Barr assembles 'team' to look into counterintelligence investigation on Trump campaign in 2016, official says
Attorney General William Barr
has assembled a "team" to investigate the origins of the FBI's
counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign, an
administration official briefed on the situation told Fox News on
Tuesday.
Republicans repeatedly have called for a thorough
investigation of the FBI's intelligence practices and the basis of the
since-discredited Russian collusion narrative following the conclusion
of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's probe -- and they now appear to have assurances that a comprehensive review was underway.
The FBI's
July 2016 counterintelligence investigation was formally opened by
anti-Trump former FBI agent Peter Strzok. Ex-FBI counsel Lisa Page, with
whom Strzok was romantically involved,
revealed during a closed-door congressional interview that the FBI
“knew so little” about whether allegations against the Trump campaign
were “true or not true” at the time they opened the probe, noting they
had just “a paucity of evidence because we are just starting down the
path” of vetting the allegations.
Page
later said that it was “entirely common” that the FBI would begin a
counterintelligence investigation with just a “small amount of
evidence.”
Former FBI Director James Comey would testify later
that when agency initiated its counterintelligence probe into
possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and the Russian
government, investigators "didn't know whether we had anything" and that
"in fact, when I was fired as director [in May 2017], I still didn't
know whether there was anything to it."
President Trump greeting then-FBI Director James Comey at the White House on January 22, 2017.
(Reuters, File)
Barr told lawmakers at a contentious hearing earlier
Tuesday that he was reviewing the bureau's “conduct” in particular
during the summer of 2016. The attorney general's explosive testimony
marked his first Capitol Hill appearance since he revealed the central
findings of Mueller’s investigation, and he indicated the full report --
with redactions -- would be made public within the week.
Mueller's
investigation completed last month without securing the indictment of a
single American for collusion with Russia or obstruction of justice, "despite multiple offers from Russian-affiliated individuals to assist the Trump campaign."
“I
am reviewing the conduct of the investigation and trying to get my arms
around all the aspects of the counterintelligence investigation that
was conducted during the summer of 2016,” Barr said at the hearing.
Barr
also was questioned about the initial Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA) warrants approved to surveil members of the Trump campaign,
including former Trump aide Carter Page.
Republicans have called
for a careful review as to whether the FBI, in violation of Page's
constitutional rights and FBI procedures, misled the FISA court or
withheld exculpatory information, and Barr testified that a DOJ review
of the FBI's FISA practices was in progress.
The FBI's ultimately successful October 2016 warrant application
to surveil Page, which relied in part on information from British
ex-spy Christopher Steele – whose anti-Trump views are now
well-documented – flatly accused Page of conspiring with Russians. Page
has never been charged with any wrongdoing, and he since has sued the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) for defamation.
The FBI assured
the FISA court on numerous occasions -- in the October 2016 warrant
application and in subsequent renewals -- that other sources, including a
Yahoo News article, independently corroborated Steele's claims, without
evidence to back it up. It later emerged that Steele was also the
source of the Yahoo News article, written by reporter Michael Isikoff.
The FBI also quoted directly from a disputed Washington Post opinion piece
to argue that Trump's views on providing lethal arms to Ukraine, and
working towards better relations with Russia, was a possible indicator
that the campaign had been compromised.
The Trump campaign, at the
time, supported only providing only defensive arms to Ukrainians, and
rejected a single Republican delegate's proposed platform amendment that
called for providing lethal arms. Later, the Trump administration
changed course and approved lethal arms sales to Ukraine.
The
FBI did not provide its own independent assessment of whether the
Washington Post opinion piece contained accurate information, and did
not mention that the Obama administration had the same policy towards
arming Ukraine as the one Trump's team supported.
The FBI also did
not clearly state that Steele worked for a firm hired by Hillary
Clinton's campaign. Instead, the FBI only indicated that Steele's
dossier was prepared in conjunction with a presidential campaign.
Fox News exclusively obtained internal FBI text messages
last month showing that just nine days before the FBI applied for the
Page FISA warrant, bureau officials were battling with a senior Justice
Department official who had "continued concerns" about the "possible
bias" of a source pivotal to the application.
Fox
News also has been told the Justice Department's Inspector General (IG)
was looking separately into whether Comey mishandled classified
information by including a variety of sensitive matters in his private
memos.
A DOJ court filing on Monday night revealed that Comey incorporated into his private documents, among other key details, the name and code name of a confidential human source. Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
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