Trump: FBI missed signs on Florida
shooting due to Russia probe
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[February 19, 2018]
By Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump attacked the FBI and lawmakers probing suspected Russian meddling
in the 2016 presidential election and said an excessive focus on Russia
led federal investigators to miss signs that could have prevented a
deadly mass shooting at a Florida high school.
In a series of tweets over the weekend sent from his Mar-a-Lago estate
in Florida, Trump said congressional investigations and political
"hatred" showed that Russia had succeeded in sowing "discord, disruption
and chaos" in the United States.
He accused his predecessor, President Barack Obama, of failing to do
enough to stop Russian election interference.
"They are laughing their asses off in Moscow," Trump tweeted on Sunday
morning.
On Friday, Special Counsel Robert Mueller charged 13 Russians and three
Russian companies with conspiracy to tamper in the 2016 U.S. election.
Mueller's indictment said the Russians adopted false online personas to
push divisive messages and staged political rallies while posing as
Americans.
U.S. spy agencies concluded more than a year ago that Russia used
hacking and propaganda to try to tilt the election in favor of Trump.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly denied that.
In a tweet on Saturday night, Trump criticized the Federal Bureau of
Investigation for missing warning signs in the case of Nikolas Cruz, 19,
who is charged with killing 17 people on Wednesday at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, a Fort Lauderdale suburb.
"Very sad that the FBI missed all of the many signals sent out by the
Florida school shooter. This is not acceptable," Trump wrote. "They are
spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump
campaign - there is no collusion," he added.
The FBI acknowledged on Friday that it failed to investigate a warning
that Cruz possessed a gun and the desire to kill.
Trump offered no evidence that there was any connection between the
investigation of Russian meddling and the FBI's failure to prevent the
Florida shooting.
Former Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates expressed outrage at Trump's
efforts to connect the Florida massacre to the Russia probe.
"Our president uses the tragedy to attack the investigation of a foreign
adversary's interference in our democracy. Shameful," Yates wrote on
Twitter. Yates, who had been a holdover from the Obama administration,
was fired early in the Trump presidency for refusing to defend travel
restrictions on several Muslim-majority countries.
LEAKING 'MONSTER'
Trump, in a Sunday morning tweet, belittled Representative Adam Schiff,
the senior Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee that is
investigating Russia's actions, labeling him a leaking "monster."
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President Donald Trump meets with law enforcement at the Broward
County Sheriff's Office in the wake of the shooting at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, U.S.,
February 16, 2018. REUTERS/Eric Thayer
In one of 13 tweets Trump sent after Mueller's indictments of the
Russians, the president said he "never said Russia did not meddle in
the election."
Trump has on several occasions, however, questioned whether Russia
was behind efforts to interfere in the 2016 election.
Several lawmakers rejected Trump's linking of the FBI's missteps in
preventing the shooting to the Russia probe.
"So many folks in the FBI are doing all that they can to keep us
safe. The reality of it is, is that they are two separate issues,"
Republican Senator Tim Scott said on CBS' "Face the Nation" program.
After Mueller's indictment was made public on Friday, Trump said it
backed up his assertion that there was no collusion between his
campaign and Russia.
The indictment did not address whether anyone from the Trump
campaign coordinated or worked with Russians. Mueller's broader
probe is ongoing.
"It wasn't designed to be able to clear everything on the
investigation," Republican Senator James Lankford said on NBC's
"Meet the Press."
"It was designed to say it was very clear these 13 individuals in
this set of companies were trying to interfere in our election,"
said Lankford, who sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Schiff, speaking on CNN's "State of the Union" program, said details
of the Mueller indictment provided "overwhelming and unequivocal"
evidence of the threat from Russian interference. He said the
indictments countered Trump's frequent comments that the Russia
investigation was a "hoax."
"This is a president who claims vindication anytime someone
sneezes," Schiff said.
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason in West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Editing by Caren Bohan and Peter Cooney)
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