Posted on 03/08/2019 7:41:32 AM PST by Cboldt
1 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
EXECUTIVE SESSION
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY,
JOINT WITH THE
COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT REFORM AND OVERSIGHT,
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
INTERVIEW OF: BRUCE OHR
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Washington, D.C.
The interview in the above matter was held in Room 2141,
Rayburn House Office Building, commencing at 9:05 a.m.
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Mr. Parmiter. Good morning. This is a transcribed interview
of Bruce Ohr. Chairman Goodlatte and Chairman Gowdy requested
this interview as part of a joint investigation by the House
Committee on the Judiciary and the House Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform regarding decisions made and not made in
2016 and 2017 by the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation regarding the 2016 Presidential election.
Would the witness please state his name and position at the
Department of Justice for the record.
Mr. Ohr. Good morning. My name is Bruce Ohr. I am a senior
counsel in the Office of International Affairs in the Criminal
Division of the Department of Justice.
Mr. Parmiter. Thank you. On behalf of the chairman, I want
to thank you for appearing today, and we appreciate your
willingness to appear voluntarily. My name is Robert Parmiter,
and I am the Majority Chief Counsel for Crime and Terrorism at the
House Judiciary Committee.
I will now ask everyone else who is here in the room to
introduce themselves for the record, starting to my right with Art
Baker.
Mr. Baker. Arthur Baker, Investigative Counsel, Majority
Staff, House Judiciary.
Mr. Gowdy. Trey Gowdy, South Carolina.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Jim Ratcliffe, Texas
Mr. Issa. Darrell Issa, California.
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Mr. Biggs. Andy Biggs, Ohio.
Mr. Gaetz. Matt Gaetz, Florida.
Mr. Lasseter. David Lasseter, Department of Justice.
Ms. Hekman. Rebecca Hekman, Clifford Chance.
Mr. Berman. Joshua Berman, Clifford Chance.
Mr. Weinsheimer. Brad Weinsheimer, Department of Justice.
Ms. Hariharan. Arya Hariharan, Judiciary minority.
Ms. Shen. Valerie Shen, Oversight and Government Reform
minority staff.
Mr. Ventura. Christopher Ventura, legal clerk, majority.
Mr. Castor. Steve Caster, Oversight staff, majority.
Mr. Buddharaju. Anudeep Buddharaju, House Oversight
majority.
Ms. Green. Meghan Green, House Oversight, majority.
Mr. Parmiter. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not
apply in this setting, but there are some guidelines that we will
follow that I will go over.
Our questioning will proceed in rounds. The majority will
ask questions first for an hour, and then the minority will have
an opportunity to ask questions for an equal period of time if
they choose. We will go back and forth in this manner until there
are no more questions and the interview is over. Typically, we
take a short break at the end of each hour of questioning, but if
you would like to take a break apart from that, please let us
know. We will also take a break for lunch at the appropriate
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point.
As I noted earlier, you are appearing today voluntarily.
Accordingly, we anticipate that our questions will receive
complete responses. To the extent you decline to answer our
questions or if counsel instructs you not to answer, we will
consider whether a subpoena is necessary. We also have the
ability to go into classified setting, but it was represented to
us that there is going to be very little that is classified today.
As you can see, there is an official reporter taking down
everything we say to make a written record, so we ask that you
give verbal responses to all questions. Do you understand that?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Parmiter. So that the reporter can take down a clear
record, it is important that we don't talk over one another or
interrupt each other if we can help it.
Both committees encourage witnesses who appear for
transcribed interviews to freely consult with counsel if they so
choose, and you are appearing today with counsel.
Could counsel please state your name and current position for
the record.
Mr. Weinsheimer. My name is Brad Weinsheimer. I'm an
Associate Deputy Attorney General at the Department of Justice.
Mr. Berman. My name is Josh Berman. I am Mr. Ohr's personal
counsel, and I am a partner of Clifford Chance.
Ms. Hekman. My name is Rebecca Hekman. I am Mr. Ohr's
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personal counsel. I'm an associate of Clifford Chance.
Mr. Parmiter. We want you to answer our questions in the
most complete and truthful manner possible, so we will take our
time. If you have any questions or if you do not understand one
of our questions, please let us know. If you honestly don't know
the answer to a question or do not remember, it is best not to
guess. Please give us your best recollection, and it is okay to
tell us if you learned of information from someone else. If there
are things you don't know or can't remember, just say so and
please inform us who, to the best of your knowledge, might be able
to provide a more complete answer to the question.
Mr. Ohr, you should also understand that although this
interview is not under oath, you are required by law to answer
questions from Congress truthfully. Do you understand that?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Parmiter. This also applies to questions posed by
congressional staff in an interview. Do you understand this?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Parmiter. Witnesses who knowingly provide false
testimony could be subject to criminal prosecution for perjury or
for making false statements. Do you understand this?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Parmiter. Is there any reason you are unable to provide
truthful answers to today's questions?
Mr. Ohr. No.
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Mr. Parmiter. Finally, I'd like to note that, as Chairman
Goodlatte stated at the outset of our first transcribed interview
in this investigation, the content of what we discuss here today
is confidential. Chairman Goodlatte and Gowdy ask that you not
speak about what we discuss in this interview to anyone not
present here today to preserve the integrity of our investigation.
This confidentiality rule applies to everyone present in the room
today. That is the end of my preamble.
Do you have any questions before we begin?
Mr. Ohr. No, I don't. Thanks.
Mr. Parmiter. The time is now 9:10 a.m. and we'll get
started with the first round of questions, and Chairman Gowdy.
EXAMINATION
Mr. Gowdy. Good morning, Mr. Ohr. I'm one of a handful of
members that will be asking you questions, and I'll kick it off.
To the extent I ask you a question that is vague or you think it's
a trick question, it's not. I'm really trying to understand what
role, if any, you played in the two major investigations in 2016,
that being the investigation into what Russia did and with whom,
if anyone, did they do it, and if you know anything or had any
role in the Clinton Espionage Act investigation, we want to know
that too. So not trying to trick you, not trying to -- I just
simply want to know. I've read a lot, but here's our opportunity
to ask you directly what role, if any, did you play in those two
investigations, official or otherwise.
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Did you ever provide information to Fusion GPS employees or
contractors during 2016 or 2017?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe so, no.
Mr. Gowdy. When you say you don't believe so, it makes me,
as a recovering lawyer, wonder why you would use that phrase
instead of yes or no.
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall everything I said, but it's
certainly not my practice, it's never been my practice to provide
information to outsiders about any Department of Justice business.
Mr. Gowdy. Did anyone employed at or by Fusion GPS -- and by
that, I mean employees, contractors, anyone by any definition of
employment you can think of -- provide information to you in 2016
or 2017 with respect to either the Russia investigation, the
investigation into what the Trump campaign did, if anything, or
the Clinton investigation?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Who?
Mr. Ohr. Chris Steele, as I understand it, was hired by
Fusion GPS to do research or gather information. He provided
information to me. Glenn Simpson, who is, as I understand it, a
principal of Fusion GPS, on a couple of occasions, he provided
information to me. And on one occasion my wife, who was a
contractor with Fusion GPS, provided some information to me.
Mr. Gowdy. Let's take those in reverse order. You said on
one occasion your wife. And just for purposes of those who don't
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know, your wife's name is Nellie Ohr. Is that right?
Mr. Ohr. That is correct.
Mr. Gowdy. And she began working for Fusion GPS in what,
March of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I believe it was late 2015.
Mr. Gowdy. Late 2015?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And what role did she have at Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. She was a Russia analyst, and she would research
people and companies that Fusion GPS asked her to look into. She
would do her research on the internet, open sources; and she would
report her findings to Fusion GPS, usually I think -- I don't
remember exactly the names.
Mr. Gowdy. Was she hired specifically to work on an
investigation into then-candidate Trump, or was it a broader
portfolio than that?
Mr. Ohr. My understanding is that it was a broader
portfolio. She began, as I said, I believe in late 2015.
Mr. Gowdy. What did she do before she began working for
Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. She was a contractor with other companies that were
doing Russia-related work.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. If I heard you correctly, there was
one occasion where she provided information to you.
Mr. Ohr. That is correct.
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Mr. Gowdy. What was that one occasion?
Mr. Ohr. So the -- what she -- at one point -- and I don't
remember the exact date, I think it was in 2016 -- she provided me
with a memory stick that included research she had done for Fusion
GPS on various Russian figures.
And the reason she provided that information to me is, my
understanding was, it related to some of the same -- it related to
the FBI's Russia investigation. And she gave me that stick to
give to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Why would she not give it to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. She wasn't talking with the FBI. She gave it to
me, and I provided it to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Was Chris Steele talking to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. At various times, Chris Steele was talking with the
FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. He was talking to them a good bit until they
discharged him as a source, wasn't he?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know exactly when he spoke with them.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, all marriages are different, so I'm trying
to envision this cold start to a conversation with Here, honey,
here's a thumb drive. There were no conversations before that?
Mr. Ohr. Well, Nellie was present with me in the end of
July, when I first heard Russia information -- information
relating to the Russia investigation from Chris Steele. So she
was present for some of that conversation. So she was certainly
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aware at that point that Chris Steele was giving me some
information about Russia.
At some point, I don't remember when, I became aware that she
was looking at some of the same figures as part of her work for
Fusion GPS. And so it came up -- again, I don't remember the
exact date -- where basically she was concerned that maybe the FBI
might want her information as well, and so provided the
information to me.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. This is where I need you to help me,
because you were working at the Department of Justice?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Which means you, depending on what division
you're working in, you have the ability, if appropriate, to charge
people.
Mr. Ohr. Well, at the time I was working as the director of
OCDETF, so I did not have any line attorney responsibilities or
command, chain of command responsibilities. But yes, I was
working for the Department of Justice.
Mr. Gowdy. Right. And the Department of Justice can file
informations or seek indictments. Fusion GPS cannot. So when you
say you were working on the same thing, it couldn't have
necessarily been for the same reasons, because she wasn't
investigating criminal conduct, was she?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. What was she investigating?
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Mr. Ohr. She was investigating names and companies that
Fusion GPS asked her to look into.
Mr. Gowdy. For what purpose?
Mr. Ohr. To provide it to Fusion GPS. My understanding is
that Fusion GPS was, in turn, providing it to other people.
Mr. Gowdy. Were they a contractor of the Department of
Justice? Were they launching criminal investigations?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm trying to figure out why Fusion GPS is
investigating Russian oligarchs and potential criminality and how
that might overlap with what you did at the Department.
Mr. Ohr. My understanding is that Fusion GPS was hired by
private individuals to look into possible contacts between the
Russian Government and the Trump campaign.
Mr. Gowdy. See. That's what I thought. I don't know why it
took us three questions to get there. Fusion GPS was hired by
whom?
Mr. Ohr. I did not know at the time.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you know now?
Mr. Ohr. I've seen it in the paper. It sounds like, from
the paper, that there were a couple of different people that were
paying Fusion GPS to do this at different times. My understanding
is that some of these people were connected to the Clinton
campaign in some way. I don't know the -- I don't recall the
names.
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Mr. Gowdy. So Fusion GPS were looking at potential Russian
contacts with the Trump campaign.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And that's what your wife was working on?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. At some point, I became aware that some of
the people she was invest -- she was researching were some of the
same people that I had heard about from Chris Steele and Glenn
Simpson.
Mr. Gowdy. And when did she provide, I call it a thumb
drive, you called it something else.
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the exact date.
Mr. Gowdy. Give me a month.
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the month either. I think it was in
late 2016, but I don't know for sure.
Mr. Gowdy. After the Russia investigation began by the
Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. I --
Mr. Gowdy. That would have been late July?
Mr. Ohr. I would assume it would -- I'm pretty sure it was
after that.
Mr. Gowdy. After the election?
Mr. Ohr. That I don't recall.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, I need you to help me there. The election
is a pretty big pivot point. Most people remember what they were
doing before that and after that. Do you remember getting
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information from anyone at Fusion GPS before the election?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. From whom?
Mr. Ohr. Glenn Simpson.
Mr. Gowdy. We'll come back to Mrs. Ohr. Tell me about Glenn
Simpson providing you information.
Mr. Ohr. As I recall, and this is after checking with my
notes, Mr. Simpson and I spoke in August of 2016. I met with him,
and he provided some information on possible intermediaries
between the Russian Government and the Trump campaign.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm sure my colleagues are wondering this also.
Why would Glenn Simpson give you information about Russian
oligarchs?
Mr. Ohr. Well, my job, for a long time, included
responsibility for the organized crime program at the Department
of Justice. And so for many years, I had been overseeing
investigations and meeting with people, talking about organized
crime.
In the course of this many years, I met with both -- I had
become acquainted with both Chris Steele, Glenn Simpson, and other
people. And from time to time, these people would give me
information about Russian oligarchs and other Russian organized
crime figures, and then I would pass that to the FBI, or introduce
people to the FBI so that they could continue. And so what
happened in August was I heard from Glenn Simpson that he had some
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information.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, you also strike me as being smart enough
not to make yourself a fact witness if you didn't have to. So why
take the information? Chris Steele already had a relationship
with the Bureau. Why not just connect Glenn Simpson with the
Bureau? Why put yourself in the middle of that?
Mr. Ohr. My recollection is that I tried to get Glenn
Simpson to speak with the Bureau, but I don't recall the exact
conversation. So he was willing to meet with me and give me some
information. So I took the information and passed it to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Who at the FBI did you pass it on to?
Mr. Ohr. Well, at that point I had -- I believe I met with
Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, and some people from the
Department's -- Justice Department's Criminal Division, and I gave
them the information that I had received.
Mr. Gowdy. Was either Peter Strzok or Lisa Page, were they
working on a Russian oligarch fraud investigation in addition to
the Trump campaign, or was it just the Trump campaign
investigation that you remember them working on at the time?
Mr. Ohr. I think my recollection is that they were looking
at different parts, not just one part. I don't remember the exact
details, but --
Mr. Gowdy. Can you see how it might be troubling? You just
called the names of two people, neither of whom I think are with
the Bureau, one who was mentioned unfavorably in an IG report,
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both of whom had, at least from my standpoint, an unprecedented
amount of animus or bias towards one of the candidates, and you
are getting information from someone hired by the DNC and
funneling it to the lead agent on the Russia investigation. Can
you possibly see how that might be troubling to people?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. And what would your response to that
troublement be?
Mr. Ohr. At the time, they were the people who could use,
you know, or look at the information. They were the ones that I
was told to pass it to. They also told me that they would arrange
for me to be in contact with a line agent, a regular agent, and
that in the future, my contacts would be with that agent rather
than with higher officials at the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Who was handling Chris Steele, who at the Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know who was officially his handler. I
know one of the people he was talking with who may have been his
handler was Special Agent Mike Gaeta.
Mr. Gowdy. So why not tell Steele and Simpson to go talk to
the Bureau directly?
Mr. Ohr. I believe Steele was talking to the Bureau
directly. My recollection is that at least initially -- well, no.
Let me cancel that.
I -- I don't think -- I think Glenn Simpson was willing to
talk with me. I'm not sure that -- my recollection is I'm not
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sure he was willing to talk with the FBI, although that was
where obviously it would be better to --
Mr. Gowdy. Why not? Why talk to a prosecutor who does not
investigate crime? Were you assigned to the Russia investigation?
Mr. Ohr. I was not.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you have any connection with the Russia
investigation at all?
Mr. Ohr. Aside from passing this information, no.
Mr. Gowdy. So why would Glenn Simpson go through you and not
go directly to the Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what was in his head. I know he was
willing to talk --
Mr. Gowdy. I'm sure you asked him.
Mr. Ohr. I think I tried to get him to talk with the FBI,
but I don't recall the exact conversation.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, Mr. Ohr, a couple of people around the
table have worked for the Department at various points. You
really try hard, as an attorney, not to involve yourself in chains
or facts that could warrant you being pretty much exactly where
you are today, which is a fact witness. Surely this is not the
first time you thought about that?
Mr. Ohr. That's right.
