House Republicans shout down Rosenstein
in tense hearing
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[June 29, 2018]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. House
Republican allies of President Donald Trump shouted and attacked Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on Thursday, alleging he was improperly
withholding documents related to the FBI's investigation of Trump's 2016
campaign.
The tense congressional hearing came as Republicans brought to the House
floor a non-binding resolution that scolded the Justice Department for
not turning over more records, a move that is widely seen as a possible
precursor to holding Rosenstein in contempt of Congress. The resolution
passed along party lines, 226-183.
Rosenstein, the No. 2 official at the Justice Department, has become a
frequent punching bag for Trump supporters for appointing Special
Counsel Robert Mueller to investigate whether Trump's campaign colluded
with Russia in his campaign against Democrat Hillary Clinton.
At the House Judiciary Committee hearing on Thursday, Rosenstein and FBI
Director Chris Wray, who were both appointed by Trump, insisted they are
working to comply with congressional Republicans' demands for documents
related to the investigation but Republicans did not appear convinced.
During a hostile exchange with Representative Jim Jordan, one of Trump's
major backers, Rosenstein accused him of a personal attack.
"I am the deputy attorney general of the United States," he said. "...
I'm responsible for responding to your concerns as I have. I have a team
with me, sir. It's just a fraction of the team doing this work.
“So your statement that I'm personally keeping information from you,
trying to conceal information ..."
"You're the boss, Mr. Rosenstein," Jordan interrupted.
"That’s correct,” Rosenstein snapped back. "And my job is to make sure
that we respond to your concerns. We have, sir."
Jordan later tried to assure the deputy attorney general his criticism
wasn’t personal, to which Rosenstein responded, "Sometimes it feels that
way."
'FINISH IT THE HELL UP'
Republican Trey Gowdy angrily demanded Rosenstein wrap up the
investigation.
"If you have evidence of any wrongdoing by any member of the Trump
campaign, present it to the damn grand jury," he said. "If you have
evidence that this president acted inappropriately, present it to the
American people ... Whatever you got, finish it the hell up."
The Mueller investigation already has led to charges against Trump's
former campaign chairman, his former national security adviser and
several other people.
Trump has denied any collusion with Russia and repeatedly called the
investigation a witch hunt.
For months now, Republicans have issued subpoenas and sought documents
in connection with the FBI's collusion investigation, as well as other
records related to the probe of Clinton's use of a private email server.
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Deputy U.S. Attorney General Rod Rosenstein testifies before a House
Judiciary Committee hearing entitled "Oversight of FBI and DOJ
Actions Surrounding the 2016 Election" on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., June 28, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
Critics say the Republicans are trying to discredit investigations
of the Trump campaign, and Democrats expressed exasperation
Thursday.
"Stand your ground," Democratic Representative Ted Lieu told
Rosenstein. Lieu called the hearing "ridiculous and stupid."
Republicans have alleged the FBI made missteps when it applied to a
special court for a warrant to conduct surveillance on former Trump
campaign adviser Carter Page and questioned the FBI's use of a
confidential informant who reached out to several Trump campaign
officials.
The Justice Department already has turned over hundreds of thousands
of pages and held several briefings with members of Congress about
the investigation. Attorney General Jeff Sessions directed the
department's inspector general to investigate if errors were made
when the FBI applied for the surveillance warrant to the U.S.
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
But Republicans have complained about redactions on certain records
and also claim other records pertaining to the investigation into
Trump's campaign have not been turned over.
Representative Matt Gaetz, another Trump ally, had a tense exchange
with Rosenstein, alleging Rosenstein had signed a document to
authorize "spying" on the Trump campaign.
"I dispute your characterization about what that (surveillance
warrant application) is about, sir," Rosenstein said. "If the
inspector general finds that I did something wrong, then I will
respect that judgment but I think it's highly, highly unlikely,
sir."
Thursday's hearing was the first time Rosenstein has testified
before Congress since the Justice Department's inspector general
report that described missteps by the FBI in its handling of the
investigation of Clinton's private email server use while she was
secretary of state.
In his testimony he said he was upset by the problems uncovered in
the report, including texts that several FBI employees sent
disparaging Trump.
"We need to correct errors, hold wrongdoers accountable and deter
future violations," Rosenstein said.
(This version of the story corrects paragraph 17 to say the hearing
was called "ridiculous and stupid" by Lieu, not Rosenstein)
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Patricia Zengerle; additional
reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Alistair Bell and Bill Trott)
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