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  1. #1
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    ‘I expect loyalty,’ Trump told Comey, according to written testimony

    ‘I expect loyalty,’ Trump told Comey, according to written testimony

    By Devlin Barrett
    June 7 at 6:43 PM

    Fired FBI director James B. Comey said President Trump told him at the White House “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty” during their private dinner conversation in January, according to written remarks from Comey offering a vivid preview of his testimony Thursday before the Senate Intelligence Committee.

    In seven remarkable pages of prepared testimony, Comey describes a president obsessed with loyalty and publicly clearing his name amid an FBI investigation of his associates, and the FBI director’s growing unease with the nature of the demands being made of him in their private conversations.

    Since firing Comey last month, the president has denied reports that he sought a pledge of loyalty from the FBI director amid a Justice Department probe into possible coordination between Trump associates and Russian operatives. Comey’s written remarks do support another Trump claim — that the FBI director repeatedly assured the president that he was not personally under investigation.

    But overall, Comey’s testimony portrays Trump as a domineering chief executive who made his FBI director deeply uncomfortable over the course of nine separate private conversations, beginning with their first meeting in early January before Trump was sworn into office. In that conversation, Comey warned the president-elect of a dossier that was circulating with unsubstantiated allegations against him and his advisers.

    The details of the conversations as described by Comey are likely to further fuel the debate over whether the president may have attempted to obstruct justice by pressuring the FBI director about a sensitive investigation.

    Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.), who is leading the Senate probe of possible Russian coordination with Trump associates, said he was not alarmed by Comey’s account.

    “I don’t think it’s wrong to ask for loyalty of anyone inside an administration,” Burr said. “I don’t think of what I’ve read there’s anything of wrongdoing.”

    Comey writes with almost novelistic detail about his interactions with the president, describing a call on Jan. 27 around lunchtime inviting him to dinner.

    “It was unclear from the conversation who else was going to be at the dinner, although I assumed there would be others,” Comey wrote. “It turned out to be just the two of us, seated at a small oval table in the center of the Green Room. Two Navy stewards waited on us, only entering the room to serve food and drinks.”

    The president began the conversation, Comey wrote, by asking him whether he wanted to stay on as FBI director, “which I found strange because he had already told me twice in earlier conversations that he hoped I would stay, and I had assured him that I intended to.”

    The president replied, according to Comey, that lots of people wanted his job and “he would understand if I wanted to walk away.”

    Comey’s instincts, he wrote, were that both the setting and the conversation “meant the dinner was, at least in part, an effort to have me ask for my job and create some sort of patronage relationship. That concerned me greatly, given the FBI’s traditionally independent status in the executive branch.”

    The president then made his demand for loyalty.

    “I didn’t move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed,” Comey wrote. “We simply looked at each other in silence. The conversation then moved on, but he returned to the subject near the end of our dinner.”

    When prompted again on the subject of loyalty, Comey said he replied, “You will always get honesty from me.”

    Comey said that once before Trump’s inauguration, and again at the January dinner, he assured the president that he was not personally under investigation. He also told the president later on that he had shared that information with congressional leaders.

    In his letter firing Comey, Trump wrote that three times Comey had assured him he was not under investigation. After the firing, Comey’s defenders publicly challenged the accuracy of that statement.

    Trump’s lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, said Wednesday that the president “is pleased that Mr. Comey has finally publicly confirmed his private reports that the President was not under investigation in any Russian probe. The President feels completely and totally vindicated.”

    Overall, Comey’s written testimony describes a strained, awkward relationship between the two powerful men, punctuated by exchanges in which the president expressed his displeasure about the Russia probe in ways that alarmed the FBI director. Even the number of contacts between the two were alarming to Comey, who noted that he only spoke twice privately with President Barack Obama.

    The written testimony also recounts a face-to-face conversation the two men had on Feb. 14 in the Oval Office, where many senior officials had gathered for a counterterrorism briefing.

    After the meeting, the president asked everyone to leave. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and senior adviser Jared Kushner lingered in the room, but the president told them to leave, too, according to Comey.

    When the door by the grandfather clock closed, Comey wrote, the president said, “I want to talk about Mike Flynn’’ — the former national security adviser who was forced out after disclosures about his conversations with the Russian ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak. Flynn had resigned a day earlier.

    “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go,” the president said, according to Comey. The FBI director replied only that “he is a good guy.’’

    In that conversation, the president repeatedly complained to the FBI director about leaks, and Comey said he agreed with him about the harm caused by leaks of classified information.

    Comey said he understood the president to be asking for him to “drop any investigation of Flynn in connection with false statements about his conversations with the Russian ambassador in December. I did not understand the president to be talking about the broader investigation into Russia or possible links to his campaign.’’

    The former FBI director wrote that he found the conversation “very concerning, given the FBI’s role as an independent investigative agency.’’

    Later, Comey complained to Sessions that he should not have been left alone with the president, and Sessions did not reply, according to the written testimony. Sessions declined to comment.

    Then, in late March, Trump called Comey at the FBI. In that conversation, the president called the Russia probe “a cloud’’ hanging over his ability to lead the country.

    He also expressed continued frustration that unsubstantiated allegations in a private dossier about him had become public, including lurid claims of sexual activity while in Russia.

