Sources: FBI Deputy Director Contradicts
Robert Mueller Probe, Draws Blank on Source Of Funding For
Dem-Dossier
EXCLUSIVE: Congressional investigators
tell Fox News that Tuesday’s seven-hour interrogation of Deputy FBI
Director Andrew McCabe contained numerous conflicts with the testimony
of previous witnesses, prompting the Republican majority staff of the
House Intelligence Committee to decide to issue fresh subpoenas next
week on Justice Department and FBI personnel.
While HPSCI staff would not confirm who will be summoned for testimony,
all indications point to demoted DOJ official Bruce G. Ohr and FBI
General Counsel James A. Baker, who accompanied McCabe, along with other
lawyers, to Tuesday’s HPSCI session.
The issuance of a subpoena against the Justice Department’s top lawyer
could provoke a new constitutional clash between the two branches, even
worse than the months-long tug of war over documents and witnesses that
has already led House Speaker Paul Ryan to accuse DOJ and FBI of
“stonewalling” and HPSCI Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., to threaten
contempt-of-Congress citations against Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein and FBI Director Christopher Wray.
“It’s hard to know who’s telling us the truth,” said one House
investigator after McCabe’s questioning.
Fox News is told that several lawmakers participated in the questioning
of McCabe, led chiefly by Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C.
Sources close to the investigation say
that McCabe was a “friendly witness” to the Democrats in the room, who
are said to have pressed the deputy director, without success, to help
them build a case against President Trump for obstruction of justice in
the Russia-collusion probe. “If he could have, he would have,” said one
participant in the questioning.
Investigators say McCabe recounted to the panel how hard the FBI had
worked to verify the contents of the anti-Trump “dossier” and stood by
its credibility. But when pressed to identify what in the salacious
document the bureau had actually corroborated, the sources said, McCabe
cited only the fact that Trump campaign adviser Carter Page had traveled
to Moscow.
Beyond that, investigators said, McCabe
could not even say that the bureau had verified the dossier’s
allegations about the specific meetings Page supposedly held in Moscow.
The sources said that when asked when
he learned that the dossier had been funded by the Hillary Clinton
campaign and the Democratic National Committee, McCabe claimed he could
not recall – despite the reported existence of documents with McCabe’s
own signature on them establishing his knowledge of the dossier’s
financing and provenance.
The decision by HPSCI staff to subpoena Ohr comes as he is set to appear
before the Senate Intelligence Committee, which is conducting its own
probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Until earlier this month, when Fox News began investigating him, Ohr
held two titles at DOJ: associate deputy attorney general, a post that
placed him four doors down from his boss, Rosenstein; and director of
the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF), a program
described by the department as “the centerpiece of the attorney
general’s drug strategy.”
Ohr will retain his OCDETF title but was stripped of his higher post and
ousted from his office on the fourth floor of “Main Justice.” Department
officials confirmed that Ohr had withheld from superiors his secret
meetings in 2016 with Christopher Steele, the former British spy who
authored the dossier with input from Russian sources; and with Glenn
Simpson, the founder of Fusion GPS, the opposition research firm that
hired Steele with funds supplied by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the
Democratic National Committee.
Subsequently, Fox News disclosed that Ohr’s wife Nellie, an academic
expert on Russia, had worked for Fusion GPS through the summer and fall
of 2016.
Former FBI Director James Comey,
testifying before the House in March, described the dossier as a
compendium of “salacious and unverified” allegations against
then-candidate Donald Trump and his associates. The Nunes panel has
spent much of this year investigating whether DOJ, under then-Attorney
General Loretta Lynch, used the dossier to justify a foreign
surveillance warrant against Page, a foreign policy adviser to the Trump
campaign.
DOJ and FBI say they have cooperated extensively with Nunes and his
team, including the provision of several hundred pages of classified
documents relating to the dossier. The DOJ has also made McCabe
available to the House Judiciary Committee for a closed-door interview
on Thursday.
The Justice Department and FBI declined to comment for this report.