Comey reveals little in testimony to panels

Bloomberg

Former FBI Director James Comey told lawmakers behind closed doors he would bet his life that Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigation into possible Russian ties to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign is being conducted “the right way.”
“There are not many things I would bet my life on,” Comey told the two dozen lawmakers from two congressional panels, in private. “I would bet my life that Bob Mueller will do things the right way, the way we would all want, whether we’re Republicans or Democrats, the way Americans should want.”
A 235-page transcript of Comey’s closed-door interview was released by two Republican committee chairmen, who said “time constraints” will compel the former FBI director to return.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte and House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy released the document.
Although the interview had been expected to focus on the FBI’s handling, under Comey, of an investigation into Democrat Hillary Clinton’s email practices while Secretary of State, the hours-long grilling was wide ranging.
Comey was asked, for example, why he’d compared Trump to a mafia boss in his book “A Higher Loyalty.” He responded that Trump’s leadership style is “all about me, what you can do for me, it’s all about your loyalty to me. It’s not about any higher values or institutional values. It’s about how are you feeding me, the boss; how are you taking care of me, the boss.”
The former FBI chief also rejected suggestions that the FBI’s Russia investigation was prompted by allegations in the so-called “Steele Dossier,” an opposition-research paper paid for by Democrats.
“It was not,” said Comey. Rather, he said, the basis for starting the probe was the information about a conversation that a Trump campaign foreign policy adviser — known to be George Papadopolous — “had with an individual in London about stolen emails that the Russians had that would be harmful to Hillary Clinton.”
In fact, Comey testified he was first briefed in July 2016 that the FBI had opened a counterintelligence investigation of “four Americans to see if there was any connection between those four Americans and the Russian interference effort.”
“And those four Americans did not include the candidate,” said Comey. When pressed by Gowdy on who each of those four people were, Comey said he didn’t believe the
FBI had made that public, and he declined to name them.
Former President Barack Obama never ordered him to have the FBI spy on infiltrate the Trump campaign, he said.
Comey added, in regard to the probe into Clinton’s email practices, that “anybody that thinks we were on Team Clinton, trying to cut her a break, is thinking something.” Representative John Ratcliffe, a Texas Republican, objected to the comment as “nonresponsive.”

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