    “He said he had nothing to do with Russia, had not been involved with hookers in Russia, and had always assumed he had been recorded when in Russia,’’ Comey wrote.

    “He asked what we could do to ‘lift the cloud.’ I responded that we were investigating the matter as quickly as we could, and that there would be great benefit, if we didn’t find anything, to our having done the work well. He agreed, but then re-emphasized the problems this was causing him,” Comey wrote.

    After that phone call with the president, Comey said he called acting deputy attorney general Dana Boente to tell him what was discussed and to “await his guidance.” Comey said he never heard back from Boente. A spokesman for Boente did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Then, on April 11, Comey wrote, the president called him and asked him what he had done about getting out word that he was not personally under investigation. The president told him “the cloud” of the probe was interfering with his ability to do his job.

    “I have been very loyal to you, very loyal; we had that thing you know,” Trump told Comey, according to the written testimony. “I did not reply or ask him what he meant by ‘that thing.’ ”

    He added: “That was the last time I spoke with President Trump.”

    Sari Horwitz and Karoun Demirjian contributed to this report.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...=.0477a04a9618
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Overall, Comey’s written testimony describes a strained, awkward relationship between the two powerful men, punctuated by exchanges in which the president expressed his displeasure about the Russia probe in ways that alarmed the FBI director. Even the number of contacts between the two were alarming to Comey, who noted that he only spoke twice privately with President Barack Obama.
    The only thing strained or awkward in these meetings is Comey acting in a ridiculous fashion according to his own prepared testimony. Creepy Comey is weird. He doesn't understand his job. He doesn't understand his agency. The FBI is NOT an independent agency of the Executive Branch, for the same reason a Police Chief reports to the Mayor, the Director of the FBI reports to the President of the United States. The FBI has no agenda separate from the Executive Branch, no authority separate from the Executive Branch, and no boss separate from the President of the United States. Where Comey or anyone else in the FBI got this peculiar notion of themselves is unknown, probably some screwball idea Comey came up with, since this is the first time I've ever heard of it as an "independent agency".

    The FBI takes its direction and instruction from the Department of Justice and the President of the United States. Americans have NOT empowered these spooks to run their own investigations aside from our Constitution, our Laws and the President of the United States. None of the employees of the FBI are elected persons, they are an agency just like the EPA, the DEA, the ATF, ICE and BP. They all have superiors, from an appointed Cabinet Members from Assistant Attorney General to Attorney General straight up to where the buck stops at the Oval Office with the President of the United States. Jim Comey has ruined his career with his behavior, the exposure of his unmanly weirdness, trying to interfere in an election, now fabricating "clouds" over a counter-intelligence investigation which is not a criminal investigation to begin with. It's counter-spying on spies. Well .... WHERE ARE THE SPIES??!!

    As to "two powerful men" .... Jim Comey is not "powerful". He's director of a federal law enforcement agency. The agency is not supposed to be "powerful", and the Director is most certainly not supposed to be "powerful". They are an investigative agency, they spy on people, they investigate crimes, they have special laboratories and forensic operations to solve their own cases as well as help state and local law enforcement. They are an investigative services agency. They don't prosecute, they don't convict, they investigate, arrest if they have a warrant, and aid others in doing likewise. They are no more "powerful" than a municipal police department or a Sheriff's Department, and frankly, they're proving themselves to be a bunch of creepy weirdos who hate authority other than their own and far less useful and beneficial to public safety than almost every Municipal Police Department in the United States.

    As to the Creepy Comey "memos" .... he leaked to journalists:

    This had not been my practice in the past. I spoke alone with President Obama twice in person (and never on the phone) -- once in 2015 to discuss law enforcement policy issues and a second time, briefly, for him to say goodbye in late 2016.
    http://www.cnn.com/2017/06/07/politi...ony/index.html

    This is the BOMBSHELLL OF THE WHOLE YEAR!!

    Barack Obama appointed Jim Comey in 2013 to Director of the FBI without every having met him or ever having spoken with him. HOW ODD IS THAT??!!! Well, excuse me, but no wonder the FBI has fallen so far. What kind of President would appoint a person to head the FBI without ever meeting him or speaking with him??!!! And what kind of FBI Director would years later meet with this President for the first time and not take notes and write a MEMO about the law enforcement policies they discussed, obviously for the purpose of making some changes that the FBI Director might need to refer to notes to implement or deal with.

    So WHO interviewed Jim Comey for the job of FBI Director since we now know it wasn't the President who nominated him?? Eric Holder perhaps??!!

    Well, this type of puppet-business will never happen under our new President Trum. President Trump has interviewed all major appointees himself personally, some of them more than once, including the candidates for Director, FBI.

    Damn, we've been asleep at our wheels people.

    My suggestion to President Trump, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and new FBI Director nominee, Christopher Wray, the NUMBER ONE UNSOLVED CRIME in America right now is the murder of Seth Rich. When you find his killer, you'll find out who hacked the DNC emails, and my bet is it will not be anyone from Russia or of Russia, let alone the Russian Government. Just my opinion.
    Last edited by Judy; 06-08-2017 at 12:30 PM.
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  3. #3
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    So WHO interviewed Jim Comey for the job of FBI Director since we now know it wasn't the President who nominated him?? Eric Holder perhaps??!!
    It was probably Valerie Jarrett who was the real ex-president of the US and Obama's handler.

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