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		Comey had pushed for more resources for 
		Russia probe before being fired by Trump: source 
		
		 
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		 [May 11, 2017] 
		By Dustin Volz and Susan Cornwell 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - FBI Director James 
		Comey, days before President Donald Trump fired him, told lawmakers he 
		sought more resources for his agency's probe into possible collusion 
		between Trump's presidential campaign and Russia to sway the 2016 U.S. 
		election, a congressional source said on Wednesday. 
		 
		With the Republican president facing a storm of criticism from many 
		Democratic lawmakers and some in his own party, the Trump administration 
		accused Comey of "atrocities" on the job and denied his firing was 
		related to the FBI's Russia investigation. 
		 
		Trump, who met Russia's foreign minister at the White House on 
		Wednesday, lashed out at critics, calling Democrats "phony hypocrites," 
		and defended his decision to abruptly oust Comey on Tuesday from the law 
		enforcement post he held since 2013. 
		 
		In a farewell letter to staff seen by CNN, Comey, who was appointed by 
		Trump's predecessor, Democratic President Barack Obama, said he had 
		"long believed that a president can fire an FBI director for any reason, 
		or for no reason at all." 
		 
		Comey added he would not spend time dwelling on Trump's decision "or the 
		way it was executed." 
		
		
		  
		
		But Democrats ramped up accusations that Comey's removal was intended to 
		undermine the Federal Bureau of Investigation probe and demanded an 
		independent investigation into the alleged Russian meddling, with some 
		calling the firing an attempt to cover up wrongdoing related to Russia. 
		 
		A congressional source with knowledge of the matter said Comey told 
		lawmakers within the past few days he had asked the Justice Department 
		to make additional resources available - mainly more staffing - for the 
		Russia probe. 
		 
		Comey informed lawmakers of that request after the Senate Intelligence 
		Committee, conducting its own investigation, had asked the FBI to speed 
		up its Russia inquiry, the source said. 
		 
		Democrat Dianne Feinstein, the Senate Judiciary Committee's top 
		Democrat, told reporters she understood Comey was seeking more resources 
		for the FBI investigation. 
		 
		Responding to media reports that Comey had asked Deputy Attorney General 
		Rod Rosenstein last week for a significant boost in resources for the 
		agency's probe, Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior said in an email: 
		"Totally false." 
		 
		U.S. intelligence agencies concluded in a January report that Russian 
		President Vladimir Putin had ordered an effort to disrupt the 2016 
		election that included hacking into Democratic Party emails and leaking 
		them, with the aim of helping Trump. 
		 
		Russia has denied any such meddling. The Trump administration denies 
		allegations of collusion with Russia. 
		 
		'WASN'T DOING A GOOD JOB' 
		 
		Top U.S. Republicans rallied to Trump's defense, but some called the 
		action troubling. Republican House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason 
		Chaffetz said in a statement on Wednesday he had requested a review by 
		the Department of Justice's inspector general of Trump's decision to 
		fire Comey, who had more than six years left in his 10-year post. 
		 
		Comey's dismissal stunned Washington and plunged Trump deeper into a 
		controversy over his campaign's alleged ties with Russia that has dogged 
		the early days of his presidency, while also threatening to hinder his 
		policy goals. 
		
		
		  
		
		"He wasn't doing a good job, very simply," the Republican president said 
		of Comey during a meeting with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger 
		in the White House Oval Office. 
		 
		The administration said on Tuesday that Comey's firing stemmed from his 
		handling of an election-year FBI probe into Democratic presidential 
		nominee Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server during her time 
		as secretary of state. 
		 
		White House officials said Trump's anger at Comey had been building for 
		months but a turning point came when the FBI chief refused to preview 
		for top Trump aides his planned testimony to a May 3 Senate hearing on 
		the Clinton email issue, an act Trump and his aides took it as an act of 
		insubordination. 
		 
