The Mercury News

Comey defends FBI, himself in interview with House panels

- By Karoun Demirjian and Matt Zapotosky The Washington Post

WASHINGTON >> Former FBI Director James Comey’s closed-door interview with House lawmakers Friday was largely a repetition of themes and facts that have emerged in previous public sessions, according to a transcript of the six-hour session that panel leaders released Saturday.

Republican­s from the House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform Committees peppered Comey with questions about the FBI’s probe into former secretary of state Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, including whether Comey would have dismissed for- mer officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page from the probe had he known they were exchanging texts disparagin­g then-presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump.

Comey said he probably would have.

However, the former director repeatedly declined to answer questions seeking detailed answers about elements of the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion that Comey could not recall — such as who prepared the document launching the bureau’s counterint­elligence investigat­ion of individual­s affiliated with Trump — or thought came too close to special counsel Robert Mueller III’s ongoing investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce.

Comey was asked frequently about whether the president obstructed justice when he fired him last year. An FBI lawyer sought to block him from answering a question about a memo Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein wrote supporting the terminatio­n, saying it “goes to the special counsel’s investigat­ion into obstructio­n.”

That seems to offer public confirmati­on from law Former FBI Director James Comey, with his attorney, David Kelley, right, speaks to reporters Friday.

enforcemen­t that such a probe exists.

When it came to questions about his own conduct, however, Comey was loath to take any blame.

Several Democrats asked whether he had erred in supersedin­g thenAttorn­ey General Loretta Lynch to declare the Clinton probe closed – and then informing Congress just days before the 2016 election that it had been reopened. Comey responded by criticizin­g Lynch’s decision not to recuse herself from the investigat­ion and said the timing of his decision to write to Congress had been approved by subordinat­es.

Asked whether he regretted not following normal Justice Department protocol, Comey said, “I don’t,” and disputed that he had done so.

“I still think the other alternativ­e was worse,” Comey said, echoing a rationale he has expressed in public. “And as between bad and worse, I had to choose bad.”

Comey also deflected responsibi­lity for relying on a Russian-sourced memo alleging connection­s between

Lynch and the Clinton campaign that may have been falsified. Comey said that to his knowledge, “at the time,” the memo was genuine - but that he did not “know whether that view has changed.”

Some of the questionin­g focused on current events. The former FBI director said he was “glad” to hear of former national security adviser Michael Flynn’s cooperatio­n with the Mueller probe, and he disputed the president’s suggestion that he and Mueller were close personal friends.

“I admire the heck out of the man, but I don’t know his phone number, I’ve never been to his house, I don’t know his children’s names,” Comey said .

Comey also spoke favorably of William Barr, who Trump plans to nominate as the next attorney general — even as Democrats expressed concerns about past statements by Barr criticizin­g the special counsel’s investigat­ion of Trump and endorsing fresh scrutiny of Clinton.

“He’s certainly fit to be attorney general,” Comey said of Barr.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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