Pompeo misses deadline to turn over State Dept. docs on Ukraine, Giuliani in impeachment inquiry
Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo missed Friday’s deadline to comply with a subpoena issued
by three Democrat-led House committees last week to hand over documents
related to the department’s dealings with Ukraine and President Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, Fox News has confirmed.
The
subpoena came as Congress conducts a probe into a whistleblower’s
complaint to the national intelligence community over Trump’s July 25
phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky -- the incident
that has since touched off the Trump impeachment inquiry.
The president is under fire for urging Zelensky, during that call, to investigate Democratic 2020 presidential frontrunner Joe Biden, his son Hunter Biden, and the Ukrainian firm Burisma, where Hunter Biden held a board position.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo listens during an event hosted
by the Department of State's Energy Resources Governance Initiative in
New York, Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019. (Associated Press)
Last week, the chairmen of the three House panels -- Reps. Adam Schiff,
D-Calif., of the Intelligence Committee; Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., of the
Foreign Affairs Committee; and Elijah Cummings, D-Md., of the Oversight
and Reform Committee -- demanded a list of State Department officials
who might have been involved with the Ukraine conversation. The chairmen
additionally requested any State Department records about Giuliani, and
any records relating to U.S. military aid to Ukraine. (Giuliani had
traveled to Ukraine on business on behalf of the president, he told Fox News' Sean Hannity on Wednesday.)
Fox
News confirmed the State Department is in touch with the three House
panels regarding the deadline breach. Trump told reporters he would send
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
a letter Friday, saying the White House would not comply with the
impeachment inquiry until it is made official by a vote before the
entire chamber. It was unclear if the State Department failed to comply
with the subpoena at Trump's request.
Pompeo confirmed Wednesday
-- while in Rome -- that he was on the July 25 call, describing his
involvement as appropriate, and within the purview of his role as
secretary of state. As a stand-off between the executive branch and
Congress escalated, he also said he would fight a request from the
Democratic chairmen for depositions from five State Department
officials. He accused the lawmakers of not giving department employees
enough time to prepare and voiced concern that the committee was trying
to prevent State Department counsel from participating.
"What we
objected to was the demands that were put that deeply violate
fundamental principles of the separation of powers," Pompeo said. "They
contacted State Department employees directly and told them not to
contact legal counsel at the State Department.”
"What
we objected to was the demands that were put that deeply violate
fundamental principles of the separation of powers. They contacted State
Department employees directly and told them not to contact legal
counsel at the State Department.” — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
Lawmakers
from the Foreign Affairs, Intelligence and Oversight committees moved
forward with testimony from their first key witness Thursday --- former
U.S. envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker, who resigned last week after
receiving word his name had surfaced in the whistleblower complaint.
Text messages released by Volker to Congress show U.S. officials
involved with Ukraine arguing internally last month over whether Trump
was engaged in a quid pro quo. Fox News on Friday also obtained Volker’s
prepared testimony, in which he details his interactions with Trump
lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who was probing whether Burisma had sought to
garner influence with Biden by paying high fees to his son.
A
memorandum of the July 25 call between Trump and Zelensky released last
month showed that while Trump sought a Ukrainian probe into the Biden
family, he did not explicitly use the $400 million in military aid as
leverage. Trump tweeted Thursday that he had an "absolute right, perhaps
even a duty, to investigate or have investigated corruption, and that
would include asking or suggesting other countries to help us out!"
Joe
Biden has acknowledged on camera that in spring 2016, when he was vice
president and spearheading the Obama administration's Ukraine policy, he
successfully pressured Ukraine to fire top prosecutor Viktor Shokin. At
the time, Shokin was investigating Burisma Holdings — where Hunter had a
lucrative role on the board despite limited relevant expertise. Biden
allies maintain his intervention was driven by corruption concerns.
Michael
Atkinson, the inspector general of the intelligence community, gave
testimony before the House Intelligence Committee on Friday, as he was
the first to receive the whistleblower complaint. The complaint was
eventually declassified by the Trump administration and a redacted
versions sent to Congress. House Democrats are scheduled to hear
testimony from several other officials next week. Fox News’ Chad Pergram, Brooke Singman, Alex Pappas and Catherine Herridge contributed to this report.
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