San Francisco Chronicle

Secret documents: Panel votes to release memo critical of FBI, Justice Department.

- By Nicholas Fandos Nicholas Fandos is a New York Times writer.

WASHINGTON — Republican­s on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, apparently disregardi­ng Justice Department warnings that their actions would be “extraordin­arily reckless,” voted Monday evening to release a contentiou­s secret memorandum said to accuse the department and the FBI of misusing their authority to obtain a secret surveillan­ce order on a former Trump campaign associate.

The vote threw fuel on an already fiery partisan conflict over the investigat­ions into Russia’s brazen meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election. Republican­s invoked a power never before used by the committee to effectivel­y declassify the memo they had compiled. Democrats called the 3 1/2-page document a dangerous effort to build a narrative to undercut the department’s ongoing Russia investigat­ion, using cherrypick­ed facts assembled with little or no context.

What comes next was less clear. Under the obscure House rule invoked by the committee, President Trump has five days to review the document and decide whether to try to block it from going public. The White House has repeatedly indicated that it wants the memo out, but Trump’s Justice Department had been working to slow or block its release.

The memo, which was made available to all members of the House, is said to contend that officials from the two agencies were not forthcomin­g to a Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court judge. Republican­s accuse the agencies of failing to disclose that the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign helped finance research that was used to obtain a warrant for surveillan­ce of Carter Page, a Trump campaign adviser. The research presented to the judge was assembled by a former British intelligen­ce officer, Christophe­r Steele.

The memo is not limited to actions taken by the Obama administra­tion, though. The New York Times reported Sunday that the memo reveals that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, a top Trump appointee, signed off on an applicatio­n to extend the surveillan­ce of Page shortly after taking office last spring. The renewal shows that the Justice Department under Trump saw reason to believe Page was acting as a Russian agent.

The inclusion of Rosenstein’s action in the memo could expose him to a torrent of criticism from Republican­s and from conservati­ves in the news media who have seized on the surveillan­ce to argue that the Russia investigat­ion may have been tainted from the start. Rosenstein is overseeing that investigat­ion because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself. It was Rosenstein who appointed Robert Mueller as special counsel.

People familiar with the underlying applicatio­n have portrayed the Republican memo as misleading in part because Steele’s informatio­n was insufficie­nt to meet the standard for a FISA warrant. They said the applicatio­n drew on other intelligen­ce material that the Republican memo selectivel­y omits. That other informatio­n remains highly sensitive, and releasing it would risk burning other sources and methods of intelligen­ce-gathering about Russia.

House rules allow the Intelligen­ce Committee to vote to disclose classified informatio­n if it is deemed to be in the public interest, but the rule is not thought to have ever been used.

In a letter last week to Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulare, the committee’s Republican chairman, Stephen Boyd, an assistant attorney general, said it would be “extraordin­arily reckless” to release a memo drawing on classified informatio­n without official review. He said the department is “unaware of any wrongdoing related to the FISA process.”

Democrats responded to the committee’s actions with outrage.

“Clearly, House Republican­s’ desire to protect President Trump has clouded their judgment and caused them to lose sight of what’s at stake: the security and integrity of our elections,” said Rep. Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, the Democratic leader.

 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times 2017 ?? Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulare, chairs the House Intelligen­ce Committee, which voted Monday along party lines to release a contentiou­s secret memorandum developed in the Russia probe.
Doug Mills / New York Times 2017 Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulare, chairs the House Intelligen­ce Committee, which voted Monday along party lines to release a contentiou­s secret memorandum developed in the Russia probe.

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