Mr. Gowdy. So why allow yourself to be a conduit?
Mr. Ohr. I thought the -- I wanted to get the information,
whatever information they had. I wanted to get it to the FBI, and
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I wanted to try to create the situation for people like Glenn
Simpson to talk to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you believe, as I do, that the FBI is the
world's premier law enforcement agency?
Mr. Ohr. If I say yes, I might make people at the DEA very
unhappy, but yes, I am very -- I have a great admiration for the
FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. I don't think it's going to make them unhappy.
They don't have as much jurisdiction as the Bureau has. The
Bureau has broad jurisdiction. I mean, DEA can't look at Title 18
cases, can they?
Mr. Ohr. That's right, except for money laundering, I
believe, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. So you've got what, with your caveat
noted, you don't want to offend anyone else, you got the world's
premier law enforcement agency investigating a fact pattern.
Chris Steele already has a handler, already is in contact with the
FBI; and you allow the person hired by the DNC to dig up dirt on a
Presidential candidate to talk to you directly and use you as a
conduit. We're just trying to figure out why you let that happen?
Mr. Ohr. I took the information. I thought the information
might be important, and I wanted to get it to the FBI. It seemed
the only way to do it.
Mr. Gowdy. What information would Glenn Simpson have that
the Bureau couldn't get or already have?
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Mr. Ohr. I don't know exactly what the FBI had access to,
and I know Glenn Simpson was also gathering information. So more
information is better. The FBI is in a position to decide whether
the information is useful or credible. My job, as I saw it, was
just to get the information over there and let them figure it out.
Mr. Gowdy. So when Glenn Simpson gave you information, what
information did he give you?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the exact facts he gave me in
August. I believe I made some notes at the time, and I believe it
had to do with possible intermediaries between the Russian
Government and the Trump campaign.
Mr. Gowdy. Such as?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the exact names.
Mr. Gowdy. That's a serious allegation, Mr. Ohr.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. To allege that a hostile foreign government is in
cahoots with members of a campaign is a pretty serious allegation.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And you don't remember who it was?
Mr. Ohr. There were many names mentioned over a period of
time.
Mr. Gowdy. Tell me the ones you remember.
Mr. Ohr. I don't know if it came up in the conversation with
Glenn Simpson, but certainly one of them was Sergei Millian.
Mr. Gowdy. How about on the Trump campaign side?
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Mr. Ohr. Again, I don't recall if this was a name that Glenn
Simpson mentioned, but I remember the name Michael Cohen coming
up.
Mr. Gowdy. Cohen? Okay. Who else?
Mr. Ohr. I remember -- and, again, I don't think -- I don't
remember if -- I think this name came from Chris Steele
originally, was Carter Page. And the name Paul Manafort was also
mentioned, and I think that came from Chris Steele originally.
Mr. Gowdy. And what precisely, as best you can recall, was
the nature of this collaboration/conspiracy/coordination?
Mr. Ohr. That there were communications back and forth
between the Russian Government and the Trump campaign.
Mr. Gowdy. Is there anything inherently criminal about that?
Mr. Ohr. If the Russian Government was attempting to
influence the Trump campaign in some way, I would think that would
be a national security threat.
Mr. Gowdy. What would that some way be?
Mr. Ohr. Espousing certain positions, or if they had some
kind of control or influence over members of the campaign that
could affect U.S. policy in a way that would be favorable to
Russia or Russian interests.
Mr. Gowdy. And what did Mr. Simpson relay to you about that?
What control or dominion or --
Mr. Ohr. I think Mr. Simpson was -- what Glenn Simpson was
giving me was more the means by which this communication was
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being -- what he thought how the communication was happening. I
don't think he was talking as much about what exactly they
were -- you know, what policies or whatever they were talking
about.
Mr. Gowdy. You've been a prosecutor for how long?
Mr. Ohr. I began as a prosecutor in 1991.
Mr. Gowdy. So from 2018 to 1991, you have essentially asked
questions for a living?
Mr. Ohr. Uh-huh. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. What questions did you ask Glenn Simpson about
the origin of his information? And I'm still -- maybe it's just
me. I'm still struggling to figure out -- now, if it was a
conspiracy to access the DNC server, I'm interested. If it's a
conspiracy to access John Podesta's email, I'm interested. I'm
actually interested if it's a conspiracy to disseminate what was
taken even if they didn't take it.
But I doubt he met with a high-ranking DOJ official to say,
someone in the Russian Government knows someone in the Trump
campaign.
Mr. Ohr. I believe one of the things -- again, I don't
remember if it was Glenn Simpson or Chris Steele that mentioned
this -- talked about -- I'm going to get the names wrong, but
somebody associated with the Trump campaign having advance
knowledge of when information about the Clinton campaign that had
been stolen and hacked, when it was going to be leaked.
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Mr. Gowdy. What criminal code section would that violate?
Mr. Ohr. I mean, I think, again, it's --
Mr. Gowdy. Conspiracy to defraud the United States?
Mr. Ohr. Right, conspiracy. It could be --
Mr. Gowdy. You don't see that statute used very often I
don't think, do you, not that part of it? Recently, we've seen
it.
Mr. Ohr. Sorry?
Mr. Gowdy. Recently, we've seen it. Is that what you were
thinking, that it was a conspiracy to defraud the United States?
Mr. Ohr. I think any attempt by a foreign power to gain
influence over a Presidential campaign would be troubling.
Mr. Gowdy. But that does not include Steele relying on
Russians to provide dirt on Trump.
Mr. Ohr. I'm sorry, I don't understand the question.
Mr. Gowdy. That does not include Steele relying on Russians
to provide dirt on Trump, question mark?
Mr. Ohr. I think my understanding is that what Steele was
finding out was investigating the links, the national security
threat posed by Russian Government officials attempting to gain
influence over the Trump campaign. So I don't think that's
criminal. I think that's highlighting a national security threat.
Mr. Gowdy. He was relying on foreign nationals for that
information?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know who he was getting it from.
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Mr. Gowdy. Who were Steele's sources?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Gowdy. How did you vet those -- how did he vet those
sources? How did Fusion GPS vet those sources?
Mr. Ohr. I think -- I don't know the specifics. The fact
that my wife was looking at some of the same figures, like Sergei
Millian, suggests that that was one way they were trying to vet
the information.
So when I provided it to the FBI, I tried to be clear that
this is source information. I don't know how reliable it is.
You're going to have to check it out and be aware. These guys
were hired by somebody relating to -- who's related to the Clinton
campaign, and be aware --
Mr. Gowdy. Did you tell the Bureau that?
Mr. Ohr. Oh, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Why did you tell the Bureau that?
Mr. Ohr. I wanted them to be aware of any possible bias or,
you know, as they evaluate the information, they need to know the
circumstances.
Mr. Gowdy. So you specifically told the Bureau that the
information you were passing on came from someone who was employed
by the DNC, albeit in a somewhat triangulated way?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I used -- I didn't know they were
employed by the DNC, but I certainly said, yes, that -- that they
were working for -- you know, they were somehow working associated
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with the Clinton campaign. And I also told the FBI that my wife
worked for Fusion GPS or was a contractor for GPS, Fusion GPS.
Mr. Gowdy. And, again, you thought it was important to tell
the Bureau that for bias --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. -- motive, interest in the outcome, all of the
reasons that you have to produce --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. -- not complementary information?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And so you think it should have also been
included in a FISA application?
Mr. Ohr. I have no -- I don't do FISA applications. I don't
know. So I would think you should attempt to corroborate any
source information you get before you --
Mr. Gowdy. Would a jury be told about that?
Mr. Ohr. I think certainly I would -- if I were calling a
witness, I would provide that kind of information to the defense.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, and your very competent counsel would spend
hours making sure the jury knew of the connection between the
source and a political opponent, don't you think? Hours.
Mr. Ohr. I'm sure it would be a topic of cross-examination.
Mr. Gowdy. It wouldn't be a footnote.
Mr. Ohr. I --
Mr. Gowdy. It wouldn't be an oblique footnote buried
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 24 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
somewhere in an application. They'd spend hours on it.
Mr. Ohr. I'm sure if it were a trial setting, there would be
cross-examination about it.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. So Simpson, you met with Simpson how
many times?
Mr. Ohr. I recall two times.
Mr. Gowdy. Now, some of my colleagues don't believe in
coincidences. I have not made up my mind yet on whether or not
that's possible, but you met with Simpson -- I mean, with Steele,
if I remember correctly, in late July --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. -- at a breakfast with Mrs. Ohr?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you know what else happened in late July?
Mr. Ohr. I have seen in the papers that the FBI opened some
kind of investigation in late July. I was certainly not aware of
that at the time.
Mr. Gowdy. Who opened it?
Mr. Ohr. I've just seen something in the papers. I don't
know.
Mr. Gowdy. Oh, you can guess. What FBI agent opened it?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Gowdy. I'll give you a hint. You mentioned his name
already. Peter Strzok. How many times did you talk to Peter
Strzok before July of 2016?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 25 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. None, I don't think. I did not know Peter Strzok.
Mr. Gowdy. How did you meet him?
Mr. Ohr. At some point, I believe in the fall of 2016, I met
with him and Lisa Page, as I told you before.
Mr. Gowdy. Why? Why did you meet with them?
Mr. Ohr. To pass the latest information that I had received.
Mr. Gowdy. How did you find out who to meet with? Who did
you call to find out?
Mr. Ohr. So, prior to that meeting, I had -- okay. After
the July 30th meeting with Chris Steele, I wanted to provide the
information he had given me to the FBI. I reached out for Andrew
McCabe, at that time, Deputy Director of the FBI and somebody who
had previously led the organized crime, Russian organized crime
squad in New York and who I had worked with in the past, and asked
if he could meet with me.
I went to his office to provide the information, and Lisa
Page was there. So I provided the information to them. And some
point after that, I think, I was given Peter Strzok, or somehow
put in contact with Peter Strzok.
Mr. Gowdy. And that would have been when?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the exact date. I'm guessing it
would have been in August since I met with Chris Steele at the end
of July, and I'm pretty sure I would have reached out to Andrew
McCabe soon afterwards.
Mr. Gowdy. So you provided the information Glenn Simpson
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 26 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
gave to you to Peter Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. No, no. The information Chris Steele had given
me -- oh, no. Yes. Yeah, I'm sorry.
So after Glenn Simpson gave me information, yes, I believe I
provided that to Peter Strzok.
Mr. Gowdy. So the Steele and Simpson information, you were
the conduit to Peter Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. I -- they may have had other conduits
certainly with respect to Mr. Steele, but yes, I did.
Mr. Gowdy. In July of 2016, Chris Steele emailed you and
made reference to, and I'll quote, "our favorite business tycoon."
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Who was he referring to?
Mr. Ohr. Oleg Deripaska.
Mr. Gowdy. How did you know that that's who he was referring
to?
Mr. Ohr. We had had conversations prior to that time about
Oleg Deripaska earlier that year.
Mr. Gowdy. It couldn't have been Donald Trump?
Mr. Ohr. No, I don't think so.
Mr. Gowdy. Why not?
Mr. Ohr. We never had conversations about Donald Trump
before July 30th. He talked with me about Russian organized crime
matters. We had talked in the past about Deripaska. That was
pretty much the only person in my mind that he could have been
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 27 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
referring to.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you and Chris Steele ever discuss Donald
Trump?
Mr. Ohr. In the July 30th conversation, one of the items of
information that Chris Steele gave to me was that he had
information that a former head of the Russian Foreign Intelligence
Service, the SVR, had stated to someone -- I didn't know
who -- that they had Donald Trump over a barrel.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you know Jon Winer?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, I'm acquainted with Jonathan Winer.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever discuss the Russian investigation or
the 2016 Presidential race with Jon Winer?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever pass information -- he was an
employee of the State Department?
Mr. Ohr. I think so.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever pass information from him on to the
Bureau or the Department?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Other than Chris Steele and Glenn Simpson, did
anyone else ever provide information to you that you then provided
to the Department or the Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. I mentioned my wife and the memory stick.
Mr. Gowdy. Your wife?
Mr. Ohr. So I don't think anyone else did, no.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 28 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Gowdy. Did you look at that stick or thumb drive?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. You didn't even open it?
Mr. Ohr. No. I didn't want to plug it into my machine at
work. I just gave it to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. Why didn't you want to plug it into your machine
at work?
Mr. Ohr. I don't plug any stick that anyone gives me, even
my wife, into a work computer.
Mr. Gowdy. What did she describe was on it?
Mr. Ohr. My understanding was that it included her research
on behalf of Fusion GPS.
Mr. Gowdy. Was her job to find as much information as she
could, good and bad, on Donald Trump, or was it opposition
research?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think -- my understanding was not
that -- she was asked to look at specific individuals and
companies, and I think they were all related to -- were Russia,
because her expertise was researching Russian topics, reading
Russian websites, that sort of thing.
So I think she was just gathering whatever information she
could find on those persons, and then she would pass that to
Fusion GPS. So it wouldn't -- it wasn't limited to favorable or
unfavorable. It was just whatever she could find.
Mr. Gowdy. The July 30th breakfast that Chris Steele and
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 29 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
your wife and you attended, what was discussed there?
Mr. Ohr. So Chris Steele provided me with basically three
items of information. One of them I've described to you already,
the comment that information supposedly stated and made by the
head, former head of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service.
He also mentioned that Carter Page had met with certain
high-level Russian officials when he was in Moscow. My
recollection is at that time, the name Carter Page had already
been in the press, and there had been some kind of statement about
who he had met with when he went to Moscow. And so the first item
that I recall Chris Steele telling me was he had information that
Carter Page met with higher-level Russian officials, not just
whoever was mentioned in the press article. So that was one item.
And then the third item he mentioned was that Paul Hauser,
who was an attorney working for Oleg Deripaska, had information
about Paul Manafort, that Paul Manafort had entered into some kind
of business deal with Oleg Deripaska, had stolen a large amount of
money from Oleg Deripaska, and that Paul Hauser was trying to
gather information that would show that, you know, or give more
detail about what Paul Manafort had done with respect to
Deripaska.
Mr. Gowdy. Did Mr. Steele ever express his opinion on
candidate Trump to you?
Mr. Ohr. At that time, I don't recall, but later on, prior
to the election when I spoke with Chris Steele, I got the sense he
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 30 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
was very alarmed by this information, which I think he believed to
be true. And so I definitely got the impression he did not want
Donald Trump to win the election.
Mr. Gowdy. You got the impression or he told you that?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember specifically what he said, but it
was a strong enough impression that I told the FBI that.
Mr. Gowdy. Have you had a chance to review your 302s?
Mr. Ohr. I looked at my 302s in preparation for my testimony
with the Senate Intelligence Committee back in January of this
year; and I did review them on one subsequent occasion, again,
early this year. So I have seen them, but I have not looked at
them for at least 6 months.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you recall whether it was you that Chris
Steele said he was desperate that Donald Trump not win?
Mr. Ohr. I think I said that to the FBI, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Was that your impression of him or is that
something he said to you?
Mr. Ohr. I -- I don't recall exactly what he said, but, as I
said, whether he said it directly or not, I had the very strong
impression. I just don't want to say words that I don't remember
right at this moment.
Mr. Gowdy. What does the word "desperate" mean?
Mr. Ohr. I think he was very anxious or very -- very
concerned that Donald Trump not win.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, "concerned" and "desperate" are two
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 31 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
separate words. What does the word "desperate" mean?
Mr. Ohr. I think very concerned. And, again, I wanted to
provide that to the FBI, because it was important that the FBI
know what his mindset was. You want to know when --
Mr. Gowdy. If you're relying on a source that says they're
desperate to prevent someone from winning, you would want to know
that.
Mr. Ohr. Yes, of course.
Mr. Gowdy. How about willing to do anything to keep him from
winning, do you remember seeing that in your 302, or words to that
effect?
Mr. Ohr. No, I don't recall that specifically, no.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, what do you -- instead of me guessing what
you recall, what do you recall Chris Steele telling you about
Donald Trump and whether or not he wanted to see him prevail in
November?
