Barr thinks FBI may have acted in 'bad
faith' in probing Trump campaign's links to
Russia
"I think our nation was turned on its head
for three years based on a bogus narrative,"
the attorney general said in an exclusive
interview with Pete Williams.
By Ken Dilanian
December 10, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-WASHINGTON —
Attorney General William Barr said he still
believes the FBI may have operated out of
"bad faith" when it investigated whether the
Trump campaign colluded with Russia, and he
contends the FBI acted improperly by
continuing the investigation after Donald
Trump took office.
In an exclusive
interview with NBC News, Barr essentially
dismissed
the findings of the Justice Department's
inspector general that there was no
evidence of political bias in the launching
of the Russia probe, saying that his
hand-picked prosecutor, John Durham, will
have the last word on the matter.
WASHINGTON —
Attorney General William Barr said he still
believes the FBI may have operated out of
"bad faith" when it investigated whether the
Trump campaign colluded with Russia, and he
contends the FBI acted improperly by
continuing the investigation after Donald
Trump took office.
In an exclusive
interview with NBC News, Barr essentially
dismissed
the findings of the Justice Department's
inspector general that there was no
evidence of political bias in the launching
of the Russia probe, saying that his
hand-picked prosecutor, John Durham, will
have the last word on the matter.
"I
think our nation was turned on its head for
three years based on a completely bogus
narrative that was largely fanned and hyped
by a completely irresponsible press," Barr
said. "I think there were gross abuses …and
inexplicable behavior that is intolerable in
the FBI."
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
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"I
think that leaves open the possibility that
there was bad faith."
Barr's
blistering criticism of the FBI's conduct in
the Russia investigation, which went well
beyond the errors outlined in the inspector
general report, is bound to stoke further
debate about whether the attorney general is
acting in good faith, or as a political
hatchet man for Trump.
Inspector General Michael Horowitz, after
reviewing a million documents and
interviewing 100 people, concluded that he
"did not find documentary or testimonial
evidence that political bias or improper
motivation influenced the decisions to open"
the investigations into Trump campaign
aides.
But
Barr argued that Horowitz didn't look very
hard, and that the inspector general
accepted the FBI's explanations at face
value.
"All
he said was, people gave me an explanation
and I didn't find anything to contradict it
… he hasn't decided the issue of improper
motive," Barr said. "I think we have to wait
until the full investigation is done."
Barr
said he stood by his assertion that the
Trump campaign was spied on, noting that the
FBI used confidential informants who
recorded conversations with Trump campaign
officials.
"It
was clearly spied upon," he said. "That's
what electronic surveillance is … going
through people's emails, wiring people up."
Barr
portrayed the Russia investigation as a
bogus endeavor that was foisted on Trump,
rather than something undertaken by career
civil servants who were concerned about
whether a foreign power had compromised a
political campaign.
"From
a civil liberties standpoint, the greatest
danger to our free system is that the
incumbent government use the apparatus of
the state … both to spy on political
opponents but also to use them in a way that
could affect the outcome of an election,"
Barr said. He added that this was the first
time in history that "counterintelligence
techniques" were used against a presidential
campaign.
Barr
said that presidential campaigns are
frequently in contact with foreigners,
contradicting the comments of numerous
political professionals who have said for
two years that there is rarely, if ever, a
reason for a presidential campaign to be in
touch with Russians.
Barr
added, "There was and never has been any
evidence of collusion and yet this campaign
and the president’s administration has been
dominated by this investigation into what
turns out to be completely baseless."
But
the biggest outrage, Barr said, is that the
FBI's "case collapsed after the election and
they never told the court and they kept on
getting these renewals."
The
inspector general report does not say the
FBI's Russia case collapsed after the
election. It does say that the FBI
interviewed some of the sources for the
dossier written by a British operative, who
raised questions about his reporting. But by
then, the investigation had moved well
beyond anything in the dossier.
This article was originally published by "NBC
News"
--
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