Daniel Chaitin
What did former FBI Directors James Comey and Robert Mueller know? That's what Republican investigators are asking after the declassification of footnotes
in a Justice Department inspector general report, showing the FBI
received classified reports in 2017 which identified that parts of
British ex-spy Christopher Steele’s anti-Trump dossier were likely
influenced by Russian disinformation. DOJ watchdog Michael Horowitz determined last year the FBI
properly opened its counterintelligence investigation, known as
Crossfire Hurricane, into potential ties between the Kremlin and Trump
campaign in the summer of 2016, but GOP concerns are more focused on the
dossier being used to obtain Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
warrants against Trump campaign associate Carter Page and why leaders
such as Comey insisted Steele's research be included in the 2017 intelligence community assessment on Russian election interference. One burning question, according to Wisconsin Sen. Ron
Johnson, is why Comey refused to allow his security clearance to be
reinstated, allowing him to avoid questions about classified information
that Horowitz wanted to raise for his audit of the Russia
investigation. "Why did former FBI Director James Comey and former FBI general
counsel James Baker refuse to have their security clearances reinstated
before they were interviewed by the inspector general? Was it so they
wouldn’t have to explain this information?" Johnson, the Senate Homeland
Security Committee chairman, wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece published on Friday. This very issue is "one of the problems" in Horowitz's
investigation, Attorney General William Barr said in December. But it is
not one that can't be solved. Barr suggested U.S. Attorney John Durham,
who is conducting a review of the Russia investigation,
could secure cooperation where the inspector general could not.
"Someone like Durham can compel testimony, he can talk to a whole range
of people, private parties, foreign governments, and so forth," Barr told NBC News...Steele put his research together at the behest of the opposition research firm Fusion GPS,
funded by Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign and the Democratic
National Committee through the Perkins Coie law firm. Comey told Donald
Trump, who was the incoming president at the time, about the salacious
claims about him in the dossier during an early January 2017 meeting at Trump Tower. Comey defended himself against allegations that the FBI
committed "treason" and illegal surveillance of the Trump campaign back
in December 2019. "All of that was nonsense," he said in a Fox News Sunday interview. He did admit, however, that Horowitz identified "real sloppiness" on the part of FBI agents...Mueller, too, is on their radar. Soon after Comey was fired by Trump in
May 2017, Mueller was appointed to be the special counsel overseeing the
Russia investigation. Dubbed a "witch hunt" by Trump and his allies,
Mueller's team did not find a criminal conspiracy between the Trump team
and Russia but did lay out possible instances of obstruction of justice
that were seized on by Democrats last spring...Now as Democrats warn that Barr and Durham's investigation could be an effort to discredit Mueller,
Republicans are raising questions about what Mueller knew about the
newly revealed classified reports that cast aspersions on Steele's
dossier and when. "These notes beg question of when FBI learned of Russian
disinfo in dossier+what did they do about it?? Why did they keep
renewing spying authority with this info? What did Mueller know and
when? Did we even need Mueller?" Grassley, an Iowa Republican, said in a tweet, echoing similar questions in Johnson's opinion article...MORE
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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