Tag: Department Of Justice

  • Trump ‘cites Russia probe’ after finishing ex-CIA head’s security access

    Image shows Former CIA director John Brennan being sworn in to testify in Congress Symbol copyright Reuters Image caption Mr Trump revoked ex-CIA leader John Brennan’s safety clearance on Wednesday

    US President Donald Trump says his frustrations with the investigation into alleged Russian election meddling forced him to revoke the safety clearance of ex-CIA chief John Brennan.

    “It Is a sham,” he informed the Wall Side Road Journal. Revoking Mr Brennan’s clearance “needed to be done”.

    The White Area had in advance said Mr Brennan’s get entry to used to be revoked on account of “erratic behavior”.

    The vocal critic of the president can not get entry to sensitive data.

    In response, Mr Brennan mentioned the move used to be a part of President Trump’s broader effort to “suppress freedom of speech and punish critics”.

    Symbol Copyright @JohnBrennan @JohnBrennan Image copyright Getty Photographs Image caption Mr Trump is reviewing get entry to for a couple of other former top-score US officials

    Some Republicans praised the move, including Senator Rand Paul who said he “instructed the president to do this.”

    “Mr Brennan’s behaviour in government and out of it display why he will not be allowed close to categorized information,” he said in a statement.

    Louisiana Senator John Kennedy mentioned Mr Brennan had “been totally political” and had “given the nationwide intelligence group a foul name.”

    “i do not see why he would need a safety clearance, i actually don’t,” he informed CNN.

    Changing the topic

    Analysis via BBC’s North America Editor Jon Sopel

    John Brennan has been an outspoken critic of the president.

    He called Donald Trump treasonous over his assembly with the Russian chief in Helsinki, he has also referred to as him imbecilic and a danger to the US.

    Now Donald Trump has had his revenge, revoking the former CIA chief’s security clearance – and dangerous a number of different nationwide intelligence officials, all of whom have one thing in common: they have got also been important of the president.

    However in justifying this move there is been no recommendation that Mr Brennan both leaked categorised material or sought to generate profits from it.

    The timing could also be noteworthy. The White Area has been buffeted for days via claims from a disaffected former adviser to the president.

    Last arguments within the trial of Donald Trump’s former marketing campaign supervisor, Paul Manafort, are also being heard.

    The White Space briefing the place this used to be introduced hadn’t been scheduled. It looks like a concerted effort to change the topic.

    (more…)

  • Justice Department’s attempts to influence investigations exposed in McCabe probe

    Tucked inside the inspector general’s report on former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe was the story of an August 2016 phone call from a high-ranking Justice Department official who Mr. McCabe thoug

    Tucked inside the inspector general’s report on former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe was the story of an August 2016 phone call from a high-ranking Justice Department official who Mr. McCabe thought was trying to shut down the FBI’s investigation into the Clinton Foundation while Hillary Clinton was running for president.

    The official was “very pissed off” at the FBI, the report says, and demanded to know why the FBI was still pursuing the Clinton Foundation when the Justice Department considered the case dormant.

    Former FBI officials said the fact that a call was made is even more stunning than its content.

    SEE ALSO: Justice Department to turn over 2016 election investigation documents to Congress

    James Wedick, who conducted corruption investigations at the bureau, said he never fielded a call from the Justice Department about any of his cases during 35 years there. He said it suggested interference.

    “It is bizarre — and that word can’t be used enough — to have the Justice Department call the FBI’s deputy director and try to influence the outcome of an active corruption investigation,” he said. “They can have some input, but they shouldn’t be operationally in control like it appears they were from this call.”

    Although the inspector general’s report did not identify the caller, former FBI and Justice Department officials said it was Matthew Axelrod, who was the principal associate deputy attorney general — the title the IG report did use.

    Mr. McCabe thought the call was out of bounds.

    He told the inspector general that during the Aug. 12, 2016, call the principal associate deputy attorney general expressed concerns about FBI agents taking overt steps in the Clinton Foundation investigation during the presidential campaign.

    “According to McCabe, he pushed back, asking ‘are you telling me that I need to shut down a validly predicated investigation?’” the report said. “McCabe told us that the conversation was ‘very dramatic’ and he never had a similar confrontation like the PADAG call with a high-level department official in his entire FBI career.”

