WASHINGTON (AP) β House Republicans on Friday released a partisan and bitterly disputed memo that they say shows surveillance abuses in the early stages of the FBIβs investigation into the Trump campaign and Russia.
See the full memo HERE.
The memo, prepared by Republicans on the House intelligence committee, says there was βa troubling breakdown of legal processesβ in the Russia investigation.
President Donald Trump, who advocated for the memoβs release over the fierce objections of the Justice Department and the FBI, told reporters the document shows βa lot of people should be ashamed of themselves.β
βI think itβs terrible,β Trump said. βYou want to know the truth. I think itβs a disgrace. Whatβs going on in this country, I think itβs a disgrace.β
The memo, which the FBI has said is inaccurate and missing critical context, asserts that current and former FBI and Justice Department leaders signed off on a surveillance warrant to monitor communications of a former Trump campaign associate.
The document also asserts that opposition research, conducted by a British spy and funded in part by the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign, formed a critical basis for the allegations contained in the warrant application.
They say that research should not have been a basis for the warrant because it contains unproven allegations.
The release of the memo is likely to further divide Trump and his FBI and Justice Department leaders, and the president lashed out anew on Friday morning on Twitter. He has supported the memo release in apparent hopes that it could help undermine the probe being led by special counsel Robert Mueller, which he has called a βwitch hunt.β
βThe top Leadership and Investigators of the FBI and the Justice Department have politicized the sacred investigative process in favor of Democrats and against Republicans – something which would have been unthinkable just a short time ago. Rank & File are great people!β Trump tweeted.
The tweet came as U.S. news coverage was dominated by reports that the FBI and the Justice Department had objected strenuously to the memoβs release. Earlier this week, the FBI declared it had βgrave concernsβ about its accuracy.
Trumpβs tweet and his approval of the memo release set up a clash with the man he picked to lead the FBI, Christopher Wray, after firing James Comey as agency director. It also seemed at odds with House Speaker Paul Ryan who said a day earlier βthis memo is not an indictment of the FBI or the Department of Justice.β
Democrats say the memo cherry-picks intelligence in an effort to smear law enforcement investigating whether Trump associates collaborated with Russia to sway the 2016 presidential election.
βThis is designed to impugn the credibility of the FBI, to undermine the investigation, to give the president additional fodder to attack the investigation. And itβs a tremendous disservice to the American people,β Rep. Adam Schiff, the senior Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said on CBS βThis Morning.β
The document was written by GOP lawmakers as part of an effort to reveal what Republicans say are surveillance abuses by the FBI and the Justice Department early in Russia investigation, before special counsel Mueller was appointed to take it over.
The House intelligence panel voted along party lines Monday to put the memo out, giving Trump five days to reject the release under committee rules. But Trump also had the power to declassify the document himself.
Senior FBI officials, including Wray, also made direct appeals to the White House, warning that it could set a dangerous precedent.
Democrats on the intelligence panel made a last-ditch effort Wednesday evening to stop the release, saying the memo had been βsecretly alteredβ by the Republicans who wrote it. In a letter to the House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, Schiff wrote that committee Democrats had discovered changes that were made after the vote Monday.
βThe White House has therefore been reviewing a document since Monday night that the committee never approved for public release,β Schiff said in the letter.
Schiff asked Nunes for another vote on the memo, but Republicans didnβt waver. Nunes spokesman Jack Langer said the committee vote was βprocedurally sound.β
This all comes as special counsel Mueller is investigating whether the Trump campaign improperly coordinated with Russia and whether Trump sought to obstruct the inquiry by, among other actions, firing Comey. Republicans have intensified their pressure on the Justice Department as Muellerβs probe has moved closer to Trumpβs inner circle.
Trump has been telling confidants in recent days that he believed the GOP House membersβ document would validate his concerns that the FBI and Justice Department conspired against him. The president also has told allies that he believes the memo bolsters his claim that accusations of collusion between his campaign and Russian officials are false and part of a conspiracy to discredit his election.
Comey weighed in on Twitter as well: βAll should appreciate the FBI speaking up. I wish more of our leaders would. But take heart: American history shows that, in the long run, weasels and liars never hold the field, so long as good people stand up. Not a lot of schools or streets named for Joe McCarthy.β
He then added this once the memo was released:
