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Justice Inspector General sends the case of fired FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe to Federal Court prosecutors for possible charge
Thursday, April 19, 2018
VietPress USA (April 19, 2018): Accoring to Wikipedia, Andrew George McCabe (born March 18, 1968) is an American attorney who served as the Deputy Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation from February 2016 to January 2018.
From
May 9, 2017, to August 2, 2017, McCabe served as the Acting Director of the FBI
following James Comey's dismissal by
President Donald Trump. U.S.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions stated that McCabe was one
of several candidates under consideration for Director. President Trump
ultimately chose Christopher A. Wray,
the former Assistant
Attorney General for the Justice
Department's Criminal Division, to succeed Comey. Once Wray was
sworn in, McCabe returned to the position of Deputy Director.
On
January 29, 2018, McCabe announced that he was stepping down from his position
as Deputy Director of the FBI and went on paid leave.
On
March 16, 2018, Sessions fired McCabe 26 hours before his scheduled retirement. Sessions
announced that he based his decision on reports from the DOJ Inspector General
and the FBI's disciplinary office saying that McCabe had made unauthorized
releases of information to the media and had "lacked candor" in
talking about it. McCabe denied that he had ever been dishonest and charged
that his firing was politically motivated.
McCabe was born in 1968. He graduated from The Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1986 He graduated
from Duke University in 1990 and obtained a J.D. degree from Washington
University in St. Louis in 1993. During
law school he interned in the criminal division of the United States
Department of Justice.] Because of a
hiring freeze, McCabe spent three years in a private law practice
before joining the FBI in 1996 in Philadelphia.
Starting in July 2017 Trump repeatedly attacked McCabe in
Twitter comments, suggesting that Sessions should dismiss McCabe, accusing him
of conflicts because of his wife’s campaign for state office, and taunting him
about "racing the clock" until his retirement. In January 2018
it was reported that Attorney General Sessions had been pressuring FBI Director
Wray to fire McCabe. However, Wray refused and reportedly threatened to resign
if McCabe was removed.
The Nunes memo, which alleges improper activities
in seeking a warrant to surveil former Trump associate Carter Page, asserts that McCabe
"testified before the [House Intelligence] Committee in December 2017 that
no surveillance warrant would have been sought from the FISC without the Steele dossier," a document many Trump
supporters insist is completely false. However, McCabe's testimony was in
classified session and no public transcript is available to confirm the Nunes
memo assertion; disclosing contents of the classified testimony would be
unlawful. Democratic Representative Eric Swalwell, a member of the House
Intelligence Committee, said the Nunes memo "seriously mischaracterizes
the testimony of Deputy Director Andrew McCabe." The Nunes memo also
asserts that a text message from Peter Strzok discusses "a meeting
with Deputy Director McCabe to discuss an “insurance” policy against President
Trump’s election." However, The Wall Street Journal reported
on December 18, 2017, that Strzok associates said the "insurance
policy" meant the FBI continuing its investigation into possible collusion
between Trump and Russians, in case Trump won the election.
After meeting with Director
Wray concerning the OIG report and a possible demotion, McCabe announced
on January 29, 2018 that he was stepping down as deputy director, effective
immediately. He then went on paid leave until his scheduled retirement date of
March 18, 2018, his 50th birthday, at which point he would be eligible for a
retirement pension. McCabe
did not lose his entire pension.
On
March 1, 2018, the New York Times and Washington Post,
citing persons familiar with an investigation by Michael E. Horowitz,
the Justice Department inspector general, reported
that the inspector general was preparing a report that would conclude that
McCabe was "responsible for approving an improper media disclosure,"
specifically relating to an October 2016 Wall Street Journal article
that reported on disagreements between the FBI and Justice Department over an
investigation of the Clinton Foundation.
On
March 14, 2018, the FBI's Office of Professional Responsibility, citing the inspector
general's conclusions, recommended that McCabe be fired. Attorney General
Sessions announced at 10 p.m. on Friday, March 16, 2018 that he was taking the
recommendation and firing McCabe. He cited the inspector general's report,
which had not yet been publicly released, saying that "Mr. McCabe had made
an unauthorized disclosure to the news media and lacked candor - including
under oath - on multiple occasions." McCabe told The New York
Times, "The idea that I was dishonest is just wrong. This is part of
an effort to discredit me as a witness." McCabe was dismissed less
than two days before he would have collected a full early pension for his FBI
career. He may have to wait until age 57--62 to
begin collecting pension benefits. Trump immediately celebrated on
Twitter, saying "Andrew McCabe FIRED, a great day for the hard working men
and women of the FBI - A great day for Democracy.”
Today Department Od Justice announces the Inspector general has referred the case og Andrew McCabe to Federal prosecutors for possible charge.
Read this news from GMA on Yahoo News at:
VietPress USA News
oOoDOJ inspector general has referred McCabe case to federal prosecutors for possible charge (ABC News) |
DOJ inspector general has referred McCabe case to federal prosecutors for possible charge
MIKE LEVINEGood Morning AmericaApril 19, 2018
Federal prosecutors in Washington have been asked by the Justice Department’s inspector general to determine whether the FBI’s former deputy director, Andrew McCabe, should be charged for allegedly “lacking candor” on multiple occasions with internal investigators and with then-FBI director James Comey, according to a source familiar with the matter.
In a report made public by lawmakers last week, Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded that McCabe repeatedly misled investigators looking into how sensitive investigative information ended up on in a national newspaper in the weeks before the 2016 presidential election.
Horowitz’s office then referred the matter to the U.S. Attorney’s office in Washington, indicating Horowitz believes McCabe committed a federal crime with his actions. It’s unclear exactly when the referral was made.
McCabe has become a frequent target of criticism from President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers, who allege that McCabe's time at the top of the FBI was emblematic of political bias in the FBI's law enforcement work. McCabe has denied any wrongdoing and insists he clarified any problematic statements to investigators as soon as possible.
In October 2016, the Wall Street Journal published an article that questioned whether McCabe was hampering the federal probe of the Clinton Foundation.
Ahead of the story's publication, McCabe authorized an FBI spokesman and FBI attorney to speak with the newspaper about the probe and his own efforts to keep it moving forward, including the contents of a phone call months earlier about the matter with a senior Justice Department official, the report released Friday said.
“Among the purposes of the disclosure was to rebut a narrative that had been developing … that questioned McCabe’s impartiality in overseeing FBI investigations involving former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,” according to the report.
Meanwhile, McCabe, first head of the FBI field office in New York and then in Washington, told the inspector general’s office that after the Wall Street Journal report was published, “they each received calls from McCabe admonishing them for leaks contained in the” article, the report said. “At no time did McCabe disclose to either of them that McCabe had authorized [an FBI attorney] to disclose information … to the WSJ reporter.”
The day after the article’s publication, McCabe spoke face-to-face with Comey, who expressed concern about information contained in the news article, according to the inspector general's report. According to what McCabe later told the internal investigator, he informed Comey that he had authorized the FBI spokesman and FBI attorney to disclose details about his previous phone call with a senior Justice Department official. Comey disputed that version telling investigators he was “very concerned” that the article included “sensitive FBI information,” and that McCabe “definitely did not tell me that he authorized” the disclosure, according to the report.
The inspector general began investigating McCabe in August 2017, after the FBI’s Inspection Division told the inspector general’s office that the deputy director may have lacked candor when questioned about his role in disclosing sensitive information to a reporter.
In its report released Friday, the inspector general’s office said McCabe “lacked candor” in July 2017 when he told investigators – under oath – “that he was not aware of [the FBI attorney] having been authorized to speak to reporters around October 30,” and he “lacked candor” again four months later when he acknowledged authorizing the disclosure but “stated that he told Comey on October 31, 2016, that he had authorized the disclosure to the WSJ.”
Representatives for McCabe noted that two business days after speaking with investigators in July 2017, McCabe contacted the inspector general’s office “and corrected his prior statements.” “Mr. McCabe thought further about his discussion with the OIG investigators and realized that he needed to correct the record,” they said in a “factsheet” distributed to reported.
Nevertheless, the inspector general also concluded that McCabe “lacked candor” in May 2017 when interviewed by officials from the FBI’s Inspection Division. He told them he had not authorized the disclosure to the Wall Street Journal and did not know who did, the report said.
The representatives for McCabe said the inspector general’s “account of Mr. McCabe’s interactions with the … investigators is incomplete and misleading.”
“Mr. McCabe never deliberately misled Inspection Division (INSD) investigators,” the “factsheet” said. “[W]hen Mr. McCabe turned back to the draft statement they prepared for him several months later, he declined to sign it and instead contacted INSD to correct the inaccurate facts about his relationship to the WSJ article.”
Beyond the accuracy of McCabe’s statements to investigators, the inspector general’s report released Friday also took sharp issue with McCabe’s move to authorize the media disclosure in the first place.
“[W]e concluded that McCabe’s decision to confirm the existence of the [Clinton Foundation] Investigation through an anonymously sourced quote, recounting the content of a phone call with a senior Department official in a manner designed to advance his personal interests at the expense of Department leadership, was clearly not within the public interest exception,” the report said.
“We therefore concluded that McCabe’s disclosure of the existence of an ongoing investigation in this manner violated the FBI’s and the Department’s media policy and constituted misconduct.”
But representatives for McCabe said he “had full authority to authorize sharing information with the media” as deputy director.
“Their interaction with the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) was not done in secret: it took place over the course of several days and others knew of it, including Director Comey. It was done to protect the institutional reputation of the FBI as a non-political and professional investigative agency, and therefore was squarely within the public interest exception to the FBI’s prohibition on sharing sensitive material,” a “factsheet” from McCabe’s representatives said.
In 2015, while McCabe was head of the FBI's Washington Field Office, his wife ran for state senate in Virginia as a Democrat. She lost the election in November 2015, and three months later McCabe became deputy director, giving him an oversight role in the investigation of Clinton's use of a private email server as secretary of state. After the Wall Street Journal story was published in October 2016, McCabe recused himself from the Clinton matter.
McCabe first joined the FBI in 1996, investigating organized crime cases in New York. Over the next several years, he shifted his focus to rooting out international terrorists, and in 2012 he became the head of the FBI's counterterrorism division at headquarters in Washington.
In October 2013, McCabe took over the FBI's entire national security branch, and the next year he moved to become the assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington Field Office. McCabe stepped down as deputy director in January, and he was fired by Sessions in May.
“The rush to judgment – and the rush to terminate Mr. McCabe – were unprecedented, unseemly, and cruel,” Michael Bromwich, an attorney for McCabe, said in a statement. “His treatment was far more harsh and far less fair than he deserved, and his reward for the loyalty he showed to his country over the course of his career was a truncated form of administrative due process, including the lack of any right to appeal outside the Department of Justice.”
The U.S. attorney’s office and a spokesman for the inspector general declined to comment for this article.
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