Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley is threatening to subpoena two top FBI
officials to answer questions about Russia, the firing of James Comey,
the Hillary Clinton email case and more.
“If we are unable to reach a voluntary agreement, the committee will
consider proceeding to compulsory process through its authority under
the Constitution and pursuant to Senate and committee rules,” Grassley
wrote in a Wednesday letter to the Justice Department.
Grassley, an Iowa Republican, has been seeking a closed-door interview
with FBI officials Carl Ghattas and James Rybicki. Ghattas is the
executive assistant director of the FBI National Security Branch;
Rybicki is the the chief of staff and senior counselor to the FBI
director.
Stephen Boyd, the assistant attorney general, had written in a Sept. 11
letter to Grassley that the officials could not be interviewed over
concerns it would interfere with the ongoing special counsel probe into
Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
But Grassley said he wants to ask the officials about improper political
influence or bias in the Justice Department, Comey’s firing, the Clinton
email investigation, the FBI’s activities related to President Trump and
his associates and Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.
DOJ REFUSING TO LET FBI STAFFERS SPEAK TO SENATE INVESTIGATORS
One of those officials, Rybicki, has been in the spotlight lately after
partial interview transcripts emerged in which Rybicki and another
bureau official suggested Comey had started drafting an exoneration
statement for Clinton in the private email investigation weeks before
she was interviewed.
The claims, which emerged in interviews by the Office of Special Counsel
and were disclosed by members of the Judiciary Committee, prompted some
GOP lawmakers to question Comey’s past statements to Congress. On the
other side of Capitol Hill, some House Republicans have renewed calls
for a second special counsel to be appointed in light of claims Comey
drafted an exoneration statement before the case was closed.
Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016, was investigated
by the FBI for using a private email address and server to handle
classified information while serving as secretary of state.
In July 2016, Comey famously called Clinton’s email arrangement
“extremely careless” though he decided against recommending criminal
charges.
Comey was fired as FBI director by President Trump in May amid tensions
over the Russia investigation.
While the Department of Justice has turned down Grassley's requests for
access to the officials in question, Fox News has learned Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein met with Grassley recently for a private
face-to-face meeting.
The Senate Judiciary Committee originally asked in July to interview
Rybicki and Ghattas.
Fox News’ Jake Gibson and Chad Pergram contributed to this report |
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