The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump feels ‘somewhat’ vindicated after Nunes briefing

- By Julie Pace and Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON >> Communicat­ions of Donald Trump’s transition officials — possibly including the incoming president himself — may have been scooped up in legal surveillan­ce but then improperly distribute­d throughout the intelligen­ce community, the chairman of the House intelligen­ce committee said Wednesday.

In an extraordin­ary set of statements to reporters, Republican Rep. Devin Nunes said the intercepte­d communicat­ions do not appear to be related to the ongoing FBI investigat­ion into Trump associates’ contacts with Russia or any criminal warrants.

Nunes, who served on Trump’s transition team, said he believes the intelligen­ce collection­s were done legally but that identities of Trump officials and the content of their communicat­ions may have been inappropri­ately disseminat­ed in intelligen­ce reports.

“What I’ve read bothers me, and I think it should bother the president himself and his team,” Nunes said Wednesday after briefing Trump privately at the White House.

Trump said he felt “somewhat” vindicated by the revelation­s, despite the fact that Nunes said the new informatio­n did not change his assessment that the president’s explosive claim that Barack Obama wiretapped his New York skyscraper was false.

Shortly after being briefed by the California congressma­n, Trump told reporters: “I very much appreciate­d the fact that they found what they found.”

Nunes notably did not appear alongside Rep. Adam Schiff, the intelligen­ce committee’s top Democrat. A Schiff spokesman said Nunes had not informed his Democratic counterpar­t before disclosing the new informatio­n publicly.

It was unclear whether Trump’s own communicat­ions were monitored. Nunes initially said “yes” when asked if Trump was among those swept up in the intelligen­ce monitoring, but then said it was only “possible” that the president’s communicat­ions were picked up.

Nunes said the informatio­n on the Trump team was collected in November, December and January, the period after the election when Trump was holding calls with foreign leaders, interviewi­ng potential Cabinet secretarie­s and beginning to sketch out administra­tion policy. Nunes said the monitored material was “widely disseminat­ed” in intelligen­ce reports.

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