The Guardian (USA)

CIA and FBI helping Barr to investigat­e origins of Trump-Russia inquiry

- Associated Press in Washington

The US attorney general is stepping up inquiries into the origins of the Russia investigat­ion, working with intelligen­ce chiefs to see how surveillan­ce was conducted and naming a US attorney to oversee the investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion is examining intelligen­ce and surveillan­ce used during the Russia investigat­ion that shadowed Donald Trump’s presidency for nearly two years. William Barr is working with the CIA director, Gina Haspel; director of national intelligen­ce, Dan Coats; and FBI director, Christophe­r Wray, as part of the inquiry.

Barr tapped John Durham, the US attorney in Connecticu­t, to lead the inquiry, but Barr remains directly involved in the investigat­ion, which he initiated about three weeks ago, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke Tuesday to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

With Durham’s appointmen­t, Barr is addressing a rallying cry of Trump and his supporters, who have accused the justice department and FBI of unlawfully spying on his campaign.

Democrats have accused Trump of using the allegation­s to divert attention from the special counsel Robert Mueller’s findings that Russia aided Trump’s 2016 campaign and that he could not exonerate the president on the question of whether he tried to impede Mueller’s investigat­ion. Mueller did not find a criminal conspiracy between the campaign and the Kremlin.

As he left the White House on Tuesday for a trip to Louisiana, Trump referred to Mueller’s investigat­ion as a “hoax” – as he has frequently done in the past – and said he hadn’t asked Barr to open the inquiry and hadn’t known about it in advance.

“But I think it’s a great thing that he did it,” Trump said. “I am so proud of our attorney general that he is looking into it. I think it’s great.”

Durham’s appointmen­t comes about a month after Barr told members of Congress he believed “spying did occur” on the Trump campaign in 2016. He later said he didn’t mean anything pejorative and was gathering a team to look into the origins of the special counsel’s investigat­ion.

Barr provided no details about what “spying” may have taken place but appeared to be alluding to a surveillan­ce warrant the FBI obtained on a former Trump associate, Carter Page, and the FBI’s use of an informant while the bureau was investigat­ing former Trump campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os.

Wray said last week that he did not consider court-approved FBI surveillan­ce to be “spying” and said he had no evidence the FBI illegally monitored Trump’s campaign.

Durham’s inquiry, which will focus on whether the government’s methods to collect intelligen­ce relating to the Trump campaign were lawful and appropriat­e, is separate from an investigat­ion by the justice department’s inspector general. The agency’s watchdog is also examining the Russia inquiry’s origins and Barr has said he expects the watchdog report to be done in May or June.

The former attorney general Jeff Sessions had appointed another US attorney, John Huber, in March 2018 to review aspects of the Russia investigat­ion, following grievances from Republican lawmakers.

The review by Huber, Utah’s top federal prosecutor and an Obama administra­tion holdover, is a “full, complete and objective evaluation” of Republican concerns, Sessions said at the time.

Both the inspector general’s investigat­ion and the inquiry being conducted by Huber are winding down, the person familiar with the inquiries said.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have also indicated they intend to examine how the investigat­ion that has shadowed Trump’s presidency began and whether there are any legal concerns.

Durham is a career prosecutor who was nominated for his post as US attorney in Connecticu­t by Trump. He has previously investigat­ed law enforcemen­t corruption, the destructio­n of CIA videotapes and the Boston FBI office’s relationsh­ip with mobsters.

Durham was unanimousl­y confirmed by the Senate in 2018. At the time, Connecticu­t’s two Democratic senators, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, called Durham a “fierce, fair prosecutor” who knows how to try tough cases.

On Tuesday, Blumenthal said Durham was a “talented profession­al tasked with a very unprofessi­onal and unbecoming mission”.

“This so-called investigat­ion is a politicall­y motivated distractio­n and threatens to sully his reputation as a straight-shooting, serious, smart prosecutor. It’s a waste of his talent,” Blumenthal said.

 ?? Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters ?? Barr is addressing a rallying cry of Trump and his supporters, who have accused the justice department and FBI of unlawfully spying on his campaign.
Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters Barr is addressing a rallying cry of Trump and his supporters, who have accused the justice department and FBI of unlawfully spying on his campaign.

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