FBI, spy agencies will not say if attending U.S. House election security
briefing
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[September 05, 2020]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Bureau
of Investigation and key U.S. spy agencies on Friday would not say
whether they will participate in a classified briefing on election
security, which the Democratic-led House Intelligence Committee has
scheduled for Sept. 17.
In a letter to John Ratcliffe, President Donald Trump's Director of
National Intelligence (DNI), committee Chairman Adam Schiff explicitly
requested that experts from DNI, the FBI, the Central Intelligence
Agency, the National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland
Security participate in the briefing.
Late last month, however, Ratcliffe, a former Republican congressman,
sent letters to lawmakers saying that to protect classified information
from being leaked, agencies would largely end in-person congressional
briefings on election security and instead mainly provide "written
finished intelligence products."
Ratcliffe later told Fox News congressional intelligence committees
would still be briefed. Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Marco
Rubio, a Republican, earlier this week said he expected to continue to
receive in-person briefings.
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But Schiff and Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have said that
Ratcliffe's office canceled live briefings it had planned for
mid-September.
Spokespeople for the DNI, FBI and CIA all declined to comment on
whether their officials would participate in the Sept. 17
election-related briefing requested by Schiff. The NSA and Homeland
Security Department did not immediately respond to request for
comment.
A congressional source familiar with contacts between leading House
Democrats and spy agencies said it was not clear if the House
committee would receive the same range of election security
briefings that Rubio said his committee expects.
(Reporting By Mark Hosenball; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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