The Reporter (Vacaville)

Trump Homeland Security pick denies intelligen­ce meddling

- By Ben Fox

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security denied allegation­s Wednesday that he molded intelligen­ce reports to suit the administra­tion, telling a Senate committee that a recent whistleblo­wer’s report is “patently false.”

Acting Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf, testifying in a widerangin­g Senate confirmati­on hearing, also rejected a separate allegation that he held back an intelligen­ce report on Russian disinforma­tion that targeted former Vice President Joe Biden.

Both issues emerged early in the hearing as the Senate considers a nominee who has been accused of politicizi­ng the third largest department in the federal government and has faced criticism over its handling of civil unrest, COVID-19 and immigratio­n.

“Rhetoric and political ideology cannot drive intelligen­ce reports and it should not predetermi­ne the actions of any federal department,” Sen. Gary Peters, top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security committee, said at the start of the hearing.

Wolf seems to have solid Republican support on the committee but it is unclear if the full Senate will vote on his confirmati­on before the Nov. 3 election.

The whistleblo­wer complaint released this month is the subject of a DHS Office of Inspector General investigat­ion. Wolf pushed back hard on claims, which included allegation­s that he sought to downplay the threat posed by Russia and white supremacis­ts, made by Brian Murphy, who was a senior official with the intelligen­ce division of the agency until the acting secretary reassigned him in early August.

“It is patently false. It is a fabricatio­n, completely,” Wolf told the committee.

Wolf said Murphy was reassigned because of “credible allegation­s” that he had directed the collection of informatio­n about U.S. journalist­s who were covering the deployment by DHS of federal agents to Portland, Oregon, during protests over the summer.

In his whistleblo­wer complaint, Murphy said that, as far as he was aware, the DHS intelligen­ce division “never knowingly” collected informatio­n about journalist­s though it did track media reports that appeared to include leaked material.

Murphy plans to dispute Wolf’s assertion after his legal team gets DHS clearance to review classified informatio­n, attorney Mark Zaid said.

“We outright challenge Mr. Wolf’s testimony and we look forward to the opportunit­y to provide classified testimony to congressio­nal and OIG oversight authoritie­s to describe details to the contrary,” Zaid said in an email.

Wolf was also asked about a report by ABC News that he withheld an intelligen­ce bulletin that warned law enforcemen­t agencies about a Russian disinforma­tion effort to promote false allegation­s about Biden’s mental health.

Wolf said he put a hold on the two- page document in July so that it could be “improved” with additional context. It was then released in September. Peters questioned why it took that long, only coming out after news coverage that it had been held back. The assistant secretary blamed leadership changes in the intelligen­ce division, alluding to the removal of Murphy.

“The important part is the underlying intelligen­ce did not change,” he said.

Later, he said that the intelligen­ce community believes three nations are waging disinforma­tion campaigns aimed at influencin­g the presidenti­al election.

“Russia looks to denigrate former Vice President Biden,” he said. “China prefers Vice President Biden, and Iran prefers Vice President Biden.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States