Mr. Ohr. As I told you, I don't recall the exact words. I
definitely had a very strong impression that he did not want
Donald Trump to win, because he believed his information he was
giving me was accurate, and that he was, as I said, very
concerned, or he was desperate, which is what I then told the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. If I remember right, you've been a prosecutor
since 1991?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, sir.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever have a chance to cross-examine
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 32 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
anyone?
Mr. Ohr. On occasion. Not as often as a defense counsel,
but yes.
Mr. Gowdy. So tell me all of the questions,
cross-examination-like questions that you asked Chris Steele about
the source of his information.
Mr. Ohr. I knew -- he would not give me the source of his
information, so I couldn't get it.
Mr. Gowdy. How much of what Chris Steele told you would have
ever come out in a courtroom?
Mr. Ohr. I'm not sure it would have. I --
Mr. Gowdy. Oh, I'm --
Mr. Ohr. This was source information.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm pretty sure it would not.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Gowdy. Why not?
Mr. Ohr. It was source information. It was hearsay. I --
Mr. Gowdy. What's hearsay?
Mr. Ohr. It's something that he did not -- it was something
that he heard from someone else.
Mr. Gowdy. What is hearsay for those not familiar with the
definition?
Mr. Ohr. A statement that was made outside of court.
Mr. Gowdy. Offered to prove?
Mr. Ohr. The truth of the matter asserted, yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 33 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Gowdy. Yes. There are exceptions, but we can't find one
for what Chris Steele told you. Was Chris Steele talking directly
to the source?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know exactly. I assumed he was talking to
a source. I don't know what the source specifically knew.
Mr. Gowdy. Did he have subsources?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm guessing you never talked to the sources or
subsources.
Mr. Ohr. That is correct.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, Mr. Ohr, that information would never see
the inside of a courtroom, because you can't cross-examine it.
You can't find out who, if anyone, really is the source of that.
Do you agree?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. But this is not evidence in a courtroom. He
is providing information from -- this is source information. And
most FBI investigations involve source information, at least in
the early stages.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. I don't really want to do this, but
we're going to have to do it anyway. Why would that information
not come in a courtroom? Why is hearsay not allowed?
Mr. Ohr. We don't -- the rules of evidence are try to ensure
that we have, you know, first-person evidence for a courtroom.
Mr. Gowdy. Why? Why?
Mr. Ohr. Because we consider that more reliable.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 34 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Gowdy. Yes. It's more reliable, more likely to be true,
right?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And the most powerful tool you have to eliminate
the truth is what? I'll give you a hint. It's in the Sixth
Amendment.
Mr. Ohr. Cross-examination.
Mr. Gowdy. You get to confront the people, right? You get
to cross them?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Not only were you not able to do it, you don't
even know if Steele was able to do it.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Gowdy. So best-case scenario, best-case scenario, it's
double hearsay. Worst-case scenario, we don't have any -- it
could be quintuple hearsay, right?
Mr. Ohr. I think -- I don't know. It definitely is hearsay,
and it was source information, which is what I was telling the
FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. I like the phrase "source information." Source
information is of no help if the source is not credible, agree?
Mr. Ohr. The FBI -- I agree, but the point -- what the FBI
has to do when it gets information is see if there's other
information from other places that corroborate the information.
And this is the point of giving -- that's why the FBI collects
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 35 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
source information, not to present it in court, but to see if
different sources corroborate each other, and whether a picture
begins to emerge.
Mr. Gowdy. I guess what alarms me about this fact pattern is
all the way in December of 2016, a guy named Comey was referring
to the information as unverified. That's in December of 2016.
What happened in October of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I'm not sure what you're referring to.
Mr. Gowdy. Was it used in a court filing?
Mr. Ohr. I'm not aware of how it was used.
Mr. Gowdy. Have you read the FISA application?
Mr. Ohr. I am aware that there was -- I've read in the paper
that some kind of a FISA application was used -- or that some of
the information was used in a FISA application, but I was not
aware of that at the time.
Mr. Gowdy. Were you aware that Director Comey referred to
the information as unverified all the way into December of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall that, you know, at the time, but I
certainly considered it, as I said, source information.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you know what steps Peter Strzok took to
either corroborate or contradict the information?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. So you don't know Steele's source.
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Gowdy. You don't know if he had subsources.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 36 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Gowdy. You don't know if any of it was even attempted to
be corroborated or contradicted?
Mr. Ohr. My assumption is that the FBI tries to corroborate
the information if they think it's something they want to pursue.
Mr. Gowdy. How would you know better than Comey? He said it
was unverified. They didn't even try to corroborate it until
2017.
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what they had, what they were doing.
Mr. Gowdy. Who at the Department knew that you were talking
to Chris Steele and Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I spoke with some people in the Criminal Division,
other career officials who dealt with some of these matters.
So --
Mr. Gowdy. Any of them have names?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. So I was about to tell you. One of them was
Bruce Swartz, who is the Counselor For International Affairs in
the Criminal Division; a person who was working with him at the
time, working on similar matters in the Criminal Division was
Zainab Ahmad; and a third person who was working on some -- some
of these matters I believe was Andrew Weissmann.
Mr. Gowdy. Who is that last one?
Mr. Ohr. Andrew Weissmann. He was the head of the Fraud
Section at the time.
Mr. Gowdy. I've heard his name somewhere before, I think.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 37 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Changing the subject, have you talked to anyone on the
special counsel's team?
Mr. Ohr. I've had one social contact with a member of the
special counsel team. An FBI agent who I've worked with in the
past named Bill McCausland was, at least for a while, assigned to
the special counsel team from New York. When he was working in
Washington, we went out for lunch one time. We -- obviously, we
did not discuss the investigation. Other than that, I am not
aware of any contact with the special counsel team.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever put Chris Steele in touch with
anyone on special counsel team?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I know that the FBI, at one point in
2017, asked me to ask Chris if he would meet with the FBI, and I
conveyed that message. And I know at some point a meeting took
place. I don't know who from the FBI was present, so I don't know
if they were from the special counsel team or not.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm going to have to get you to go back through
that again. You lost me, which I'm sure is my fault, not yours.
Mr. Ohr. No, no. Sorry. So -- I'm sorry, you're going to
have to repeat the question so I get it right.
Mr. Gowdy. Well, I think what I was wondering is whether or
not Chris Steele either asked you or communicated to you that he
wanted to talk to special counsel team and whether you made any
efforts to connect him?
Mr. Ohr. So the -- okay, that's a different question. But I
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 38 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
know that Chris Steele referred to the FBI and the special counsel
team in some of our conversations it seemed like interchangeably.
I do not know who Chris Steele spoke with when the FBI spoke
with him in 2017, so I don't know if the FBI people who spoke with
him were a part of the special counsel's team or not. The person
I was speaking with when I reported these conversations was not
part of the special counsel team.
Mr. Gowdy. Are you aware that Chris Steele's relationship
with the Bureau soured and/or dissolved at some point in the fall
of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. At some point I became aware of that, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. How did you learn that?
Mr. Ohr. I am not sure where I first learned of it. I
certainly would have heard that from Chris Steele at some point,
but I'm not sure where I learned it first.
Mr. Gowdy. Why did it dissolve?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know specifically.
Mr. Gowdy. I'm sure Chris told you, didn't he, or did you
not ask?
Mr. Ohr. I mean, I guess I was making an assumption at the
time that -- but it's just an assumption, that -- that the FBI
would have stopped talking with him because he talked to a
reporter.
Mr. Gowdy. Why would that dissolve a relationship with the
Bureau?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 39 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. Normally, the FBI tells its sources not to talk to
anybody else.
Mr. Gowdy. That would be a good assumption. So Chris Steele
was working for Fusion GPS and the FBI at the same time?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, I believe so.
Mr. Gowdy. Was he being paid by both?
Mr. Ohr. I believe so.
Mr. Gowdy. Why was the Bureau paying him for information if
you were going to pass it on from Fusion GPS to the Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. I know the FBI had other contacts with Chris Steele
besides my contact, besides what I was getting, but I don't know
the specific nature of what they paid him for.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever talk to the media?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Did DAG Yates know that you were talking to
Steele or Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Did any of your supervisors at the Department
know? I think the others you described were more peers.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Gowdy. Any of your supervisors?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you know if Mrs. Nellie Ohr ever talked to
Peter Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know of any conversation, no.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 40 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Gowdy. If there were a text from Strzok to Page that
said, quote, "remind me [redacted, name redacted] met with Bruce
and got more stuff today," close quote, do you know who that Bruce
would be?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Could it be Bruce Ohr?
Mr. Ohr. I guess it could be.
Mr. Gowdy. Do you remember meeting with someone on or about
December 20th and getting information from that person?
Mr. Ohr. Not as I sit here.
Mr. Gowdy. Would anything refresh your recollection?
Mr. Ohr. Maybe an email or something. I don't know. I
don't think in my notes it reflected anything like that.
Mr. Gowdy. If I remember correctly, the only sources of
information for you were Simpson, Steele, and Mrs. Ohr.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Outside the government, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. What was the last part?
Mr. Ohr. Outside the government, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. All right. Other than Mrs. Ohr, were you talking
to the other two in December of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I believe I met with Glenn Simpson in December
2016.
Mr. Gowdy. About what?
Mr. Ohr. He provided me with a memory stick, and he provided
additional information regarding the contacts between the Russians
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 41 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
and the Trump campaign.
Mr. Gowdy. So now we're up to two memory sticks.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Both of whom could have gone to the Bureau but
didn't.
Mr. Ohr. Oh, I provided them to the Bureau.
Mr. Gowdy. I get that. I get that, Mr. Ohr. I'm still
wondering why they wanted to go through a DOJ attorney that was
not assigned to the investigation.
Mr. Ohr. Well, I've known Glenn Simpson, not very well, but
I've known him for several years. So maybe he felt more
comfortable talking with me. That's my -- that's my assumption,
but --
Mr. Gowdy. You've been with the Department since 1991?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, sir.
Mr. Gowdy. Are there other cases where you recall taking
information from fact witnesses and passing it on to the Bureau?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. I don't recall specific instances, but
whenever I -- over the years, as I've talked with people who are,
you know, experts or have information one way or another on
transnational organized crime, including Russian organized crime,
I take their information, and if it looked like it -- if there's
anything there, I would pass it to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. I've been out of it for about 8 years, so you
help me if I'm wrong, but a stick, or thumb drive, would be
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 42 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
physical evidence --
Mr. Ohr. Yes, sir.
Mr. Gowdy. -- for which a chain would exist --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. -- if it were ever needed in court?
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Gowdy. And you made yourself part of the chain?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Can you think of other instances in your career
since 1991 where you made yourself part of a chain of custody?
Mr. Ohr. Not -- I don't remember getting any other sticks or
anything like that, so --
Mr. Gowdy. How many cases would you say you handled in your
career at the Department?
Mr. Ohr. When I was an AUSA and actively prosecuting cases,
I'm sure I did a few hundred.
Mr. Gowdy. Then if tradition holds, you did a few less when
you went to Main Justice than when you were out in the field?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. So what, 250, is that conservative?
Mr. Ohr. I wouldn't want to guess.
Mr. Gowdy. I want to be conservative. 200?
Mr. Ohr. As I said, I'm sure it was, you know, several
hundred altogether.
Mr. Gowdy. Several hundred would be more than 200, but we'll
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 43 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
be really conservative and say 200.
Mr. Ohr. All right.
Mr. Gowdy. And you can't think of a single case where you
inserted yourself into a chain of custody other than this one?
Mr. Ohr. That's right.
Mr. Gowdy. I guess my colleagues are wondering why. Why
this one?
Mr. Ohr. As I mentioned before, I met people over the years
who would have information that they wanted to tell somebody in
U.S. law enforcement. I had been working in this area for many
years, so many people know me but might not know an FBI agent
who's working in this area. They would tell me things; I would
pass it to the FBI.
Mr. Gowdy. You never gave information to your wife to then
give to Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. No. No.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever have any conversations with Peter
Strzok about Donald Trump?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe so, no.
Mr. Gowdy. What causes you to not be certain?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I passed him the information I had received,
so that's -- you know, so that information mentions Donald Trump's
name, but outside of that, I don't think we had any other
conversations.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 44 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[10:05 a.m.]
Mr. Gowdy. Did he ever express any animus or bias towards
Trump to you in those conversations?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think so, no.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever meet with Lisa Page?
Mr. Ohr. She was at the same meeting -- she was at the
meeting with Peter Strzok, and she was at the initial meeting with
Andrew McCabe.
Mr. Gowdy. Where did the meeting take place, the one with
you and Strzok and Page?
Mr. Ohr. I belive that was in the Criminal Division at main
Justice.
Mr. Gowdy. Did either one of them express any concern that
you were in a chain of physical evidence?
Mr. Ohr. Well, at that point, I don't believe that any
memory sticks had been passed. So they understood that I had
received information, and they said they would get me an agent to
talk to who would write the stuff down and do whatever -- well, I
don't know if write it down, but that they would give me an agent
to speak with and provide the information.
Mr. Gowdy. Is that why there are 302s of you in the file?
Mr. Ohr. I believe so.
Mr. Gowdy. That is the agent interviewing you?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Who did you give the sticks to?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 45 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. The agent. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. Which agent?
Mr. Ohr. I believe at this point it was Joe Pientka.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you get a receipt?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Gowdy. No chain of custody receipt?
Mr. Ohr. I just -- this was, you know, unverified, as you
say. It was source information. I just passed it to the FBI for
whatever it was worth.
Mr. Gowdy. Why did you meet with Chris Steele after the FBI
had dissolved its relationship with him?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I met with Chris Steele at any
point after that. Chris Steele would continue to call at various
times, and I would listen to what he had to say, and I would pass
it to the FBI. The only time information went the other way -- it
wasn't information -- was when the FBI asked me to convey to Chris
would he be willing to meet with them again and I did that.
Mr. Gowdy. Who at the FBI asked whether Steele would be
willing to meet with them again?
Mr. Ohr. It was the agent I was talking to. At that point,
I don't remember if it was Joe Pientka or another agent. At
various times, I was told to start talking to a new agent, and so
I would provide the information to the new agent.
Mr. Gowdy. So this is after the Bureau dissolved its
relationship with Steele --
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 46 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. I believe so, yes.
Mr. Gowdy. -- did not pay him the last installment of the
money he thought was owed --
Mr. Ohr. Yes, I believe so.
Mr. Gowdy. -- for breaking the agreement that he had with
them not to tell others that he was a Bureau source and/or talking
to the media.
Mr. Ohr. That is my assumption. But, yes, I was not part of
any decision at the FBI, so I don't know specifically. But that
is my understanding.
Mr. Gowdy. And your testimony is someone at the Bureau was
willing to reengage with Christopher Steele.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Gowdy. And tell me again who that was.
Mr. Ohr. I don't know where the request came from. It was
given to me by the agent that I was reporting to, and then I
conveyed that to Chris Steele.
Mr. Gowdy. Did you ever wonder why the Bureau didn't convey
that directly to Steele, why the Bureau was also using you as a
conduit?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember if I wondered about that at the
time. I guess it didn't seem out of place, since I was telling
them: Hey, this is what he told me. And they said: Oh, well,
the next time you talk with him, can you ask him this? And so I
did.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 47 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Gowdy. I have only got a little bit of time left. I see
Mr. Ratcliffe writing furiously, so he can have the 1 minute and
30 seconds I have left.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Mr. Ohr, I want to make sure I heard you
right. You met with Lisa Page on two occasions that you --
Mr. Ohr. I remember two. There might have been a third, but
I remember two.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And one of those was shortly after you met
with Christopher Steele. On July 30, you had a meeting with Andy
McCabe and Lisa Page.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You said that meeting was at main Justice?
Mr. Ohr. No, that meeting was in Andrew McCabe's office.
Mr. Ratcliffe. It was in Andrew McCabe's office.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And it was sometime, you believe, in August,
because it was shortly after the meeting with Christopher Steele?
