Trump attacks report on FBI, saying in
fact there was 'total bias'
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[June 16, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump said on Friday a Justice Department inspector
general's report that concluded there was no bias in how the FBI handled
its investigation of Hillary Clinton's emails was wrong, saying there
was "total bias."
"The end result was wrong," Trump said in an interview with Fox News
Channel, adding that the inspector general "blew it."
"There was total bias when you look at (FBI staff member) Peter Strzok,
what he said about me; when you look at (then-FBI Director James) Comey
and all his moves."
The 500-page report by Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that
Comey, who was later fired by Trump, made a "serious error of judgment"
when he announced shortly before the 2016 U.S. presidential election
that he was reopening an investigation into candidate Clinton's use of a
private e-mail server.
But the report, released on Thursday, also concluded that the FBI's
investigation was not tainted by political bias, even as it uncovered an
email from Strzok to then-fellow FBI employee Lisa Page during the 2016
campaign saying Trump would not become president. "We'll stop it," he
said in the email.
The findings have no direct bearing on a separate Justice Department
special counsel probe on Russia's alleged interference in the election,
and the possibility there was collusion between the Trump campaign and
Moscow.
Trump, however, has used the findings on Strzok, who also worked on the
Russia probe, to sow doubts about that investigation. "They were
plotting against my election," Trump said in the Fox News interview,
referring to people in the FBI.
Russia has denied that it interfered in the election. Trump has
repeatedly said there was no collusion or attempt by him to obstruct the
Russia investigation, and has called Special Counsel Robert Mueller's
probe a "witch hunt."
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President Donald Trump and Former FBI director James Comey (R)
appear in Washington, DC, U.S., on May 24 and April 30, 2018
respectively. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque (L) and Jonathan Ernst/File
Photo
Despite his criticism of the inspector general's report, Trump
presented the report's findings as vindication of his decision to
fire Comey in May last year.
'GREAT SERVICE' IN FIRING COMEY
"The IG Report is a total disaster for Comey, his minions and sadly,
the FBI," Trump said in a post on Twitter. "I did a great service to
the people in firing him."
Initially when Comey was fired, the Trump administration presented
the dismissal as related to his handling of the Clinton email probe.
However, Trump later said that he had the FBI's Russia probe in mind
when he dismissed Comey.
It was Comey's dismissal that led to the Justice Department
appointing Mueller to take over the federal probe into Russian
election meddling.
Comey defended his actions in an op-ed published in the New York
Times after the report was released.
"In 2016, my team faced an extraordinary situation — something I
thought of as a 500-year flood — offering no good choices and
presenting some of the hardest decisions I ever had to make," Comey
wrote.
(Reporting by Eric Walsh and Justin Mitchell; Writing by Tim Ahmann;
Editing by Bernadette Baum and Frances Kerry)
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