    In a footnote to the report, the inspector general says the Justice official agreed with the description of the call but objected to seeing that “the Bureau was trying to spin this conversation as some evidence of political interference, which was totally unfair.”

    Mr. Axelrod, whom the Federal Register and Justice Department documents at the time identified as the principal associate deputy attorney general and whose LinkedIn page says he held that position from February 2015 through January 2017, didn’t respond to repeated requests last week from The Washington Times for comment.

    Ron Hosko, a former assistant director at the FBI, wondered if the call to Mr. McCabe was made because Justice Department officials believed he would be more sympathetic than the FBI’s New York field office, which was overseeing the Clinton Foundation investigation.

    As the election approached, questions surrounded Mr. McCabe’s objectivity with regard to the Clinton investigation. His wife, running for a state Senate seat in Virginia in 2015, had accepted a nearly $700,000 donation from an organization linked to Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe. A longtime Clinton confidant, Mr. McAuliffe chaired Mrs. Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign.

    Mr. McCabe recused himself from the Clinton investigation three weeks before Election Day.

    “You run the risk of more publicity by going to the field,” Mr. Hosko said. “If I am that agent and I’ve been told to shut down something I’ve been working on, I’m screaming bloody murder.”

    Mr. Axelrod quit the Justice Department on Jan. 30, 2017, the same day President Trump fired his boss, Deputy Attorney General Sally Q. Yates, for refusing to defend his travel ban executive order.

    He is now a lawyer in the Washington office of British law firm Linklaters LLP.

    In a March 2017 interview with The New York Times, Mr. Axelrod said he left the department earlier than he had planned.

    “It was always anticipated that we would stay on for only a short period,” he said of himself and Ms. Yates. “For the first week we managed, but the ban was a surprise. As soon as the travel ban was announced there were people being detained and the department was asked to defend the ban.”

    Ms. Yates also didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment from The Times.

    Those familiar with Justice Department operations said they don’t believe the principal associate deputy attorney general would have made the McCabe call without consulting with his supervisor, which would have been Ms. Yates.

    “In my experience these calls are rarely made in a vacuum,” said Bradley Schlozman, who worked as counsel to the PADAG during the Bush administration. “The notion that the principle deputy would have made such a decision and issued a directive without the knowledge and consent of the deputy attorney general is highly unlikely.”

    Hans von Spakovsky, a former Justice Department official who is now a legal fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said the proper chain of command for the Justice Department to follow up on an investigation would involve the head of the Criminal Division, not the PADAG, calling the FBI.

    “There is no way I would have ever called the FBI on my own unless I raised concerns with my boss or my boss told me to do so,” he said. “I have a hard time believing this guy did this without consulting with Sally Yates unless he was a complete lone ranger and off the reservation.”

    The inspector general is examining the way the FBI and Justice Department handled investigations into Mrs. Clinton during the election.

    The report on Mr. McCabe was a separate matter, stemming from questions about a media leak he made to try to protect his reputation, the inspector general said.

  • Justice Department awards $1M grant to Parkland first responders

    The Department of Justice said Monday it will award a $1 million grant to defray some of the overtime costs racked up by local law enforcement officials in response to the shooting deaths of 17 people

    The Department of Justice said Monday it will award a $1 million grant to defray some of the overtime costs racked up by local law enforcement officials in response to the shooting deaths of 17 people at a Parkland, Florida, high school in February

    Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the grant demonstrates the department’s commitment to helping first responders.

    “The school shooting in Parkland shocked and horrified the nation, but the community and law enforcement at all levels have shown resilience and determination,” Mr. Sessions said. “As I told our state and local partners back in February, the Department of Justice stands ready to help them in any way we can. Today we offer $1 million to support the police who have been working overtime in the aftermath of this tragedy. They can be sure about this: we have their backs.”

    The Bureau of Justice Assistance, a Justice Department arm that provides funds to improve safety across the country, will award the grant. It will be distributed to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which coordinates police and other agencies throughout the state.

    More than 18 local, state and federal law enforcement agencies responded to the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School, the Justice Department said. Local, state and county agencies incurred several million dollars in costs, including securing crime scenes and operating command centers.

    Last month, the Department of Education awarded Broward County Public Schools, where Marjory Stonemason Douglas High School is located, a $1 million grant to help students recover from trauma resulting from the shooting.