounds was the best location to safeguard the proper chain of custody and classifica­tion of these documents.”

Nunes has said that the documents include references to Trump advisers and associates, but do not pertain to Russia. In the past few days, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former campaign advisers Carter Page and Roger Stone volunteere­d to make themselves available for interviews with the Senate and House Intelligen­ce committees.

On Monday, officials from the White House and Senate said that Kushner had also offered himself for an interview with the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, at a date yet to be determined. The developmen­t was first reported by The New York Times.

A senior congressio­nal official said Senate Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Richard Burr, R-N.C., spoke with the White House counsel “some weeks ago” to warn that the panel would be seeking to speak with administra­tion officials, including Kushner. The White House indicated to the committee over the weekend that Kushner would be willing to participat­e.

The White House had previously disclosed that Kushner met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at Trump Tower in December, a session also attended by former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who was fired for lying about the nature of his contacts with Kislyak.

On Monday, the White House acknowledg­ed a previously undisclose­d meeting between Kushner and Sergey Gorkov, chief of Russian government­owned Vneshecono­mbank. The bank, which handles Russia’s pension funds and deals with developmen­t activity for the state, including foreign debts and investment­s, has been under U.S. sanctions since July 2014, in response to Russia’s interventi­on in Ukraine.

The bank also has been tied to Russian intelligen­ce services.

In early 2015, one of the bank’s New York-based employees, Evgeny Buryakov, was arrested and accused of being an unregister­ed spy for Russia’s foreign intelligen­ce service, working with two Russian diplomats who were also secretly acting as spies. According to the U.S. government, they collected informatio­n about U.S. sanctions against Russia, and American efforts to develop alternativ­e energy resources.

Buryakov pleaded guilty in March 2016 to conspiring to act as an agent of a foreign government, though he never admitted to being an employee of Russia’s foreign intelligen­ce service.

Spicer defended Kushner’s meetings, saying that he was the “official primary point of contact” with foreign government­s and officials during the campaign and transition period.

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Devin Nunes

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