Mr. Ohr. Probably, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And that was because, at that point in time,
you wanted the FBI to have that information and be aware of your
contact with Christopher Steele?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Did anyone prompt that call to Andy McCabe?
Mr. Ohr. No, I don't think so. I think that was me. Just
me.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 48 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ratcliffe. You, out of just an idea that that was the
appropriate thing to do?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. But you also thought it was
appropriate to be communicating with Christopher Steele.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Even though you don't have any
authority, apparently.
Mr. Ohr. He is just calling me or meeting with me, as we had
done on and off for many years. So if he tells me something that
is of interest or concern, I pass that to the FBI.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And you said something about you thought that
was your job.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Part of my job, as I saw it, as having been
for a long time responsible for organized crime at the Department,
was to try to gather as much information or introduce the FBI to
possible sources of information, whatever ways to further the
program's goals.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. But yet Sally Yates -- she was your
boss, right?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You said she didn't know that you were
talking to Steele or Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. How do you know she didn't know?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 49 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. Well, I didn't tell her.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. So she may have known from some other
source.
Mr. Ohr. Possible.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Well, you would think she would, because over
at the FBI Andy McCabe knew that you were talking to Steele and
Simpson as early as August of 2016.
Mr. Ohr. Right. But I don't know what, if anything, was
conveyed to Sally Yates.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Andy McCabe knew. Did Jim Comey know in
August of 2016 that you were talking to Christopher Steele and
Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Ratcliffe. I think our first hour has expired. So I
will visit with you in a little bit.
Mr. Ohr. Okay.
[Recess]
Ms. Shen. We are back on the record. The time is 10:25.
Sir, my name is Valerie Shen. I am the chief national
security counsel for Ranking Member Cummings on the House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
Ms. Hariharan. Arya Hariharan for Ranking Member Nadler.
Ms. Shen. We will be leading the questioning on behalf of
the minority side today.
Mr. Ohr. Good morning.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 50 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Ms. Shen. Good morning.
EXAMINATION
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So I would like to ask you just some additional
background questions about your career. So we will end up
covering, I think, some of the ground that we mentioned last
round. But what is your current title at the Department of
Justice?
A I am a senior counsel in the Office of International
Affairs in the Criminal Division of the Justice Department.
Q And how long have you held that position?
A Since January of this year.
Q And how would you describe your general roles and
responsibilities in that position?
A I advise the director and deputy directors of the Office
of International Affairs in the operation of the office and the
work of the office.
Q Who is currently your direct supervisor?
A The Director of Office of International Affairs is Vaugh
Ary, A-r-y.
Q And who does Vaughn Ary report to?
A He reports to the Deputy Assistant Attorney General,
Bruce Swartz, and to the Assistant Attorney General.
Q And who does that Assistant Attorney General report to?
A The Deputy Attorney General.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 51 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Who reports to the Attorney General.
A Correct.
Q What previous positions have you held at DOJ? What was
your previous position before your current one?
A My previous position was the Director of the Organized
Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, or OCDETF, OCDETF.
Q What was your role and your responsibilities as part of
that position?
A I was the head of that component responsible for the
operation of OCDETF and helping to coordinate drug and organized
crime investigations within the Department.
Q And how long did you hold that position for?
A I had that position from late 2014 until January
of 2018, the current year.
Q And when you were in that position, who did you directly
report to?
A I reported to the Deputy Attorney General.
Q What was your position at the Department of Justice
prior to the Director of OCDETF?
A From 2011 to 2014, I was counselor for transnational
organized crime and international affairs in the Criminal
Division.
Q And what were your roles and responsibilities as part of
that position?
A I worked on organized crime policy matters and on
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 52 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
international policy and case matters as they came up.
Q And who did you report to when you were in that
position?
A To Bruce Swartz and to the Assistant Attorney General.
Q And what position did you hold at the Department of
Justice before you were the counselor for transnational organized
crime and international affairs?
A From 1999 to 2011, I was the chief of the Organized
Crime and Racketeering Section in the Criminal Division.
Q And what were your roles and responsibilities in that
position?
A I oversaw the Department of Justice's organized crime
program, primarily transnational organized crime.
Q And who did you report to as part of that position?
A I reported to one of the deputy assistant attorney
generals in the Criminal Division. For most of the time that I
was the chief of that section, I reported to Deputy Assistant
Attorney General John Keeney, K-e-e-n-e-y.
Q And what was your position at the Department of Justice
prior to that position?
A From 1991 to 1999, I was an assistant U.S. attorney in
the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York.
Q And what types of cases did you prosecute when you were
in the Southern District of New York?
A Many different kinds of cases. I served in the general
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 53 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
crimes unit, the narcotics unit, senior narcotics unit, securities
unit, the gang unit, and in my last year in the office I was the
chief of the violent gang unit.
Q As part of the chief of the violent gang unit, are there
any particular cases you found notable? Or can you just elaborate
a little bit more about your work as the chief of the violent
gangs unit?
A Our job was to prosecute the most violent gangs in New
York City. We did provide numerous prosecutions for murder,
racketeering, drugs of violent gangs in various parts of New York
City.
Q Are you a counterintelligence expert?
A No.
Q Have you ever worked as a counterintelligence
professional?
A No.
Q What would you say your professional areas of expertise
are?
A I have worked most of my career in organized crime and
drug investigations.
Q How many years of experience do you have in organized
crime?
A Certainly the time I was chief of the Organized Crime
Section, 12 years. I worked some organized crime cases when I was
an AUSA. And then as counselor -- well, I would say everything
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 54 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
since then has involved organized crime.
Q So it would be fair to say you have decades of
experience in organized crime.
A Yes.
Q Are there certain nations or regions of organized crime
that you have had a special focus on in your career?
A Yes. We are concerned with organized crime from many
different regions. Russia and the former Soviet Union is one.
Eastern Europe and the Balkans is another. Asian organized crime
and emerging organized crime groups from other parts of the world
as well.
Q So would you call yourself an expert in Russian
organized crime?
A Yes.
Q And as part of your work in Russian organized crime,
have you worked on cases involving the Russian mafia or mob? I am
not sure what the correct terminology is.
A Yes, I have overseen those kind of investigation is.
Q And in your investigations involving the Russian mafia
or mob, what types of investigations or crimes do those tend to
involve?
A They often involve fraud, public corruption, extortion,
money laundering, other crimes.
Q Do those criminal investigations sometimes involve
Russian oligarchs?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 55 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Yes.
Q Have you ever prosecuted a Russian oligarch?
A One of the cases that I had some supervisory
responsibility as the chief of the Organized Crime Section was the
prosecution of a former prime minister of Ukraine named Pavlo
Lazarenko. He was not only a former Prime Minister but he had a
great deal of money, so I suppose you could call him an oligarch.
Q What was Pavlo Lazarenko -- what kind of criminal
activity was he engaged in?
A I believe we charged him with money laundering and
fraud.
Q Can you describe in a little bit more detail what your
specific role was in that prosecution of Pavlo Lazarenko?
A The prosecution of Lazarenko was carried out by the San
Francisco Strike Force, which was in the U.S. Attorney's Office
for the Northern District of California. As the chief of the
Organized Crime Section in Washington, we had some supervisory
responsibility for all Strike Force investigations.
Q And why is his case specifically notable to you?
A He was an extremely prominent figure both politically
and having a lot of money in Ukraine. The case involved
corruption on a very large scale: theft of Ukraine Government
moneys. He came to the United States. So it was a very long and
drawn-out prosecution.
Q How long was the prosecution, do you recall?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 56 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A I don't remember exactly, but it was several years.
Q As part of the prosecution of Pavlo Lazarenko, were
there other individuals who were also prosecuted in related
crimes?
A Yes, there was another defendant in California. I
believe his name may have been Kerechenko, but I am not sure.
Q Was that individual a U.S. citizen or a Russian
national?
A I don't recall.
Q Do you recall playing a role in the 2003 indictment of
the Russian crime boss Semion Mogilevich?
A Yes.
Q Okay. And can you describe what your role was in that
prosecution?
A Again, as the chief of the Organized Crime Section, we
had some supervisory responsibility for the work of the
Philadelphia Strike Force that indicted Semion Mogilevich. I
don't recall now whether there was a RICCO charge -- I believe
there was in that case -- and we had an independent responsibility
to review and approve all RICCO indictments before they were
filed.
Q Do you recall generally what types of crimes Semion
Mogilevich was involved in?
A He was involved in stock manipulation, if I remember
correctly.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 57 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Do you recall the revocation of Russian oligarch's Oleg
Deripaska's visa around 2006?
A Yes, although there -- yes. There have been different
incidents involving Mr. Deripaska over the years, so I may have
trouble remembering specifically what happened in 2006. But yes.
Q I guess I will go to the beginning. What is sort of
your earliest recollection of your official involvement in
prosecution or activity involving Oleg Deripaska?
A I don't recall my first exposure to matters involving
Mr. Deripaska, but I do recall that, at some point, it may have
been in 2006, I worked with the FBI and with other U.S. Government
agencies to try to limit Mr. Deripaska's access to the United
States.
Q And why did yourself and the FBI believe Mr. Deripaska's
access to the United States should be limited at that time?
Mr. Weinsheimer. He really can't get into other
investigations and the basis for that investigation.
Ms. Shen. Okay.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q Can you describe as a more general matter why Mr. Oleg
Deripaska was on the United States Government radar?
A I can say generally that Mr. Deripaska's activities have
been of concern to the U.S. Government for some time.
Q So, overall, would it be fair to say that you have
significant experience in investigating and prosecuting Russian
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 58 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
organized crime, including Russian oligarchs with connection to
the Russian Government?
A Yes.
Q Mr. Ohr, why did you decide to join the Justice
Department?
A I wanted to prosecute cases. I believe strongly in the
mission of the Department of Justice, to protect our American
citizens by investigating and prosecuting crime. That is what I
wanted to do.
Q And in your nearly three decades at the Justice
Department, what would you call your proudest accomplishment?
A It is hard to single out any particular accomplishment.
I think I feel very privileged to have been able to work at the
Department for this long. I think when a prosecutor looks back on
their career, they remember things like their first trial, they
remember things like their longest trial. Those tend to stick out
more than stuff that you do in a managerial capacity. But it
would be hard for me to single out any one episode.
Q Let me just step back for a moment, just because there
is certainly a lot of mention of Russian oligarchs in the news
these days. Certainly, some of the individuals are part of our
investigation. And with your experience, I was wondering if you
could elaborate at a higher level to, you know, if and why you
think it is important for us to understand what the national
security implications are of these individuals and the crimes they
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 59 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
commit.
I mean, a lot of these crimes we talk about are of a
financial nature, money laundering. But I don't think it really
puts maybe the full context of perhaps the import, you know, to
the country.
So I was just wondering if you could speak a little bit more
in detail about, you know, the body of work that you have been
engaged in and how you think people should really think about
these cases in a larger sense, right, and why they should matter
to them.
A Okay. I will try to answer that question.
You began with Russian oligarchs. I think one thing that
outsiders do not always understand is that Russia works
differently from the United States and most Western countries,
that Russia is a place where, unfortunately, crime and corruption
are quite pervasive, and that the line between government,
business, and organized crime is thin, gray, nonexistent, whatever
you want to say. So what people might look at as a business deal
or a government action often may be linked to criminal activity.
And so we have to be very careful when we see Russian criminal,
business, or government activity and be aware that they often flow
into each other.
It is my experience that Russian criminals, businessmen,
government officials often use the government for their own
private ends, and, conversely, the Russian state often uses
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 60 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
oligarchs and criminals for government ends, to an extent which I
think is not well understood by most people in the West.
Q Okay. So, if I am hearing right, it sounds like in
Russia it is often indistinguishable, criminal networks from the
official Russian Government network, and where those boundaries
may lie. Is that accurate to say?
A Yes.
Q Okay. And so would it be fair to say that the
activities of Russian oligarchs who may be involved in crimes is
especially notable because they are also so heavily involved in
the business of the official Russian state? Is that a fair
statement?
A Yes.
Q You know, we have also -- I have certainly heard many
reports about particular acts of violence both within official
Russian state officials but also these so-called Russian
oligarchs.
So I was wondering if you could speak more -- is that
something you have witnessed in your experience as well, in the
course of your prosecutions, just certain threats that may not be
as familiar to the tactics that we would expect of U.S.
businessmen, certainly?
A Yes. Because the lines are so blurry in Russia, there
is always the potential for violence. At different times since
the fall of the Soviet Union, the violence has been more or less
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 61 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
explicit, but the threat of violence is always there. And people
who are doing things in Russia that involve a lot of money or
government actions, I think, always are calculating whether some
sort of violence could occur.
Q Has a specific threat of violence ever come up either
for you personally or a colleague of yours as they have been
involving themselves in investigating or prosecuting a case
related with Russia?
A I don't believe I recall any times where I have
personally felt threatened. I think investigators working in this
area are always cautious. I can't remember any specific
incidents, as I sit here.
Q I imagine that yourself and other prosecutors,
investigators who work in Russian organized crime would have
contacts with certain sources or at least sources who are sources
who are either Russian nationals or have ties to that world. Do
you feel like the threat of violence affects the type of sourcing
that you tend to be involved in?
A Sure. I think people who are reporting or conveying
information about Russian organized crime and corruption, I think
they are very concerned about their safety.
Q And so, in your experience, the sources related to your
work, is it, in your mind, especially important to keep their
identities confidential because of the potential risk to personal
safety?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 62 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Yes.
Q Okay.
Mr. Ohr, I would like to turn back now to really just kind of
lay out the chronology of your relationship with Mr. Steele and
some of the contacts that you have had over the years just so we
can get a complete understanding of how that developed and where
we are today.
So, as I am sure you might have gathered, one of the major
reasons you have been asked to appear before this joint
investigation is related to your relationship with Christopher
Steele and your contacts with him. So how did you first meet Mr.
Steele?
A I believe I met Chris Steele for the first time around
2007. That was an official meeting. At that time, he was still
employed by the British Government. I went to London to talk with
British Government officials about Russian organized crime and
what they were doing to look at the threat, and the FBI office at
the U.S. Embassy in London set up a meeting. That was with Chris
Steele. And there were other members of different British
Government agencies there. And we met and had a discussion. And
afterwards, I believe the agent and I spoke with Chris Steele
further over lunch.
That was, I think, the first time I met him.
Q And you said that Mr. Steele worked for the British
Government at the time. Was that at MI-6?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 63 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Yes.
Q And you said in this meeting that he was one of several
British Government employees at the meeting?
A Yes.
Q So, based on that introduction, is it fair to say that
your contacts with Christopher Steele began as a, you know, shared
professional specialization?
A Yes.
Q And that specialization would be Russian organized
crime?
A Yes.
Q So, at the time that you were introduced to Mr. Steele,
was he considered a specialist in Russian organized crime?
A That was my understanding, yes.
Q Subsequent to that first meeting, did you attend other
related meetings or events with Mr. Steele?
A Around the beginning of 2008, I recollect meeting Chris
Steele -- I believe this was the next time I met him -- at some
sort of a conference in England. I forget the exact location, but
it was talking about Russian organized crime. And there were many
participants there -- I don't remember exactly -- and Chris Steele
was one of the people there.
Q How did you run into him? Was he a panelist? Did you
see him, recognize him? How did that --
A I think it was the latter, but I don't recall exactly.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 64 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Okay. So, at the time that you met Mr. Steele again, it
was in the capacity as a previous or a professional contact or
acquaintance. Is that correct?
A That is right.
Q Okay. Is it generally common to encounter either
current or former law enforcement or intelligence officials at
such conferences?
A Yes.
Q Okay. Rough estimate, how often would you say you
encountered, you know, such individuals, like, a second time at an
event like that?
A It is pretty common. I can't give a percentage.
Q But you wouldn't be surprised at all to see a familiar
face from your professional network at a conference like that.
A Exactly.
Q Okay.
Can you sort of describe in general terms the community of
law enforcement and intelligence officials who do specialize in
Russian organized crime? You know, would you call it an extremely
large number of people or limited? I am just trying to get a
sense of the world and sort of how tight-knit it is versus who is
likely to know each other where.
