Reporter who broke news of Steele dossier used to surveil ex-Trump aide calls its claims largely 'false'
The salacious and unverified opposition research dossier
cited by the FBI as its main justification to surveil a top Trump
aide contains many claims that are "likely false," according to the
Yahoo News reporter who was among the first to break the news of the
dossier's existence.
Michael Isikoff's statements on John Ziegler's Free Speech Broadcasting podcast came
a day before Michael Cohen adviser Lanny Davis reiterated that Cohen
has never been to Prague -- where, according to the dossier, he traveled
to arrange a payment to Russian hackers during the 2016 presidential
campaign.
The dossier was created by British ex-spy Christopher
Steele and funded by the firm Fusion GPS -- which was retained by the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Hillary Clinton presidential
campaign.
"In broad strokes, Christopher Steele was clearly onto
something, that there was a major Kremlin effort to interfere in our
elections, that they were trying to help Trump's campaign, and that
there was multiple contacts between various Russian figures close to the
government and various people in Trump's campaign,” Isikoff said.
But
he added: “When you actually get into the details of the Steele
dossier, the specific allegations, we have not seen the evidence to
support them, and, in fact, there's good grounds to think that some of
the more sensational allegations will never be proven and are likely
false."
On four occasions, the FBI told the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance (FISA) court that it "did not believe" Steele was the
direct source for Isikoff's Sept. 23, 2016 Yahoo News article implicating former Trump aide Carter Page in Russian collusion.
Instead,
the FBI suggested to the court, the article by Michael Isikoff was
independent corroboration of the salacious, unverified allegations
against Trump in the infamous Steele dossier. Federal authorities used
both the Steele dossier and Yahoo News article to convince the FISA
court to authorize a surveillance warrant for Page.
But London court records show
that contrary to the FBI's assessments, Steele briefed Yahoo News and
other reporters in the fall of 2016 at the direction of Fusion GPS --
the opposition research firm behind the dossier. The revelations were
contained heavily-redacted documents released earlier this year after a
Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the organization Judicial Watch.
"The
FBI does not believe that Source #1 [Steele] directly provided this
information to the identified news organization that published the
September 23rd News Article," the FBI stated in one of the released FISA
documents. "Source #1 told the FBI that he/she only provided this
information to the business associate and the FBI."
The documents
describe Source #1 as someone "hired by a business associate to conduct
research" into Trump's Russia ties -- but do not mention that Fusion GPS
was funded by the DNC and Clinton campaign.
Instead, the
documents say only: "The FBI speculates that the identified U.S. person
was likely looking for information that could be used to discredit
[Trump's] campaign." Fox News believes that the U.S. person is Glenn
Simpson, co-founder of Fusion GPS.
Senior Justice Department official Bruce Ohr, left, continued to
communicate with former British spy Christopher Steele, right, even
after the FBI cut ties with him.
(AP)
Page announced in October
he is filing a defamation lawsuit against the DNC over the dossier's
claims. He is also suing Perkins Coie and its partners, the law firm
that represented Clinton’s campaign and hired Fusion GPS.
Page told Fox News’ “Hannity” at the time that his lawsuit goes “beyond any damages or any financial aspects."
“There
have been so many lies as you’re alluding to and you look at the damage
it did to our Democratic systems and our institutions of government
back in 2016. And I’m just trying to get some justice,” he said.
Meanwhile,
ex-Cohen attorney Lanny Davis laughed off a suggestion during an MSNBC
interview on Sunday that his former client had ever made a trip to
Prague to pay Russian hackers.
“No, no Prague, ever, never,” Davis said.
While Cohen's team has long denied he made the trip, the latest denial comes after Cohen pleaded guilty in two separate prosecutions
linked to his work for President Trump. Cohen has pledged to cooperate
with federal authorities, and Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team has
said he has largely done so. ANTI-TRUMP EX-FBI AGENT STRZOK'S PHONE WIPED AFTER HE WAS FIRED FROM MUELLER'S TEAM
Fox
News reported in August that embattled Justice Department official
Bruce Ohr had contact in 2016 with then-colleague Andrew Weissmann, who
is now a top Mueller deputy, as well as other senior FBI officials about
the controversial anti-Trump dossier and the individuals behind it.
The
sources said Ohr's outreach about the dossier – as well as Steele; the
opposition research firm behind it, Glenn Simpson’s Fusion GPS; and his
wife Nellie Ohr's work for Fusion – occurred before and after the FBI
fired Steele as a source over his media contacts. Ohr's network of
contacts on the dossier included: anti-Trump former FBI agent Peter
Strzok; former FBI lawyer Lisa Page; former deputy director Andrew
McCabe; Weissmann and at least one other DOJ official; and a current FBI
agent who worked with Strzok on the Russia case.
Weissmann was
kept "in the loop" on the dossier, a source said, while he was chief of
the criminal fraud division. He is now assigned to Mueller’s team.
Ohr's
broad circle of contacts indicates members of FBI leadership knew about
his backchannel activities regarding the dossier and Steele.
Congressional
Republicans are still trying to get to the bottom of Ohr's role in
circulating the unverified dossier, which became a critical piece of
evidence in obtaining a surveillance warrant for Page in October 2016.
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