The Guardian (USA)

Richard Burr steps down as Senate committee chair over FBI investigat­ion

- Daniel Strauss in Washington and Joanna Walters in New York

A Republican US senator stepped down from a key committee leadership role in Congress on Thursday after his phone was seized overnight by investigat­ors with a warrant looking into allegation­s that he used private briefings as inside informatio­n to dump shares before the market plummeted over the coronaviru­s crisis.

Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina will “step aside” from his post as the chair of the Senate intelligen­ce committee, the majority leader, Mitch McConnell, a fellow Republican of Kentucky, announced on Thursday afternoon.

“Senator Burr contacted me this morning to inform me of his decision to step aside as chairman of the intelligen­ce committee during the pendency of the investigat­ion. We agreed that this decision would be in the best interests of the committee and will be effective at the end of the day tomorrow,”at statement from McConnell said.

Burr’s phone was seized by the FBI on Wednesday night, when investigat­ors served him a warrant at his Washington home amid an ongoing investigat­ion into whether he engaged in insider trading.

Burr previously denied he had kept the public in the dark about the scale of the threat of coronaviru­s and also denied insider trading, saying he was relying on publicly available informatio­n when he dumped stock as the pandemic hit the US.

Burr and his wife sold between around $628,000 and $1.7m in more than 30 separate transactio­ns in late January and mid-February.

Burr faced calls for his resignatio­n when the news emerged in late March. Burr denied any impropriet­y and called for an ethics investigat­ion on Capitol Hill in order to establish his innocence.

Several of the stocks he and his wife sold were in companies that own hotels and followed senators receiving confidenti­al briefings on the seriousnes­s of the approachin­g pandemic even as the public was not yet fully aware of what was about to hit the US. More than 80,000 Americans died of Covid-19 between 11 March and 11 May, and the death toll continues to rise.

Burr said in late March: “I relied solely on public news reports to guide my decision on the sale of stocks February 13,” he said in a statement.

He told reporters at the US Capitol on Thursday he decided to step aside because he did not want the investigat­ion to distract the intelligen­ce committee from its work. “I thought this was the best thing to do,” Burr said.

The warrant marked a significan­t step-up in the investigat­ion.

Donald Trump said, as he departed the White House for a visit to Pennsylvan­ia, that he did not know anything about Burr’s decision, but added: “That’s too bad.”

A senior justice department official said the FBI did not conduct a raid, but paid a visit to Burr’s home to collect his cellphone. Approval of the warrant – a significan­t developmen­t because it was served on a sitting senator – was obtained at the “highest levels” of the justice department, the official said.

 ?? Photograph: Erin Scott/Reuters ?? Senator Richard Burr leaves the US Capitol after voting in Washington on Thursday.
Photograph: Erin Scott/Reuters Senator Richard Burr leaves the US Capitol after voting in Washington on Thursday.

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