A I couldn't give you an exact number, obviously, but I
know the number of agents and prosecutors working on, say, Russian
organized crime matters has historically been pretty small. That
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 65 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
goes both for the United States and for other nations as well.
So, over the years, you tend to meet most of the people who are
working in this area.
Q Okay. So, of the specialists who work in Russian
organized crime, there are very few specialists that you wouldn't
know, given the number of years you have been working in this
area. Is that fair to say?
A I probable know most of them, yes.
Q Okay. And most of these other individuals probably also
know each other and likely have professional contacts with each
other over the years?
A Yes.
Q So I guess it would be fair to say that your association
with Mr. Steele developed naturally because, again, there are just
only so many expert in Russian organized crime. Is that correct?
A Yes.
Q And so you did not develop a relationship with
Mr. Steele for any improper or political purpose.
A That is correct.
Q Would you describe your relationship with Mr. Steele as
a purely professional one?
A Over the years, we would talk and have lunch together.
So I would say, you know, we would talk a little bit about our
families. So, in that sense, it is professional, but it is a
cordial relationship.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 66 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Sure. So you would talk about your families in a way
that, say, work colleagues might talk about their families?
A Yes.
Q So, since meeting Mr. Steele and sort of the two
specific meetings we just talked about, how often would you
estimate you had contacts with him subsequently?
A It is hard to say. Maybe once a year. It might be a
couple of years between hearing from him, or I might hear from him
twice in 1 year. But not that frequently.
Q What form did these contacts tend to take place? Were
they in person? Calls? Emails?
A Some of both. At some point, Chris Steele left the
British Government and became involved with a firm called Orbis.
And, at that point, I know he -- sometime after that we were in
contact, and we stayed in contact. So sometimes it was by
telephone, email.
Q And, generally speaking, what were the purposes of your
contacts with Mr. Steele?
A Generally, Mr. Steele would be providing some
information about Russian organized crime that he thought would be
of interest to the U.S. Government.
Q And so these contacts with Mr. Steele tended to be
related to your work in Russian organized crime.
A Yes.
Q And throughout your contacts with him, did you consider
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 67 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Steele to be a trustworthy expert in his field?
A Yes. He was certainly very skilled, and, yes, I believe
he was pretty trustworthy.
Q Did Mr. Steele ever have involvement in or make
contributions to any of your prosecutions at the Department of
Justice?
A Chris Steele provided information that did help specific
cases, yes.
Q And did you sometimes also consult with him on your
official matters, or was it more just receiving information?
A I think it was more receiving information.
Q And this information that you received from Mr. Steele
proved credible and actionable in some of your cases?
A At least in some of the cases, I think it was
actionable, yes.
Q Okay.
So now I would like to sort of switch to the 2016-2017
timeframe. And since we are in unclassified setting, I will try
to keep all the information to that, but if at any point you think
the answer does involve classified information, please just let us
know, and we can address that.
Do you recall what your first contact was with Mr. Steele in
2016?
A I believe we had some sort of email contact early in
2016.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 68 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q And what did that contact consist of?
A He was providing some information about Oleg Deripaska.
Q And, again, we heard his name in the last round, but can
you just briefly describe to us, like, who is Oleg Deripaska,
like, what is his significance?
A Oleg Deripaska is a Russian oligarch. He, until very
recently, was the head of a company called RUSAL, one of the
biggest, if not the biggest, aluminum producers in the world. He
also has connections to organized crime and to the Russian
Government.
Q And why did Mr. Steele reach out to you about Oleg
Deripaska?
A I believe he was letting me know that Mr. Deripaska
would be in the United States at some point.
Q And why did you believe he thought that would be
information significant to you?
A I don't recall. I mean, I don't know exactly what he
was thinking. He was just letting me know in case we wanted to do
something, I suppose.
Q What was your reaction to receiving that information?
A I thanked him for the information.
Q Did you respond to him in any way at the time?
A I think my response was basically, "Thank you. I'll
keep an eye on it," or something like that.
Q So it was just a piece of information that he thought
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 69 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
you might be interested in, but it wasn't part of an existing
conversation or it wasn't part of some larger conversation at the
time.
A We had spoken about Deripaska over the years, so it is
just the latest bit of information.
Q Okay. Do you recall what your next contact was with Mr.
Steele after that regarding Deripaska?
A Not specifically. I know there were a couple of
contacts early in the year, but then I don't remember exactly what
the next contact was.
Q Do you recall if Mr. Steele brought issues to you other
than regarding Mr. Deripaska in the early 2016
timeframe or later in the year?
A As I sit here, I don't recall if there were any other
topics.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 1
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So I am going to introduce as exhibit 1 a July 1, 2016,
email from yourself to Chris Steele with the subject matter
"Availability for a Skype com with CDS?"
Mr. Ohr, are you familiar with this email chain?
A Yes.
Q Okay.
I will also note that this email is Bates-stamped
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 70 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
HPSCI-32318-DOJ-6, indicating that it was produced to the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and marked "law
enforcement sensitive" in the header. This document was, however,
recently leaked to the press and posted online.
So, in the first message at the bottom of the page,
Mr. Steele writes to you, quote: "Dear Bruce, I hope all is well
with you. I am seeing" -- redacted -- "in London next week to
discuss ongoing business, but there is something separate I want
to discuss informally and separately. It concerns our favorite
business tycoon."
So, Mr. Ohr, I think you already answered this question, but
can you describe what Mr. Steele wanted to discuss with you
informally and separately about your favorite business tycoon?
A I don't recall if this is the specific time he raised
it, but I think he was letting me know that there might be an
opportunity to interview Oleg Deripaska.
Q So, again, "our favorite business tycoon" is a reference
to Oleg Deripaska?
A Yes.
Q And the "favorite business tycoon" is not a reference to
then-candidate Donald Trump?
A No.
Q Can you speak a little bit more to why during this
timeframe Mr. Steele would reach out to you again involving Mr.
Deripaska?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 71 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Again, I am not 100 percent sure just from looking at
this document, but I believe that at about this time Chris Steele
was letting me know that there might be an opportunity for the
U.S. Government to interview Oleg Deripaska.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 2
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So I am now going to introduce as exhibit 2 an email
chain dated July 30, 2016, between yourself and Chris Steele with
the subject "CDS in D.C."
It is also Bates-stamped with HPSCI-DOJ-8 and marked "law
enforcement sensitive" in the header. This document was also
leaked to the press and posted publicly recently.
Mr. Ohr, are you familiar with this email chain?
A Yes.
Q So, at the top of the chain, Mr. Steele writes, quote:
"Great to see you and Nellie this morning, Bruce. Let's keep in
touch on the substantive issues. Glenn is happy to speak to you
on this if it would help."
Mr. Ohr, who were all the attendees of this morning meeting
referred to in the chain?
A Chris Steele was there. He had an associate at the
meeting whose name I do not recall. And my wife, Nellie, and I.
Q Okay. And what were the substantive issues that were
raised during this meeting?
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A Chris Steele provided some information to us.
Specifically, he -- these are the things I mentioned before. He
talked about the people that Carter Page had met with when he was
in Moscow sometime before this. He told me that the former head
of -- or he had information that the former head of the Russian
foreign intelligence service had said that they had Trump over a
barrel. And he told me that Paul Hauser, a lawyer who worked for
Oleg Deripaska, was collecting information about a large amount of
money that Oleg Deripaska had -- or that Paul Manafort had stolen
from Oleg Deripaska.
Q So I believe in the last round you said that some of
these Carter Page meetings were with high-level Russian officials.
Is that accurate?
A Yes.
Q And did you recall any of the names of the high-level
Russian officials?
A The trouble is that there are several high-level Russian
officials with similar names. So I do not want to get the wrong
name here.
Q Okay. Was it notable to you that Carter Page had
in-person meetings with high-level Russian officials?
A Yes. In combination with the other item that Chris
Steele mentioned, it was very concerning, yes.
Q Okay. So it is not typical to hear about a U.S. citizen
who has meetings with high-level Russian officials. Is that fair
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 73 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
to say?
A Yes. But, in particular, in this case, I think there
had been a press story where Carter Page or some associate claimed
he had met with different people. So it was particularly
concerning here because it sounded like he may be concealing that
he had met with higher-level Russian officials.
Q I see. So Mr. Steele was bringing you information not
just about what he believed were meetings that took place but
meetings that were attempted to be concealed. Is that correct?
A Yes.
Q Okay.
So, in that same email, the "Glenn," is that a reference to
Mr. Glenn Simpson?
A Yes.
Q And why do you think Mr. Steele suggested that you might
want to talk to Glenn about these issues -- Mr. Simpson?
A Well, I don't know exactly what Chris Steele was
thinking, of course, but I knew that Chris Steele was working for
Glenn Simpson and that Glenn might have additional information
that Chris either didn't have or was not authorized to prevent,
give me, or whatever.
Q Did you, in fact, talk to Mr. Simpson about these
issues?
A I believe I spoke with Mr. Simpson a few weeks later in
August.
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Q And did Mr. Simpson provide you additional details
about --
A He did provide me some additional information.
Q What were some of those additional details?
A Again, I don't want to -- I met with him a couple times
and I met with Chris Steele a couple times, so I don't want to get
it wrong. I don't know exactly what Glenn Simpson provided in
August.
Q Were there any other topics that were discussed during
your July 30, 2016, meeting?
A Yes, there were. Based on my sketchy notes from the
time, I think there was some information relating to the Russian
doping scandal, but I don't recall the substance of that. And
based on my notes, it indicated that Chris Steele had provided
some reports to the FBI, I think two, but that Glenn Simpson had
more.
Q Was this the Russian doping scandal related to the FIFA
allegations?
A I don't recall.
Q Okay.
So your wife, Nellie, also attended this meeting. What, if
any, role did she participate in the substantive discussions?
A I don't think she said anything. And I don't know if
she was present for all of the discussion, because Chris Steele
and I, at least for part of the discussion, were standing away
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from the table. But she was there, and she certainly heard some
of it.
Q Okay.
And did any topic of this meeting relate to your ongoing
substantive work at Department of Justice?
A Yes. It was relating to Russian organized crime and
Russian Government actions. To me, it seemed like, yes, it was
part of the same topics I had been pursuing for many years.
Q During this meeting, did you also talk about the Trump
campaign and the fall election?
A Yes. The Carter Page information I think was
significant because there was some sort of connection, at least in
the press I think, between Carter Page and the Trump campaign.
And, of course, the second item had to do with supposedly the
Russian foreign intelligence service having some kind of
compromising information about Donald Trump.
Q Remind me, I think the term you had used was "had Trump
over a barrel." Is that accurate?
A That is what my notes indicate. I think that is what
Chris said.
Q Okay. And how did you interpret "having Trump over a
barrel" to mean?
A My interpretation is that that meant that, if true, the
Russian Government had some kind of compromising material on
Donald Trump.
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Q Okay. So, in reporting this to you, do you believe
Mr. Steele believed it to be true that the Russian Government had
some sort of compromising material on then-candidate Donald Trump?
A I think -- my impression is that Chris Steele believed
his sources. What I should say in addition, though, is that
whenever you are dealing with information from Russia, you have to
be careful, because it is a very complicated place. And so even
information from a good source has to be looked at carefully.
Q Okay.
In the last round, I think someone noted that shortly after
this July 30 meeting the FBI's investigation into potential
coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia was initiated
by the FBI, although you weren't aware of that at the time. Is
that correct?
A That is right.
Q Okay. So, just to be clear, your July 30, 2016, meeting
didn't have anything to do with the decision to initiate the
investigation into links between Russia and the Trump campaign?
A None that I know of.
Q Okay.
So, moving back to, I guess, August 2016, do you recall if
Mr. Steele maintained contact with you into the summer and the
fall of 2016?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 77 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[11:12 a.m.]
Mr. Ohr. Yes. But I don't know -- the next time I'm aware
of meeting with Chris Steele is in September. So, yes.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q And what took place at that September meeting with Chris
Steele?
A Chris Steele was in Washington, D.C., again, and he
reached out to me, and, again, we met for breakfast, and he
provided some additional information.
Q And can you describe what that additional information
was he provided?
A Again, I would have to look at my notes because I don't
want to mix up the different meetings.
Q Okay. Is it fair to say was it a follow-on conversation
from the July 30, 2016? Was it similar topics?
A Yes.
Q Okay. Did you have any other meetings in 2016 after
that September 2016 meeting with Christopher Steele?
A I don't believe so.
Q Okay. Did you continue to speak or exchange
communications with Chris Steele after that --
A Yes.
Q -- September 2016 meeting?
A Sorry. Yes.
Q And were those communications on the same set of topics
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that were brought up previously in the July 30, 2016, meeting?
A Yes.
Q Okay. Were there any communications you had with Chris
Steele in the rest of 2016 that were separate topics entirely,
unrelated to what was discussed previously?
A At some point Chris Steele provided me with some
information about an unrelated matter. I don't recall if it was
2016 or 2017.
Q But would it be accurate to say that the rest of your
contacts, communications with Mr. Steele in 2016 once again
related to the substantive information he provided during that
July 30, 2016, meeting?
A Yes. We were following along on -- he was providing
more information along the same lines.
Q So some of these communications, did they relate to the
Russian Government's intent to interfere with the 2016
Presidential election?
A That is how I read it, yes.
Q Okay. And did Mr. Steele provide you specific
information related to the Russian Government's attempt to
interfere with the Presidential election?
A I believe so, yes.
Q And I think I know the answer to this, but so a number
of Mr. Steele's communications were related to members of the
Trump campaign and allegations of colluding with Russia. Is that
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correct?
A I believe so, yes.
Q The information that Mr. Steele relayed to you in 2016,
did you share this information with Federal law enforcement
officials?
A Yes, I did.
Q Okay. And who exactly did you share the information
with?
A As I mentioned earlier, my first move was to reach out
for Andrew McCarthy.
Q Or Andrew McCabe is what you meant?
A McCabe, yes. Not McCarthy. I'm sorry. Andrew McCarthy
will be angry. I know him, too.
But Andy McCabe, yes, and met with him and Lisa Page and
provided information to him. I subsequently met with Lisa Page,
Peter Strzok, and eventually Joe Pientka at the FBI. And I also
provided this information to people in the criminal division,
specifically Bruce Swartz, Zainab Ahmad, and Andrew Weissman.
Q Okay. So I believe you described a meeting you attended
with Lisa Page and Peter Strzok and officials in the criminal
division. Is that correct?
A Yes.
Q And I believe you said earlier that you did not know
Peter Strzok prior to that meeting. Is that correct?
A I believe that is correct.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 80 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Did you know Lisa Page prior to that meeting?
A Yes.
Q Okay. How did you know Lisa Page?
A Lisa Page had previously been a trial attorney in the
organized crime and racketeering section, so she was one of my
employees.
Q Oh, okay. The other criminal division officials at that
meeting, did you know them prior to that meeting?
A Yes. I worked with Mr. Swartz for many years, and I had
worked with Ms. Ahmad for a lesser period of time when she was on
detail to Washington. And I don't recall for sure whether Andrew
Weissman was present at this particular meeting, but I know him
for -- I've known him for some years as well.
Q And, again, what exactly was the purpose of that
meeting? Was that for you to relay specific information to those
individuals?
A That was part of the purpose of the meeting. I think
the criminal division officials also wanted to make sure that the
criminal and national security parts of the FBI were talking or
communicating.
Q So in other words, there was a desire to have the people
with the right portfolios in the room on the same page, to have
the same information. Is that --
A I believe that's -- yes.
Q What was your understanding of why Lisa Page was a part
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of that meeting? Was it as a -- how do I say -- as someone
representing Mr. McCabe and reporting back to him, or was it a
different capacity?
A Well, she had been introduced into this with my first
meeting with Andrew McCabe. So, yes, in that sense. But I don't
know what she was reporting or exactly what her responsibilities
were as part of this subsequent meeting.
