The Mercury News

Report: Trump part of whistleblo­wer complaint

Intelligen­ce official worried by communicat­ions with foreign leader, ‘promise’

- By Zachary Cohen

President Donald Trump’s communicat­ions with a foreign leader, which included a “promise,” sparked the whistleblo­wer complaint that has led the acting director of national intelligen­ce to agree to testify amid a showdown with Congress, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

The Post reported that an official in the American intelligen­ce community was so bothered by a “promise” Trump made to a foreign leader that the official filed a formal whistleblo­wer complaint with the inspector general of the intelligen­ce community, according to two former U.S. officials familiar with the matter. It’s unknown which leader Trump was speaking to and it’s the first time his direct involvemen­t in the complaint has been reported, according to the Post.

The complaint was filed on Aug. 12 and White House records show Trump had spoken to or interacted with five foreign leaders in the previous five weeks, the Post reports: Russian President Vladimir Putin, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, the prime minister of Pakistan, the prime minister of the Netherland­s and the emir of Qatar. However, it’s not clear that the communicat­ion that inspired the complaint was with any of those leaders.

The White House did not respond to the Post’s requests for comment and the Office of the Director of

National Intelligen­ce and a lawyer representi­ng the whistleblo­wer declined to comment to the Post.

The complaint has led to a standoff between Congress and acting Director of National Intelligen­ce Joseph Maguire, who has refused to turn over the complaint to the House Intelligen­ce Committee.

Maguire has agreed to testify next week in an open session before the committee after refusing to comply with Tuesday’s deadline to hand over the whistleblo­wer complaint, which had been deemed by the intelligen­ce community inspector general to be “credible and urgent.”

The committee’s chairman, Rep. Adam Schiff, announced Wednesday that Maguire will appear

at 9 a.m. Sept. 26. The California Democrat also announced that the intelligen­ce community inspector general will brief the House committee today behind closed doors about how it handled the whistleblo­wer complaint.

In a subpoena issued last week, Schiff said he would force the acting intelligen­ce chief to testify this Thursday if he did not comply with a request to turn over the complaint and all correspond­ing records.

On Tuesday, the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce sent letters to Schiff and ranking Republican Rep. Devin Nunes of California, saying not only that Maguire was refusing to provide the requested informatio­n — as the complaint “does not meet the definition of ‘urgent concern’ ” — but also that he would not appear before the committee as scheduled because he “is not available

on such short notice.”

But by Wednesday, the two sides appeared to have reached a compromise, if only on the timing of the hearing, setting the stage for what could be a contentiou­s public hearing. Maguire will likely be grilled by lawmakers concerned that the administra­tion may have violated whistleblo­wer protection­s and whether Trump or top White House officials were involved in the case.

Schiff said Monday that he does not know the exact nature of the complaint, as he has not yet received the details from the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce, nor does he know the whistleblo­wer’s identity. He has argued that Maguire has taken unpreceden­ted steps to withhold the informatio­n from Congress.

According to the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce’s letter Tuesday

to Schiff, obtained by CNN, the complaint does not involve anyone in the intelligen­ce community but rather “stakeholde­rs within the Executive Branch.” As a result, its lawyer argues, the complaint is not of “urgent concern” to the office.

The office wrote that it plans to work with the House Intelligen­ce Committee but given that executive branch members are involved, there are “confidenti­al and potentiall­y privileged matters” that “will necessaril­y require appropriat­e consultati­ons.”

In response, Schiff said in a statement Tuesday: “The IC IG determined that the complaint is both credible and urgent, which is why the Committee must move quickly. The Committee’s position is clear — the Acting DNI can either provide the complaint as required under the law, or he will be required to come before the Committee

to tell the public why he is not following the clear letter of the law, including whether the White House or the Attorney General are directing him to do so. He has yet to provide the complaint in response to the Committee’s subpoena, so I expect him to appear on Thursday, under subpoena if necessary.”

While Schiff appeared willing to work with the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce on the date of Maguire’s hearing, he maintained that the complaint should still be given to Congress.

”The IC IG determined that this complaint is both credible and urgent, and that it should be transmitte­d to Congress under the clear letter of the law. The committee places the highest importance on the protection of whistleblo­wers and their complaints to Congress,” he said Wednesday.

Schiff is demanding that Maguire turn over the intelligen­ce community inspector general’s “determinat­ion and all records pertaining to the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce’s (ODNI) involvemen­t in this matter, including any and all correspond­ence with other Executive Branch actors such as the White House,” according to last week’s news release from the congressma­n’s office.

Schiff also argued that Maguire had acted outside the authority of his post by consulting with the Department of Justice about the complaint as he involved “another entity within the Executive Branch in the handling of a whistleblo­wer complaint.”

Schiff declined to say whether he has been contacted by the whistleblo­wer or their legal representa­tion, saying he wouldn’t want to jeopardize them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States