		Trump had been considering letting Comey go "since the day he was 
		elected" in November, White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders 
		said. She referred to what she called Comey's "atrocities in 
		circumventing the chain of command" at the Justice Department. 
		 
		Many Democrats have criticized Comey's management of the Clinton 
		investigation, but they questioned the timing of his dismissal, given 
		that Trump could have acted soon after taking office on Jan. 20 and that 
		he has repeatedly criticized the FBI and congressional probes into 
		Russia's role in the election. 
		 
		
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			A combination photo shows U.S. President Donald Trump (L) in the 
			House of Representatives in Washington, U.S., on February 28, 2017 
			and FBI Director James Comey in Washington U.S. on July 7, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Jim Lo Scalzo/Pool, Gary Cameron/File Photo 
            
			  
			In a flurry of Twitter posts, Trump said Comey had "lost the 
			confidence of almost everyone in Washington, Republican and Democrat 
			alike." He added, "Dems have been complaining for months & months 
			about Dir. Comey. Now that he has been fired they PRETEND to be 
			aggrieved. Phony hypocrites!" 
			 
			The Senate minority leader, Democrat Chuck Schumer, said Rosenstein 
			should appoint a special prosecutor. Schumer called on Republican 
			Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to hold closed and 
			potentially classified briefings with all senators to question the 
			top Justice Department officials, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and 
			Rosenstein. 
			 
			"We know Director Comey was leading an investigation (into) whether 
			the Trump campaign colluded with the Russians, a serious offense. 
			Were those investigations getting too close to home for the 
			president?" Schumer said. 
			 
			PANEL SEEKS COMEY TESTIMONY 
			 
			McConnell accused Democrats of "complaining about the removal of an 
			FBI director who they themselves repeatedly and sharply criticized" 
			and said a special prosecutor would impede existing probes like one 
			under way in the Senate Intelligence Committee. 
			 
			Paul Ryan, the Republican leader of the House of Representatives, 
			told Fox News in an interview it was "entirely within the 
			president’s role and authority" to remove Comey and that a special 
			prosecutor was unnecessary. 
			 
			Mark Warner, the intelligence committee's top Democrat, said he and 
			the panel's Republican chairman, Richard Burr, had asked Comey to 
			testify before the panel in private next Tuesday. 
			
			  
			
			On Wednesday evening, the intelligence panel said it had issued a 
			subpoena requesting documents from Trump's former national security 
			adviser, Michael Flynn, in relation to its Russia probe. The 
			committee said it had first requested the documents in a letter to 
			Flynn on April 28. 
			 
			Flynn was forced to resign in February for failing to disclose the 
			content of his talks with Sergei Kislyak, Russia's ambassador to the 
			United States, and then misleading Vice President Mike Pence about 
			the conversations. 
			 
			Trump said he had "a very, very good meeting" with Russian Foreign 
			Minister Sergei Lavrov and they discussed Syria's civil war. Their 
			meeting was the highest-level public contact between Trump and 
			Putin's government since Trump took office. 
			 
			During an earlier appearance at the State Department, Lavrov 
			responded in a sarcastic tone when asked about Comey's dismissal, 
			saying: "Was he fired? You're kidding. You're kidding." 
			 
			In the Russian city of Sochi, Putin said Comey's firing would not 
			have an impact on U.S.-Russian relations. 
			 
			Trump's nominee as the new FBI director would need to win Senate 
			confirmation. Trump's possible choices to head the FBI on an interim 
			basis, according to a White House official, include acting FBI 
			Director Andrew McCabe, Assistant Director Paul Abbate, Chicago FBI 
			agent Michael Anderson and Richmond, Virginia, agent Adam Lee. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Susan Heavey, Patricia 
			Zengerle, David Morgan, David Alexander, Eric Beech, Arshad Mohammed 
			and Julia Harte; Writing by Will Dunham; Editing by Frances Kerry 
			and Peter Cooney) 
			
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