U.S. Senator Burr steps aside as committee chair as FBI probes stock
trades
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[May 15, 2020]
By Patricia Zengerle and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Richard
Burr will step aside as chairman of the powerful Senate Intelligence
Committee, after the FBI seized his mobile telephone in a major
escalation of a probe of his stock trades before the downturn caused by
the coronavirus pandemic.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Burr contacted
him on Thursday morning to inform him of his decision to move aside
temporarily during the investigation.
"We agreed that this decision would be in the best interests of the
committee and will be effective at the end of the day tomorrow,"
McConnell said in a statement.
Burr has denied wrongdoing and said he relied solely on news reports to
guide decisions on stock sales, amid reports he and other senators sold
shares after private briefings on the risks of the coronavirus crisis.
He told reporters at the U.S. Capitol on Thursday he decided to step
aside because he did not want the investigation to distract the
intelligence committee from its work.
"I thought this was the best thing to do," Burr said.
Burr's attorney, Alice Fisher, said in a statement that Burr was
"actively cooperating" with the government inquiry.
Known for bipartisanship, the Senate panel is soon to release an
extensive report led by Burr on Russia's involvement in the 2016 U.S.
presidential election. U.S. intelligence determined that Moscow sought
to meddle in the campaign to boost the Trump candidacy.
Moscow denies such actions. Trump dismisses the allegations as a hoax.
Senator Mark Warner, the Democratic committee vice chairman who has
worked closely with Burr, told reporters he thought Burr had made the
right choice in temporarily stepping aside, and hoped the matter would
be resolved as quickly as possible.
The Republican senator turned over his phone to FBI agents after they
served a search warrant at his Washington home.
The warrant marked a significant step-up in the investigation of Burr's
stock sales in mid-February, when he and other lawmakers were receiving
regular briefings on the coronavirus outbreak and President Donald Trump
and some of his political allies were downplaying the threat to the
public.
Trump said he did not know anything about Burr's decision and had not
discussed Burr's situation with anyone at the Department of Justice.
"I know nothing about it... That's too bad," he told reporters.
'HIGHEST LEVELS' AT JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
The Democratic Party in Burr's home state of North Carolina said he
should resign from the Senate. Burr, 64, had decided not to run for a
fourth six-year Senate term in 2022 well before the reports on his stock
sales.
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Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC) leaves the U.S. Capitol after voting in
Washington, U.S., May 14, 2020. REUTERS/Erin Scott
A senior Justice Department official said the FBI did not conduct a
raid, but paid a visit to Burr's home to collect his cellphone.
Approval of the warrant - significant because it was served on a
sitting senator - was obtained at the "highest levels" of the
Justice Department, the official said.
Reuters could not immediately learn precisely when the search
warrant was executed. The warrant was first reported late on
Wednesday by the Los Angeles Times.
The Intelligence Committee chairmanship is one of the most important
positions in the Senate. The panel approves the president's nominees
to lead the country's spy agencies and handles oversight of their
operations, conducting most of its business behind closed doors.
It was not immediately clear who would step in as chairman. The
three senators next in line for seniority on the Republican-led
intelligence committee - Jim Risch, Marco Rubio and Susan Collins -
all chair other committees.
The Senate's Republican leadership will decide who will take the
position.
Other senators whose stock trades have been scrutinized have denied
trading on coronavirus information.
Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler has forwarded documents and
information about stock trades by her and her husband to the Justice
Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Senate
Ethics Committee, CNBC quoted a representative for Loeffler as
saying on Thursday.
Loeffler has denied wrongdoing in connection with her sales of
millions of dollars in shares in the weeks after lawmakers were
first briefed on the virus.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, an intelligence committee Democrat, has
turned over documents to the FBI about stock trades by her husband
that show she was not involved, a spokesman for Feinstein said on
Thursday.
Burr's decision called to mind the decision of Democratic Senator
Bob Menendez to step aside as ranking member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee in 2015 as he faced corruption charges. Those
charges were eventually dropped.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, Patricia Zengerle, Mark Hosenball,
Lisa Lambert and Jeff Mason in Washington and Kanishka Singh in
Bengaluru; Writing by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Nick Macfie, Dan
Grebler, Bernadette Baum and Daniel Wallis)
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