Q Sure. I'll just ask it more generally. What was your
understanding of why Lisa Page was participating in that meeting?
A I think she was working on the investigation.
Q Okay. And what was your understanding of why Peter
Strzok specifically was in that meeting?
A I believe he was working on the investigation as well.
Q Again, I mean, this was discussed last round.
Obviously, these two names have been in the news for lots of
different reasons. I guess I just want to be able to dispel any
notion that there's anything more perhaps than two officials
performing their jobs at the time.
So trying to form the question. Do you have any reason to
believe that Lisa Page and Peter Stzrok's attendance at this
meeting should indicate any nefarious purpose or concern or
implication of bias on the Russian investigation or law
enforcement community at large?
A The answer is no. I saw their participation as
appropriate since I had originally conveyed my information to
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Mr. McCabe, and he in turn had put Lisa Page and then Peter Strzok
in contact with me. So it seemed like the natural progression.
And in addition, Peter Strzok and Lisa Page were -- said they
would put me in contact with a line-level FBI agent who would be
my contact. And so that also seemed appropriate.
Q Okay. So subsequent to that meeting, Lisa Page and
Peter Strzok were not your main points of contact at the FBI. Is
that correct?
A That's correct.
Q So at the time you decided to share the information you
received from Mr. Steele with Federal law enforcement, were you
directed to share this information by someone or was this a
proactive decision on your part?
A It was my decision.
Q And why did you think it was important to share this
information with the FBI?
A I was very concerned when I got the information. It
seemed to have very serious national security implications. I
wanted to get it to the officials, the career officials, who would
be able to take the information and evaluate it and decide whether
further action was appropriate.
Q Okay. And I think you mentioned earlier that this is
something you had done before, which is to pass on fact
information to the FBI. Is that correct?
A That's correct.
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Q And in the past, did you do so for similar reasons
because you had a national security concern or something of that
nature?
A Whenever I received information that had an organized
crime or a national security nexus, I would convey that
information to the FBI.
Q Okay. So even if an issue wasn't part of your current
official duties, you thought it was an appropriate practice or a
desired practice perhaps to pass information to the FBI. Is that
correct?
A Any time a citizen gets information about a crime or a
national security threat it's appropriate to convey it to the FBI.
Q Okay. Thank you.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 3
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q Okay. I'd like to introduce as exhibit 3 a letter dated
July 6, 2018, from Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck
Grassley to Deputy Director Rosenstein and FBI Director Wray that
in its first paragraph is, quote: Formally requesting the
declassification of the FD-302 interview summaries in which Bruce
Ohr relayed his contacts with Christopher Steele and to request
that you produce the declassified versions directly to the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
Mr. Ohr, are you familiar at all with this letter?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 84 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A No.
Q Okay. I'll give you some time to review if you would
like.
A Okay.
Q Okay. So on page 2 of the letter it lists 12 separate
dates and 302s where the FBI interviewed you indicating the first
interview took place on November 22, 2016, and the last one on
May 15, 2017. Is this list of interviews and dates generally
consistent with your recollection?
A Yes.
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. Right. Right. I can't recall specific dates.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q But nothing strikes you as being inaccurate looking at
it? I mean, understanding that there's -- you're not going to be
able to actually remember each date for the interview, but this is
a rough timeframe that you recall being interviewed in?
A Yes. The caveat I would say is, I continued to have
some conversations with Christopher Steele after May 15, 2017.
I've reported all of those to the FBI, but I do not see any 302s
relating to those conversations.
Q Okay. Generally, how soon after communications with
Mr. Steele would you notify the FBI?
A As quickly as possible, same day or the next day,
whenever possible.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 85 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Okay. And after you notified the FBI, how soon after
that would the FBI be able to interview you about those
communications?
A Usually within a day.
Q Did you provide any documents or evidence to the FBI as
part of these interviews?
A We mentioned two memory sticks, so I provided those to
the FBI.
Q Okay. Did you provide any other documents or evidence
other than two memory sticks?
A On a couple of occasions I had written up my notes. And
I don't recall whether I gave them copies or showed them, but I
may have given them copies.
Q Okay. And these notes, were they contemporaneous with
your meetings or calls with Mr. Steele?
A I didn't generally write note -- well, yes. But when I
met with Chris Steele or Glenn Simpson I did not take notes during
the meeting, so I would have written something after.
Ms. Shen. Okay. All right. Thank you. And I think we're
out of time for this round, so we'll take a short break. Thank
you.
[Recess.]
Mr. Parmiter. Let's go back on the record.
Mr. Meadows.
Mr. Meadows. Mr. Ohr, thank you for your testimony. I guess
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 86 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
I'm going to just try to ask some clarifying questions because my
good friend, Mr. Gowdy, is a prosecutor and an attorney, and I
guess some of this stuff I'm just scratching my head to figure out
why it would have happened this way.
So for the record, you said Sally Yates did not know, to your
knowledge, that you were involved in coordinating with the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. That's right, to my knowledge.
Mr. Meadows. Are there other types of investigations that
you've been involved with where you didn't inform those that you
reported to?
Mr. Ohr. When I'm working on -- when I was working on cases,
of course, I would inform my superiors on the cases.
Mr. Meadows. Right. But she was your superior, so why would
you have not informed her of you working, it seemed like, multiple
times on this particular investigative matter with the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I wasn't serving as an investigator or
prosecutor on that case. I was simply getting source lead
information.
Mr. Meadows. So did you get any of that information -- were
you paid on official DOJ time while you got the information?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. I think it's overall part of my job, but it
wasn't a case, so --
Mr. Meadows. So you're saying it was part of your job to do
it, but it was not part of your job to inform your supervisors?
Mr. Ohr. I thought the information --
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 87 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Meadows. Because I have a hard time with that. I think
most of the American people would have a hard time. Why would
Bruce Ohr independently engage 60-plus times with Christopher
Steele, through text messages or phone calls or personal meetings,
and not inform anybody at DOJ?
Mr. Ohr. Well, first of all, I did inform some people at
DOJ --
Mr. Meadows. So who did you inform?
Mr. Ohr. -- in the criminal division. But what I would --
Mr. Meadows. So who did you inform? Who did you inform at
DOJ?
Mr. Ohr. The people I mentioned, some people in the criminal
division, Bruce Swartz, Zainab Ahmad, Andrew Weissman.
Mr. Meadows. So why would you have informed Bruce Swartz and
not Sally Yates?
Mr. Ohr. My -- at the time my lead was this is source
information, lead information. It's nothing that they can do
anything with. It should be passed to the FBI for them to use it
or not as they feel appropriate.
And it was obviously, you know, scary, inflammatory, however
you want to characterize it, and I did not want -- I wanted to
keep it in the career channels where agents would do whatever was
appropriate with it and not make it part of a larger policy
discussion.
Mr. Meadows. Well, so how do you reconcile that, wanting to
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 88 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
keep it in the proper channels, that you use this improper or
unconventional channel to actually get this information to the
FBI? Why would you be so concerned about protocol in one area and
yet do something that, according to your previous testimony,
you've never done since you were employed at DOJ since 1991,
you've never acted in this way before, why would you have been so
concerned about protocol in one area and not protocol in the other
area?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I think as I said before, I have received
information from different people about organized crime over the
years, and in each case I've provided it to the FBI. Frankly, I
don't think most of that got to the level where my superiors, you
know, would have had any use for that information or had any, you
know, anything they could do with the information.
So this wasn't the first time I had spoken directly to the
FBI. That was a regular practice of mine to let the FBI know
whatever I heard.
Mr. Meadows. Was it a regular practice in those previous
examples that you're thinking of to let the people that you
reported to know that you had received information?
Mr. Ohr. It's hard to characterize generally, but, you
know --
Mr. Meadows. Well, you were remembering other instances that
you were just sharing. So is it your typical habit to let your
supervisor or those you report to know your professional activity?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 89 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. In general, yes.
Mr. Meadows. And so in this particular case, you believed
because the information was that salacious or inflammatory, I
guess, is what you were saying, and not necessarily, I guess,
could not be used, I guess is your word, is that correct, could
not be used? That's what you just said?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall exactly what I just said, but yeah,
what -- I think maybe I misspoke. What I said is that I didn't
think my superiors in the Deputy Attorney General's Office would
be able to act on that information because they're not --
Mr. Meadows. But you could?
Mr. Ohr. I could pass it to the FBI --
Mr. Meadows. You could act on it, but they couldn't?
Mr. Ohr. I could pass it to the FBI. All they could do is
pass it to the FBI.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So let me go a little bit further.
So obviously this relationship that you had with the FBI matured
as it got closer to the 2016 election and beyond. There were more
contacts, wouldn't you --
Mr. Ohr. There were more contacts.
Mr. Meadows. So earlier in your testimony you talked about
the fact that you had a personal relationship with Glenn Simpson
that dated back, I think, several years, is what you said.
Mr. Ohr. I wouldn't necessarily call it personal, but, yes,
I had met him several times over the years.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 90 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Meadows. All right. And so when, at what point did you
reach out to Mr. Simpson as it relates to your wife's contract
work?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I ever reached out to Glenn Simpson
about my wife's work.
Mr. Meadows. So how did she get a contract with Glenn
Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I know there was some sort of
contact, but it wasn't by me.
Mr. Meadows. So you know about all of her helping write the
dossier and do -- and give you this information, but you don't
know how she got a contract? You mean a husband and wife -- she's
getting paid -- how much did she get paid?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember exactly.
Mr. Meadows. Approximately?
Mr. Ohr. I don't even know. Any guess I would make would be
wrong.
Mr. Meadows. So you can recall with specificity some of this
other stuff, but you can't recall how much your wife got paid and
how she got the job?
Mr. Ohr. Well, my wife was a Russia --
Mr. Meadows. I find that curious as a prosecutor how you
would not remember those things.
Mr. Ohr. My wife is a Russia analyst. She's worked in the
field for several years as well.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 91 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Meadows. I didn't ask about her credentials.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Meadows. How did she get a contract job with Glenn
Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember who made the contact, whether she
spoke with Glenn Simpson directly or whether there was another
party or someone else involved. I just know it wasn't me.
Mr. Meadows. So when she came home and said, "Honey, I got a
job with Glenn Simpson," what did you say?
Mr. Ohr. Oh, I'm sure we had a conversation at the time. I
just can't remember now.
Mr. Meadows. Did you say there may be a conflict of interest
if she's being -- if Glenn Simpson is being paid by the DNC or
Hillary Clinton and I'm working for the Department of Justice?
Could there potentially be a conflict? Did you say anything like
that?
Mr. Ohr. Well, my wife started working for Glenn Simpson,
doing -- a contractor for Fusion GPS in late 2015, and I don't
believe it had anything to do with the campaign at that point.
Mr. Meadows. So she never talked about the campaign with
you?
Mr. Ohr. Well, at some point I became aware that the topics
she was researching had to do with the possible --
Mr. Meadows. When did you become aware?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall exactly.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 92 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Meadows. So when you became aware what was your
conversation? Did you tell her that it created a problem for you
because you were with the Department of Justice?
Mr. Ohr. I think she can work for the firm that has dealings
with the DNC. I don't think that's --
Mr. Meadows. And you can investigate it -- while she's
working for the firm that is hired by the DNC and you can be the
source that leads information from that same group to the FBI? Do
you not see a problem with that, Mr. Ohr?
Mr. Ohr. I can't --
Mr. Meadows. I mean, would you do it the same way if you had
it to do over again, Mr. Ohr?
Mr. Ohr. That's hard to say. I was not part of the
investigation. I did not have any kind of investigative --
Mr. Meadows. But you were part of the investigation. You
coordinated with the FBI. You're part of the investigation.
Mr. Ohr. I -- as I saw it --
Mr. Meadows. Multiple times, according to your own
testimony.
Mr. Ohr. As I saw it, I was receiving information that I
passed to people who were working on the investigation, and they
decided what to do with it. I don't know what they did with it.
I don't know whether -- I don't know what investigations
specifically were existing at the time. I didn't have any input
or work on those investigations. I'm just providing
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 93 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
information --
Mr. Meadows. Well, hold on. I want to give you a chance to
correct. You had no input into the investigation. Is that your
sworn testimony here today?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I did. I was providing information
that I knew to --
Mr. Meadows. So you gave no commentary on the validity of
what the source told you or what you thought? You gave no
commentary?
Mr. Ohr. I --
Mr. Meadows. Your 302s don't suggest that.
Mr. Ohr. No. I warned them that my wife work for Fusion
GPS.
Mr. Meadows. When did you do that?
Mr. Ohr. When I first spoke with Mr. McCabe.
Mr. Meadows. In August of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, uh-huh.
Mr. Meadows. So in August of 2016 you tell Andy McCabe that
you're concerned because your wife works for Fusion GPS and that's
where you're getting the information?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. I wanted Mr. McCabe to know that there was a
possible, you know -- that the --
Mr. Meadows. Conflict of interest --
Mr. Ohr. -- of interest or appearance thereof, yeah.
Mr. Meadows. So there's a possible conflict of interest in
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August of 2016 before a FISA warrant is actually initiated?
Mr. Ohr. Well, first of all, let me --
Mr. Meadows. Is that correct?
Mr. Ohr. No, because what -- I think I did not mean to say
conflict of interest. What I would say is that in evaluating any
information that I transmitted to the FBI, I wanted the FBI to be
aware of any possible bias --
Mr. Meadows. So you believe there was the possibility of
bias?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Meadows. Okay. So there's a possibility of bias, and
that would affect the credibility of this confidential human
source or the information you got from them?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So when your conversations -- and
so I assume that you had a conversation with Glenn Simpson
sometime between July 30, when you met with Christopher Steele,
and this August meeting?
Mr. Ohr. We must have reached out somehow to arrange the
August meeting, but I don't think there was any substantive
conversation.
Mr. Meadows. So text messages, maybe a phone call here or
there to try to arrange it?
Mr. Ohr. Something to arrange the meeting, yes.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So you're the coordinating person
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to bring an opposition research group together with the FBI. Why
did it take Bruce Ohr? Why did it not take -- you know, why was
it not Peter Strzok? Why was it not someone else? Why would it
take someone with the Department of Justice to do that?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I know -- I don't know why Peter Strzok or
someone else --
Mr. Meadows. Could it be because your wife worked with
Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Meadows. Oh, you're saying that had nothing to do with
it?
Mr. Ohr. No. I know Glenn Simpson separately. And Chris
Steele had mentioned in July, I believe, that Glenn Simpson might
be willing to talk to me, so yes.
Mr. Meadows. So why was Christopher Steele so interested in
the 2016 Presidential election? From what I read he's from
England. Why would he be so concerned and so against Donald
Trump, the candidate, that he would want you to talk to Glenn
Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. Chris Steele has, for a long time, been very
concerned about Russian crime and corruption and what he sees as
Russian malign acts around the world, in the U.S., U.K., and
elsewhere. And if he had information that he believed showed that
the Russian Government was acting in a hostile way to the United
States, he wanted to get that information to me.
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Mr. Meadows. So if he's real concerned about Russian
intervention, why would you and Mr. Steele be talking about trying
to make sure that Mr. Deripaska could get into the United States
when the State Department didn't want him here? But you and
Mr. Steele wanted to make sure that Mr. Deripaska got here. If he
was concerned about Russian interference, why would you be doing
that?
Mr. Ohr. First of all, I did not want Mr. Deripaska to come
to the United States.
Mr. Meadows. Well, the emails exchanged suggest something
very different.
Mr. Ohr. I respectfully disagree. I know Chris Steele --
Mr. Meadows. So why would Chris Steele then?
Mr. Ohr. I think Chris Steele --
Mr. Meadows. I mean, what did he convey to you?
Mr. Ohr. He conveyed, I believe, if I remember correctly,
that there might be an opportunity to interview Mr. Deripaska.
Mr. Meadows. About what?
Mr. Ohr. About --
Mr. Meadows. Russia?
Mr. Ohr. -- all kinds of things.
Mr. Meadows. Trump?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. I don't know about Trump, but certainly about
Russia.
