Exclusive: Democrats prepare to probe
Trump's FBI headquarters plan - Rep Connolly
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[December 05, 2018]
By Mark Hosenball and Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump's role in decisions about a new FBI headquarters will face intense
scrutiny when Democrats take control of a key U.S. House of
Representatives committee in January, one of the panel's leaders said on
Tuesday.
Democratic U.S. Representative Gerald Connolly told Reuters in an
interview that the Trump administration's abrupt cancellation last year
of plans to build a new FBI headquarters in the Washington suburbs are a
"prime subject for exploration."
Connolly would likely lead such an inquiry if, as expected, he becomes
chairman of a House Oversight subcommittee.
He said the FBI building project is a top investigative priority for him
and fellow Democrat Elijah Cummings, who is expected to chair the full
House Oversight committee.
Connolly is one of several senior House Democrats involved in preparing
to investigate Trump and his presidency starting in January. U.S. voters
ended Republican control of the House in the Nov. 6 elections and handed
it to the Democrats. With that power will come increased resources for
investigations.
Connolly said Democrats have strong evidence showing Trump, White House
Chief of Staff John Kelly and General Services Administrator (GSA) Emily
Murphy discussed the FBI building project in the Oval Office and in
emails.
He said Murphy "has to come back to the Congress and explain herself."
As chairman of the subcommittee, Connolly could launch such an inquiry
and seek testimony from Murphy.
The GSA manages government buildings, including the FBI's existing
downtown Washington headquarters, a crumbling, 1970s-era edifice with
nets on it to catch falling chunks of concrete and too little room for
thousands of local employees.
Before he became president, Trump favored a U.S. government plan to move
the FBI out of downtown Washington to roomier quarters in the suburbs,
Democrats have said.
After he became president and was disqualified from bidding to acquire
the current FBI site for commercial development, Trump switched his
position, they said.
He now favors replacing the old FBI building with a new structure on the
same site, just a block away from the existing Trump International
Hotel. Both landmarks occupy prime properties on Washington's
Pennsylvania Avenue.
The discussions between Trump, Kelly and Murphy raise "questions about
conflicts of interest," Connolly said.
Under the canceled relocation plan, the current FBI site "would almost
certainly be developed commercially and in theory, whatever was
developed commercially could compete with some parts of the Trump Hotel
just a block away," he said.
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President Donald Trump gestures as he talks to reporters while
departing for travel to the G-20 summit in Argentina from the White
House in Washington, U.S., November 29, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
GSA press secretary Pamela Dixon told Reuters by email, "The
decision to cancel the initial procurement for a suburban FBI campus
was made by career officials in July 2017 because the project did
not receive the necessary funding from Congress.
"As the FBI testified under oath, the subsequent decision for its
headquarters to remain at the current Pennsylvania Avenue location
was made by FBI leadership," Dixon said.
The White House did not respond to requests for comment.
Besides the FBI project, Connolly said, Democrats also will examine
meddling by Russia in the 2016 presidential election, any collusion
between the Kremlin and Trump's campaign and whether Trump
obstructed justice in trying to hamper Special Counsel Robert
Mueller's ongoing investigation of these matters.
Moscow denies findings by U.S. intelligence agencies that it tried
to interfere in the 2016 presidential contest. Trump denies any
collusion or obstruction occurred.
Connolly, like other senior Democrats, cautioned against moving
forward with impeachment proceedings against Trump, a possibility
that some Democrats aired during the 2018 campaign.
At the same time, Connolly said, "If there is compelling,
incontrovertible evidence that this president and his team actively
colluded with a foreign power to distort our election, and maybe
violate laws too, I think then I have a constitutional obligation to
support an impeachment inquiry."
Democrats are also grappling with how to proceed on investigating
Trump's personal finances and businesses, White House security
clearances and other issues.
Connolly said Democratic leadership will use a "coordinating
mechanism" to ensure various committees work together. He said he
sees no signs of bipartisan cooperation on investigations.
(Additional reporting by Sarah Lynch; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and
Jonathan Oatis)
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