Lawmakers
make criminal referral on Clinton, Comey, Lymch to DOJ on Steele
Dossier
Obama
officials and FBI embattled agents also targeted for possible
violations of federal law
18 April,
2018
Congressional
lawmakers made a criminal referral Wednesday to the Department of
Justice Attorney General Jeff Sessions against former senior-level
Obama administration officials, including employees of the FBI
connected with the unverified dossier alleging collusion between the
Trump campaign and Russia, as well as those involved in the warrants
used to spy on a former Trump campaign volunteer, this reporter has
learned. The lawmakers also made a criminal referral on former
Attorney General Loretta Lynch and threats made by her DOJ against
the FBI informant, who provided the bureau with information on the
Russian nuclear industry and the approval in 2010 to sell roughly 20
percent of American uranium mining assets to Russia.
“The
lawmakers noted that Comey “engaged in questionable conduct
vis-à-vis President Donald Trump…”
House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee member Rep. Ron DeSantis,
R-Florida, along with ten other colleagues sent the letter Wednesday
to Sessions and FBI Director Christopher Wray criminally referring
former FBI Director James Comey, former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, former Attorney General Loretta Lynch, and former FBI Deputy
Director Andrew McCabe for their involvement in the investigations
into President Trump and alleged violations of federal law. FBI
Special Agent Peter Strzok and his paramour FBI lawyer Lisa Page,
whose anti-Trump text messages obtained by the DOJ Inspector General
Michael Horowitz, were also included in the referral.
“We
write to refer the following individuals for investigation of
potential violation(s) of federal statutes,” states the letter
obtained by this reporter. “In doing so, we are especially mindful
of the dissimilar degrees of zealousness that has marked the
investigations into Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the
presidential campaign of Donald Trump, respectively. Because we
believe that those in positions of high authority should be treated
the same as every other American, we want to be sure that the
potential violations of law outlined below are vetted appropriately.”
The
criminal referral also raises significant concerns regarding the
Steele dossier, and the “presentation of false and/or unverified
information to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in
connection with the former Trump aide Carter Page warrant application
to conduct surveillance through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA).” Page worked as a volunteer advisor for the Trump
campaign and the information in the dossier was used in bulk by the
FBI to obtain the warrants to spy on him.
“Accordingly,
we refer to DOJ all DOJ and FBI personnel responsible for signing the
Carter Page warrant application that contained unverified and/or
false information for possible violation(s) of 18 USC 242 and 18 USC
1505 and 1515b,” the criminal referral states. It refers to a
letter drafted by House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes
to Sessions this March.
The
lawmakers noted that Comey “engaged in questionable conduct
vis-à-vis President Donald Trump,” and referred to an article
reported by The New York Times, in May 2017, which highlighted memos
leaked by Comey to a friend that was given to the paper. In the
criminal referral letter, the lawmakers state that “Comey wrote
memoranda detailing alleged conversations between himself and
President Trump, creating ‘a paper trail’ for ‘documenting what
he perceived as the president’s improper efforts to influence a
continuing investigation.’
The
New York Times article reports that Comey “created similar memos –
including some that are classified – about every phone call and
meeting he had with the president,” the letter states.
The
criminal referral also notes a Jan. 3, 2018, letter to Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein from Chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee Charles Grassley, where committee staff reviewed the
memoranda created by Comey in a Sensitive Compartmented Information
Facility due to the classified nature of the majority of the memos;
of the seven memos, four were marked classified at the “SECRET”
or “CONFIDENTIAL” levels.
Comey,
whose book A Higher Loyalty, released this week, argued that his
memos were personal reflections about his meetings and conversations
with Trump, but admitted that some contained classified material.
According to FBI policy, however, the bureau forbids any agent from
releasing classified information regarding ongoing investigations or
sensitive operations without prior written permission. The bureau
also mandates that all records created during official duties are
considered to be government property.
“In
light of the fact that four of the seven memos were classified, it
would appear that former Director Comey leaked classified information
when sharing these memos with Professor Richman. Accordingly, we
refer James Comey to DOJ for potential violation(s) of 18 USC 641, 18
USC 793, and 18 USC 1924(a),” the letter states.
The
congressional members also are referring former presidential
candidate Clinton for her role in the dossier, assembled by former
British spy Christopher Steele, who was hired by a cutout, now
embattled research firm Fusion GPS. After months of investigations by
Congress, it was eventually discovered that the dossier was paid for
by the Hillary Clinton Campaign and the Democratic National
Committee. However, the campaign did not reveal that they had
allocated money to pay for the research on their disclosure forms,
according to congressional members and news reports.
“A
lawyer representing the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National
Committee paid Washington firm Fusion GPS to conduct research that
led to the Steele dossier, according to an October 24, 2017, report
in The Washington Post,” the letter states. ” Accordingly, for
disguising payments to Fusion GPS on mandatory disclosures to the
Federal Election Commission, we refer Hillary Clinton to DOJ for
potential violation(s) of 52 USC 30121 and 52 USC 30101.”
Lynch
was referred after concerns were made regarding her decision to
threaten with reprisal the former FBI informant, William Douglas
Campbell, who first came forward in 2016 with insight into the sale
of the Canadian firm Uranium One, which controlled nearly 20 percent
of uranium mining interests in the United States, as previously
reported.
Campbell
had filed a lawsuit in Maryland federal court in 2016 against the
Russian companies he was employed with and which he had kept tabs on
for the FBI. He was asking for the return of the money he had to
launder out of his own paychecks and had sent a Freedom of
Information Act request to the DOJ for information on his case. After
the DOJ received the FOIA request and the lawsuit was filed, his
lawyers were advised by personnel from the Justice Department that
prosecutors in the Fraud Section of the Justice Department under
Lynch, demanded the withdrawal the lawsuit. According to a letter
written by Campbell’s previous attorney, the DOJ threatened to
destroy Campbell’s reputation and prosecute him for violating a
non-disclosure agreement he had signed with the FBI.
The
criminal referral on Lynch is regarding “potential violation(s) of
18 USC 1505 and 1515b,” according to the letter.
As
for Strzok and Page, the two FBI employees at the center of the
Congressional investigations, the lawmakers seek the criminal
referral based on the pairs “interference in the Hillary Clinton
investigation regarding her use of a personal email server,” as
reported.
The
lawmakers point to a Jan. 22, The Wall Street Journal article
regarding the Justice Department’s second release of text exchanges
between Strzok and Page, and revealed that the texts “show the FBI
also eliminated evidence that Mrs. Clinton compromised high-level
communications.”
“The
report provides the following alarming specifics, among others: ‘Mr.
Strzok texts Ms. Page to tell her that, in fact, senior officials had
decided to water down the reference to President Obama to ‘another
senior government official,” the criminal referral states referring
to the article.
Other
recent documents obtained by congressional investigators also suggest
possible coordination by Obama White House officials, the CIA and the
FBI into the investigation into President Donald Trump’s campaign.
According to those documents, the senior Obama officials used
unsubstantiated evidence to launch allegations in the media that the
Trump campaign was colluding with Russia during the run-up to the
2016 presidential election.
The
documents also reveal that former Senate majority leader Harry Reid,
D-Nevada, sent a letter on Aug. 29, 2016, asking former FBI Director
James Comey to investigate the allegations, which were presented to
him by then CIA Director John Brennan. Brennan had briefed Reid
privately days earlier on the counterintelligence investigation and
documents suggest Reid was also staying in close touch with Comey
over the issues, as reported.
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