Mr. Meadows. Well, you had multiple conversations about your
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favorite business tycoon, which you say was Deripaska. It could
have been Mr. Trump. But let's assume that you're correct on your
assumption since you didn't really know. Is that correct? He
didn't say I'm talking about my favorite business tycoon
Deripaska?
Mr. Ohr. No. But we had conversations over the years about
Mr. Deripaska.
Mr. Meadows. Well, not a whole lot, because I went back to
look at the number of conversations. Your interactions with
Mr. Steele on Mr. Deripaska had been limited prior to 2015. Isn't
that correct?
Mr. Ohr. But it's been --
Mr. Meadows. No, for the record, is that correct?
Mr. Ohr. It is correct, but it's been brought up every time
pretty much when he talk with me.
Mr. Meadows. So on the three times that you talked to him
prior to 2015 about Deripaska he brought up -- he brought it up
each time?
Mr. Ohr. Pretty much, yeah.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So the three times he brings
up -- so every time he brings up Deripaska, in what context did he
bring up Deripaska as it relates to Mr. Trump with you?
Mr. Ohr. Usually he was telling me that -- whether Deripaska
had received some kind of an official visa, which could not be
blocked by the State Department, and he would be coming to the
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United States.
Mr. Meadows. Is it your understanding -- I have credible
evidence that would suggest that your understanding is the FBI
actually helped Mr. Deripaska figure out how to get here
officially? Are you aware of any of those conversations where he
would come as a business delegation with the U.N.?
Mr. Ohr. The -- I know the -- well--
Mr. Weinsheimer. Can we have a second?
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. So I'm aware that the FBI spoke with Mr. Deripaska
on other occasions, but I don't know the specific topics they
discussed.
Mr. Meadows. All right. Are you aware that the FBI spoke to
Mr. Deripaska in September of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall specifically for 2016.
Mr. Meadows. Are you aware that based on some of your
conversations -- go ahead.
Mr. Ohr. My apologies. 2016 I was not aware of that.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So you're not aware that there were
any FBI involvement with Mr. Deripaska in September 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I don't. That's news to me.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So let me go on a little bit
further because I guess I want to go back to where Mr. Gowdy was
talking about in this December 20 conversation -- or text message
where it says: Bruce has more information for us. Actually, I
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think the redacted name under there is Joe for Joe Pientka.
So was Joe Pientka your go-between in December when you got
additional information from either Christopher Steele or Glenn
Simpson in getting it to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Joe Pientka, I believe, was my contact at that
time, yeah.
Mr. Meadows. So he was your contact at that time?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Meadows. You have a meeting. You get information. You
immediately go to Joe Pientka, who immediately goes to Peter
Strzok. Are you aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Meadows. All right. Where did you assume that Joe
Pientka would go with the information that you gave him?
Mr. Ohr. I didn't know.
Mr. Meadows. Still to this day, you do not know?
Mr. Ohr. Well, now from what you're telling me, it sounds
like --
Mr. Meadows. No. No. Not based on me. Based on other
things. You are unaware that there was a coordination between Joe
Pientka and Peter Strzok or Lisa Page?
Mr. Ohr. I was --
Mr. Meadows. You're unaware of that?
Mr. Ohr. I was not aware of the specific roles that they
were playing.
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Mr. Meadows. Okay. Specifically, did Joe Pientka ever say
that he was giving it to the people that he reported to, that he
would take your information and get it to someone else?
Mr. Ohr. No. I think they just say thank you for the
information, and then it disappears into the FBI.
Mr. Meadows. So if it just disappears in the FBI and you're
not sure where it's going, why did you continue to be so
aggressive after November 1 or thereabouts when Christopher Steele
had been terminated by the FBI, in and around that particular
time?
Why would you have continued on your conversations and
intelligence gathering with Christopher Steele knowing that he had
been terminated by the FBI and you were just getting information
from that same source back to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. When I got a call from Chris Steele and he provided
information, if it seemed like it was significant, I would provide
it to the FBI.
Mr. Meadows. But he had been terminated by the FBI. In your
previous testimony said you were aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. At some point I became aware he had been
terminated. But nevertheless, when I receive information from
Chris Steele I'm not going to sit on it. I've got to give it to
the FBI.
Mr. Meadows. So why didn't you say, "Listen, Chris, you've
been terminated. I'm at the Department of Justice. Why don't you
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take this back to the FBI?" Why was that not happening? Was
there an unofficial coordination that the FBI terminated and now
they're recognizing you're this backdoor conduit to get them the
information?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what they were thinking.
Mr. Meadows. I didn't ask you what they were thinking. What
I am asking you, was there an unofficial back channel that was
acknowledged by the FBI that they knew that you were the
unofficial handler for Chris Steele after that termination?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know if you can characterize it that way.
All I can say is, I would get calls from Chris Steele and I would
pass it to the FBI.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So let me ask you a different
question then. Did the FBI ever encourage you to reach out to try
to get additional information from Chris Steele?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, there was one occasion.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So there was a coordination?
Mr. Ohr. On that --
Mr. Meadows. I mean, for you to say that you didn't
know -- I mean, if they're reaching out to you then there is
obviously this channel that has been at least unofficially
acknowledged. If they're reaching out and they're saying, can you
get Christopher Steele to do what?
Mr. Ohr. On one of the occasions when I talked to the FBI to
tell them I got a call from Chris Steele, they said, oh, next time
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you talk with him, can you ask him if he's willing to meet with
us? And I conveyed that back to Chris Steele.
Mr. Meadows. After he had been terminated --
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Meadows. -- you got a -- the same FBI that terminated,
that have told the American people that, oh, when we found out
there was a credibility problem we terminated him, after that time
you basically got a call from the FBI that said can you engage
Mr. Steele again?
Mr. Ohr. Well, it wasn't a call. It was when I told them
what I had heard.
Mr. Meadows. So it was in-person contact.
Mr. Ohr. They said, by the way, can you ask him if he'd be
willing to talk with us, yes.
Mr. Meadows. All right. Were you aware or did your wife
characterize or Glenn Simpson characterize anything that was on
the two thumb drives that you were given? Did they give you kind
of a contextual: What was in there?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I knew that the thumb drive my wife gave me
contained her research for Fusion GPS. The thumb drive that Glenn
Simpson gave me I immediately turned over to the FBI, but I think
at the time I suspected it was the dossier and I --
Mr. Meadows. Did he characterize it? That's my question.
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Meadows. So he didn't say there's juicy stuff in here,
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there's dirt in here, or this is important, you need to get it
there, he just said, this is a thumb drive, give it to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah. He said that and then --
Mr. Meadows. Mr. Ohr. Mr. Ohr. Mr. Ohr.
Mr. Berman. Mr. Meadows, can he finish his answer?
Mr. Meadows. He can finish the answer, but at the same time
I want to make sure that we're shooting straight here.
You're saying that Glenn Simpson gave you a thumb drive and
didn't suggest what was on it or anything else and said give it to
the FBI, and your curiosity was not piqued?
Mr. Ohr. I think I assumed it was the dossier, but he did
not say that.
Mr. Meadows. Why did you assume it was the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. This was in December. The rest of the conversation
had to do with additional information that he had gathered about
the possible connections between the Russian Government and the
Trump campaign, and he gives me a thumb drive. I think the
natural assumption at that point -- I had not seen the dossier. I
had heard there was such a thing as a dossier, but I hadn't seen
it. So he gives me a thumb drive. I assumed this was the
dossier.
Mr. Meadows. So he gives you the dossier or what you
believed to be the dossier. How did you first become aware of the
dossier?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall. It might have been in the press or
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I don't remember.
Mr. Meadows. Well, so what you're saying is, is he gave you
something that was already -- how could it be in the press,
because I don't think it was printed until later, was it?
Mr. Ohr. It wasn't printed, but I think people were aware
there was such a thing as a dossier. It just hadn't been printed.
I don't recall, you know, specifically, but yeah.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So let me go back because your
conversations -- I think Glenn Simpson has given sworn testimony
that he never talked to you. And what you're saying under sworn
testimony today is that indeed you've talked to Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I have talked to Glenn Simpson.
Mr. Meadows. And actually, is it true that Glenn Simpson
called you on Inauguration Day, according to your notes,
January 20 of 2017, says, I needed to talk to you. Did you talk
to him on Inauguration Day? You take good notes, by the way.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Yes.
Mr. Meadows. I can't read your handwriting.
Mr. Ohr. Many defense counsel complained about my
handwriting as well.
Yes, Glenn Simpson contacted me on or about January 20, yes.
Mr. Meadows. And what was that about?
Mr. Ohr. He was concerned that one of the sources, Chris
Steele's sources, was going to be supposed and that would put the
source in personal danger.
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Mr. Meadows. And why was he concerned about that source
being exposed?
Mr. Ohr. I think he was aware of some kind of article that
was likely to come out in the next, you know, few days or
something.
Mr. Meadows. So how would Glenn Simpson know that and the
intel community and the Department of Justice and FBI not know
that? I mean, what made Glenn Simpson so uniquely qualified to
call you on Inauguration Day about a concern about a source being
outed?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what his sources are.
Mr. Meadows. So you mean he must have talked to media. Did
he share with you that he had talked to the media, that he was
concerned about that? I mean, help me understand that
conversation from January 20.
Mr. Ohr. He says something along the lines of, I -- there's
going to be some reporting in the next few days that's going
to -- could expose the source, and the source could be in personal
danger.
Mr. Meadows. And so when he's talking about there's going to
be some reporting, there was a lot of reporting that was going on.
Did you find it just normal protocol that the Department of
Justice and the FBI would still engage when there was a number of
facts or at least allegations that continue to be shared in the
press? Did you find that concerning? Where were you having these
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one-on-one conversations and then reading about it in the press,
did you find that concerning?
Mr. Ohr. Well, what I don't -- what I recall at the time is
being very concerned, if someone's life was in danger, that we had
to be able to respond to that.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So did you talk to Lisa Page, Peter
Strzok, the deputy attorney general -- I mean deputy attorney
director -- or assistant director -- and Joe Pientka about the
FISA application?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Meadows. So your notes from November 21, where you got
all of their names and you talk about FISA, what's that in
reference to?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think I said FISA. I think I asked him if
they had a prosecutor, and they said no, and that they might look
at Manafort again. And I don't recall the other thing, but, yes.
But I don't think there was any discussion of FISA.
Mr. Meadows. And so there was no discussion of FISA because
Carter Page was really not the subject of your investigation?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what -- I mean, I wasn't part of any
FISA investigation, so I don't know.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So help me reconcile two things.
Earlier you said that all you did was got information, you passed
it on. Just now you talked about that you actually had
conversations between you and some of the other people as it
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relates to, you know, how you prosecute or what you were going to
do or who was going to be involved. So how extensive were those
conversations?
Mr. Ohr. I believe this was the only time, and I did ask is
there a prosecutor, yeah.
Mr. Meadows. Yeah. So if this was the only time, then why
would your notes suggest on March 15 of 2017, why would your notes
suggest that you had discussions about a special prosecutor?
Mr. Ohr. I would like to see the notes to be sure, but my
recollection --
Mr. Meadows. Well, I can refresh your memory.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. But my recollection is that Chris Steele was
concerned about queries from Congress or from special counsel or
whoever that might expose his source's identity, and so he asked
about that.
Mr. Meadows. Well, there was different notes about that, so
let me refresh your memory.
You were concerned about a special counsel being able to ask
questions in the U.K. that was your notes. That was your own
individual notes.
Mr. Ohr. Right, that Chris Steele had asked something along
the lines of can a special prosecutor ask questions --
Mr. Meadows. So why were you having discussions with
Christopher Steele about a special prosecutor before one was ever
appointed?
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Mr. Ohr. It's just something --
Mr. Meadows. Because one wasn't appointed for another
2 months.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Meadows. So why were you having questions about
prosecution with a special prosecutor with a source that you said
all you were doing was taking the information and get it to the
FBI?
Mr. Ohr. I wrote down what Chris Steele asked about. I
often could not answer his questions, and this was one of those
times. He'd said, can a special prosecutor ask questions in the
U.K., and I'm sure I've said something like I don't know but --
Mr. Meadows. Did you ever get back to him with that answer?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Meadows. And so you just let him ask the question and
you never responded?
Mr. Ohr. I couldn't answer many of his questions.
Mr. Meadows. All right. So let me finish with this and I'll
yield to my good friend, the gentleman from Texas.
Your testimony earlier indicated you handled this differently
than anything you've done in your career at the Department of
Justice. I mean, it was like nails on a chalkboard to me. I
heard it. I mean, you said that this was a unique circumstance.
And yet, it appears that there was, according to your
testimony, there was either an implied or a confirmed relationship
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between the FBI and you to get information from Chris Steele to
them after he was terminated. Is that correct?
Mr. Ohr. The FBI -- it's correct to the extent that the FBI
knew I was continuing to get contacted by Chris Steele and they
had given me an agent to contact to provide -- to, you know, to
forward the information, so --
Mr. Meadows. Yeah. But you're changing that a little bit
because you did admit that they reached out to you. So there was
this coordination that was happening. Obviously, you had
conversations with Lisa Page and McCabe and some of them about
prosecuting and how you would go about it. So there's actually
more of a relationship there than perhaps I'm getting information
because I happen to have a personal relationship with Christopher
Steele.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. As we discussed earlier, as I said earlier,
there was the one occasion where I did ask Lisa Page and Peter
Strzok, do you have a prosecutor? And that's what they told me.
I did not pass that information to anybody.
And on the one occasion in 2017, the FBI, when I reported to
them, one of my conversations with Chris Steele, they said, can
you ask him if he'd be willing to meet with us? So on those two
occasions there was more conversation.
Mr. Meadows. Did Andy McCabe or Peter Strzok or Lisa Page
ever talk to you about getting a special prosecutor involved after
the election of 2016?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 110 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. I don't think so, no. I don't have any
recollection of that.
Mr. Meadows. So did they suggest that to Christopher Steele?
Mr. Ohr. Not that I know of.
Mr. Meadows. I guess, why did it come up? I mean, why would
Christopher Steele ask that question when it is a fairly
infrequent use in terms of the way that we prosecute things? Why
did it have come up if it wasn't being discussed?
Mr. Weinsheimer. Just a second.
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. Right. That's what I was going to say. So
basically, I don't know what -- what I can say is that at various
times it's clear to me that Chris Steele is not an expert in the
U.S. judicial system. So he would sometimes ask things that
didn't quite, you know -- weren't obvious. But beyond -- or, you
know, where it didn't quite make sense about the U.S. judicial
system. But in this case, I don't know what -- I don't know why
he asked that question.
Mr. Meadows. Did Chris Steele get paid by the Department of
Justice?
Mr. Ohr. My understanding is that for a time he was a source
for the FBI, a paid source.
Mr. Meadows. I'll yield to my good friend, Mr. Ratcliffe.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Mr. Ohr, I want to follow up on the issue of
the authority or permission that you had to be engaging with
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Christopher Steele. I know you have been asked about this by
Mr. Gowdy and Mr. Meadows, but I have to cover this again because
I'm really trying to establish what the Department of Justice knew
and what the FBI knew as it relates to the FISA process.
I know that you weren't involved in the actual FISA
applications, but what the FBI and the Department of Justice knew
through you is important.
And so you've been asked a couple of questions about this
engagement and you've several times said that you thought it was
part of your job to get and pass along source information. And I
think you're relating that, is it fair to say, that you didn't
really think you needed authority or permission, that it was just
part of your job that allowed you to do that?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And you said you had done it a number
of other times in other cases?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Had you ever done it in any other
cases where your wife was involved?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall my wife being involved in any of
these other cases.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. But isn't that what makes this case
different, is that you're passing along information where you know
that your wife is involved and you know that your wife is being
compensated for her involvement, correct?
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Mr. Ohr. So that is -- yes. And that is why I began, when I
first spoke to the FBI about this, to emphasize my wife is working
for Fusion GPS.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And I get that, and I'm going to get
to that in terms of how you explained that. But there are a
number of us who used to work at the Department of Justice. I'm
trying to understand your mindset for the Sally Yates issue and
what she knew and when she knew it.
You know that there are rules against being involved in cases
where you get a financial benefit.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And there are requirements and obligations
that prosecutors have if those circumstances arise.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And what are those obligations?
Mr. Ohr. If you're -- if I was working on the case, I would
probably have to get off the case.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And as it relates to getting a financial
benefit?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I mean, my wife can work for whoever she
works for, but I can't work on a case where she's getting a
financial benefit.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Right. And so in this case she was getting a
financial benefit?
Mr. Ohr. Right. But I wasn't working on the case.
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Mr. Ratcliffe. Other than to be part of the chain of custody
of evidence, is your testimony.
Mr. Ohr. I passed along the information I got.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. Well, we don't -- you know, the
facts will speak for themselves with respect to this.
Mr. Ohr. Sure.
Mr. Ratcliffe. But you were asked a question about how much
your wife was paid. You said you weren't sure. This $44,000,
does that sound approximately correct?
Mr. Ohr. That could be, but I don't know as I sit here.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. If money that your wife was paid for
her work on this case, would ultimately you benefit from that
financially? In other words, do you have shared accounts?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, we do.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Did you ever file financial
disclosures reflecting that you received financial benefits as it
pertained to your wife Nellie Ohr on a matter before the
Department of Justice?
Mr. Ohr. Not that I received. I filed the public financial
disclosure reports regularly. I did not report that I was
receiving money in connection with a matter I was working on
because, in my mind, I'm not.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do others think that that was an incorrect
assumption on your part?
Mr. Weinsheimer. I don't think he's able to answer what
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others --
Mr. Ratcliffe. Well, are there actions that have been taken
by the Department of Justice or any of its investigating arms with
respect to the disclosures, the financial disclosures, as it
pertains to Nellie Ohr's work?
Mr. Weinsheimer. Hang on 1 second.
Mr. Ohr. As far as I know, no.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And I'm not -- I'm trying to understand this.
I'm not trying to embarrass you. But it's been publicly reported
that you've been demoted from different positions. Is that an
accurate public reporting?
Mr. Ohr. I've been moved twice since December, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Just briefly give me the circumstances
and the timing of the moves. Because at the relevant time period
here, again, I think you've been clear, you were the ADAG or the
associate deputy attorney general, correct?
Mr. Ohr. I was an ADAG, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Yeah. And so you have had two position
changes since then.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. So in December of 2017 I was told that there
were going to be articles relating to my conversations with Chris
Steele in the press, and they were going to move me out of the
Office of Deputy Attorney General but retain me as the director of
the -- of OCDETF.
They gave two reasons. One was they said I had not given
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them timely notice of my conversations with Chris Steele; and the
other one they said was that they were planning to change the
structure of the Department anyway because I was a component head
and -- as far as the only component head who was sitting in the
Office of Deputy Attorney General. So as part of the broader
reorganization of the department, they had planned to move me out
of the Deputy Attorney General's Office.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. That's the first one.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. And then in January or at end of December, I
don't remember the exact date, but right around there, I was
informed that the Attorney General and the deputy attorney general
did not want me in a position where I would be having contact with
the White House as part of my general -- as part of my work. And
because OCDETF did have contact with the White House, and
particularly the National Security Council, on organized crime
policy, they were going to move me into the criminal division.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. So with respect to the first move in
December of 2017, you said they said you weren't giving timely
notice of your communications with Christopher Steele. Who was
"they"?
Mr. Ohr. I was informed by Scott Schools and Jim Crowell in
the Deputy Attorney General's Office.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. And then in January of 2018 when
you were told that the AG and the deputy AG did not want you in
that position, which at that point, depending on at what point
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 116 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
the -- just for the record, who was the AG and who was the deputy
AG at that point?
Mr. Ohr. Oh, that was Attorney General Sessions and Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So getting back to the issue that I mentioned
regarding what the Department of Justice knew and what the FBI
knew, you're not sure what Sally Yates knows -- knew about your
involvement. You just said you hadn't told her anything about
that.
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. But you've identified at the
Department of Justice folks as early as August of 2016 or folks at
the Department of Justice and the FBI being aware of your
involvement. At the Department of Justice, Mr. Swartz,
Mr. Weissman, and the third name I didn't get. Zainab?
Mr. Ohr. Ahmad, Ms. Ahmad.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Ahmad. Can you spell that for me?
Mr. Ohr. I think it's A-h-m-a-d, but I'm not sure.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And the first name was Zainab, did you
say?
Mr. Ohr. Zainab. I believe that's Z-a-i-n-a-b.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. And over at the FBI, the folks
that you have identified, obviously you met with Andy McCabe, Lisa
Page, Peter Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 117 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ratcliffe. Who else?
Mr. Ohr. Joe Pientka.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Joe Pientka. So, again, so the record is
clear with respect to what the Department of Justice and the FBI
knew about your involvement, those are the folks that were aware
as of August of 2016 that you had an involvement with Christopher
Steele?
Mr. Weinsheimer. Hang on a second.
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. Those are the people that I knew that I had told.
I had told them, of course, at different times, as I mentioned
before. I had met with Mr. McCabe and Lisa Page very early on,
and then later I had met with the larger group of people that you
named. And, in fact, Mr. Pientka I don't think I met with until
November.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Well, so -- and I'm not holding you to
a specific date, but you said shortly after your meeting with
Christopher Steele you called Andy McCabe, is what you said?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And you believe within a few weeks or some
short period of time, you estimated probably in August, that you
met with Mr. McCabe, Ms. Page --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. -- and Peter Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe Peter was there. I don't recall.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 118 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
I don't think so.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And when you say there, that was
at -- was it at --
Mr. Ohr. Mr. McCabe's office.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Mr. McCabe's office, okay. All right.
And so with respect to the Department of Justice, what is
your best recollection of when Mr. Swartz, Mr. Weissman, and
Ms. Ahmad --
Mr. Ohr. Ahmad, yeah. I don't recall exactly. I don't
recall exactly. I --
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do you know if it was around the same
timeframe as Mr. McCabe and Ms. Page?
Mr. Ohr. It may not all have been at the same time.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Is it fair to say it would have been at least
in the summer or early fall of 2016?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Yes, I think so. Yes. Uh-huh.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And what were your contacts with
Mr. Swartz, Mr. Weissman, and Ms. Ahmad?
Mr. Ohr. I remember mentioning this to Bruce Swartz. And
because Ms. Ahmad worked closely with him she may have been
present. And then at some point I had a conversation with the two
of them and with Mr. Weissman. And I don't remember if that's the
same meeting that Peter Strzok and Lisa Page were at. It could
have been, but I don't recall specifically.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. And would those meetings have taken
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 119 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
place at Main Justice?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. There's reference into your notes
about a meeting in September of 2016 at Perkins Coie?
Mr. Ohr. That doesn't ring a bell. I'm sorry.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Are you aware of a meeting with -- was there
a meeting with Glenn Simpson, Fusion GPS, Mr. Steele, and others
that you were involved with?
Mr. Ohr. I met once with Chris Steele in September when he
came to town, but it was just him and me, just two of us, yeah. I
don't believe I had any meetings with any of these other folks.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. Well, the reason I'm trying
to -- again, and you're aware of this even though you weren't
involved in the FISA -- the process, you know that ultimately that
FBI and the Department of Justice, as has been publicly reported,
filed verified applications to get a warrant to surveil an
American citizen, Carter Page. You're aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. From the press, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. From the press. And you're aware that
occurred the first time on October 21 of 2016? I'll let
the -- you may not be aware of the date.
Mr. Ohr. Not aware of the date.
Mr. Ratcliffe. I'll represent to you that that was the date.
But you know as a prosecutor that when you make those
verifications and the folks on behalf of the FBI and the
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Department of Justice that do so, they have to verify that the
information in a FISA application has been thoroughly vetted and
confirmed. We've talked a little bit about that. You had no role
with respect to that. I think there are real questions whether or
not that was done.
But the other obligation that we know that we had or you
continue to have as a Federal prosecutors is to make a full
disclosure of material facts, correct?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 121 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[12:19 p.m.]
Mr. Ohr. As part of the FISA application?
Mr. Ratcliffe. As a part of any -- as a part of any
application to a Federal court.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. You're supposed to tell the court material
facts.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Material facts. Okay. And that's really
what I'm trying to get at, is to establish the material facts that
we can agree the FBI and the Department of Justice knew as of
October the 21st of 2016. Again, I know you weren't involved in
the process other than to give them some of this information.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So at that point, and through the folks that
we've mentioned at the FBI and the Department of Justice, they
were aware that -- they were aware of the relationship between you
and Christopher Steele and Glenn Simpson, correct?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. The people we've discussed.
Mr. Ratcliffe. The people we discussed. They were also
aware of the relationship between Nellie Ohr and Christopher
Steele and Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Weinsheimer. One second.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Uh-huh.
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. I believe that I told the people that we've
discussed about my wife's work, yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 122 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ratcliffe. And if you did, then they would have known
that your wife was being compensated in part for contributions to
what we've referred to as the Steele dossier?
Mr. Ohr. Well, just to be careful about that, my wife was
researching various entities who are some of the same people
mentioned in the dossier.
My understanding of the dossier, and I didn't look at it that
carefully, but it seems to be reports from Chris Steele to Fusion
GPS.
So I don't think my wife's information, as far as I knew, was
reported in those specific reports. It was certainly provided to
Fusion, which had both Chris Steele's reports and my wife's
research.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do you recall telling the FBI during any of
your interviews as reflected in 302s that your wife was working on
the Steele dossier and providing information?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall specifically what I said, but --
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do you think she was?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think so. I think she was working on the
same topic, so you could say in a broader sense maybe. But the
dossier itself, as far as I know, and I could be wrong, but those
appear to be Chris Steele's reports, not Fusion GPS.
Mr. Ratcliffe. To be clear, your wife was compensated for
information that she was providing to Fusion GPS and Christopher
Steele.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 123 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what information from my wife was
given to Christopher Steele. I know she was giving it to Fusion
GPS, obviously.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Right. Was the FBI and the Department of
Justice also aware of media contacts between Christopher Steele
and Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Weinsheimer. One second.
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. I mean, I don't have specific information on that,
no.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay.
So, again, going back to the Sally Yates issue, is it your
testimony that at some point in time as you were sitting down with
the FBI for the purpose of talking to them about information that
you were helping to coordinate from Christopher Steele that you
shouldn't have advised or didn't advise Sally Yates about the fact
that you were being interviewed for that purpose?
Mr. Ohr. I did not inform Sally Yates that I was talking to
the FBI and that I was receiving information from Chris Steele.
That's correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. My question is, did you have the thought that
it might be a good idea to let my boss know that I'm being
interviewed by the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. It was -- my thought at the time was I should get
this to the career people who would work on it, but that was my
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 124 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
thought.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Do you know whether Sally Yates
actually -- are you aware of the fact that Sally Yates actually
signed off on two different verified applications in the FISA
process as it relates to Carter Page?
Mr. Ohr. I've seen that in the press.
Mr. Ratcliffe. We've talked about the relevant facts that
the FBI and the Department of Justice was aware of. Were they
also -- one that I didn't ask you about -- they were also aware of
Mr. Steele's bias against Donald Trump, were they not?
Mr. Ohr. I provided information to the FBI when I thought
Christopher Steele was, as I said, desperate that Trump not be
elected. So, yes, of course, I provided that to the FBI.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Yes. And so were the Department of Justice
and THE FBI also aware of Glenn Simpson's bias against Donald
Trump?
Mr. Ohr. I certainly told the FBI that Fusion GPS was
working with -- doing opposition research on Donald Trump.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. So, again, so the record is clear,
what the Department of Justice and the FBI was aware of prior to
the first FISA application was your relationship with Christopher
Steele and Glenn Simpson, your wife's relationship with
Christopher Steele and Glenn Simpson, Mr. Steele's bias against
Donald Trump, Mr. Simpson's bias against Donald Trump, your wife's
compensation for work for Glenn Simpson and Fusion GPS, correct?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 125 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Weinsheimer. Can I have a second?
[Discussion off the record.]
Mr. Ohr. Right. So just, again, to reiterate, when I spoke
with the FBI, I told them my wife was working for Fusion GPS. I
told them Fusion GPS was doing research on Donald Trump. You
know, I don't know if I used the term opposition research, but
certainly that was my -- what I tried to convey to them.
I told them this is the information I had gotten from Chris
Steele. At some point, and I don't remember exactly when, I don't
think it was the first conversation, I told them that Chris Steele
was desperate that Donald Trump not get elected.
So those are all facts that I provided to the FBI.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And you provided -- you said because you
wanted to make sure -- first you said you thought there might be a
conflict of interest and then you changed that and said, well, I
didn't mean conflict of interest, I just wanted to make sure that
they were aware of the possibility of bias as it related to those
facts, correct?
Mr. Ohr. In case there is any concern that there might be
any kind of bias or anything like that.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So that the FBI and the Department of Justice
had the opportunity, if they were going to file a FISA
application, to say, the central piece of evidence that we're
submitting, this dossier, just so you know, the associate deputy
attorney general was involved in this respect and his wife was
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 126 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
involved in this respect, so they would have the opportunity to
decide what material facts related to that information and provide
it to a court.
Mr. Ohr. Right. Again, I can't answer what they were
putting into the FISA. I was providing it to them for whatever
purpose.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Right. But we've agreed that those are
material facts that you provided and they could have provided.
You don't know whether or not they provided that information to
the FISA court or not.
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. But they should have.
Mr. Weinsheimer. I don't think he can answer that.
Mr. Ohr. I can't answer that.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Well, I want to make -- part of the reason
I'm also trying to make this record real clear is there's someone
that's been appointed to look at potential FISA abuse, United
States Attorney John Huber. Have you talked to Mr. Huber?
Mr. Ohr. I have not. I mean, I have spoken with Mr. Huber
in the past when he was a U.S. attorney, but I have not spoken
with him as part of this.
Mr. Meadows. One little cleanup. You had mentioned that
your interaction with Joe Pientka did not start until November
of 2016, earlier in the questioning from Mr. Ratcliffe. Is that
correct?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 127 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. I think that's right. I think I was introduced to
him in November.
Mr. Meadows. So you would have been introduced to him after
he was terminated -- Christopher Steele's relationship with the
FBI was terminated?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember exactly when Christopher Steele's
relationship with the FBI was terminated?
Mr. Meadows. Well, I'm representing that Christopher
Steele's relationship was terminated on or about the 1st of
November, so you would have been introduced to Mr. Pientka after
that time.
Mr. Ohr. I believe I was introduced to Mr. Pientka around
November 21.
Mr. Meadows. Okay. Thank you. Yield back.
Let me ask you one other question, because in some of your
notes you referred to some inquiries as it related to Christopher
Steele with a Cleta Mitchell as it related to the NRA. What did
he represent that Ms. Mitchell was involved with?
Mr. Ohr. I may be wrong, but I think my recollection is that
Glenn Simpson mentioned Cleta Mitchell, not Chris Steele, but I
may be wrong about that.
Mr. Meadows. And it could be. In what context? Because she
hadn't been on the board for the NRA for a number of years, so it
would have been very old news at that point.
Mr. Ohr. I didn't know who Cleta Mitchell was. What I
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 128 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
was -- I believe what -- and I think it was Glenn Simpson
mentioned to me was that Cleta Mitchell became aware of money
moving through the NRA or something like that from Russia. And I
don't remember the exact circumstances. And that she was upset
about it, but the election was over. I seem to remember that from
my notes.
Mr. Meadows. So in your conversations with Mr. Simpson did
you verify the veracity of that allegation?
Mr. Ohr. I was just taking the information. I wasn't -- you
know, so I don't remember asking followup questions on that.
Mr. Meadows. And he said he knew that how?
Mr. Ohr. I don't --
Mr. Meadows. How did he find out about Cleta Mitchell?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think he said.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Mr. Ohr, the reason I hesitated before is I
don't want to start, my time is about to expire and I want to
start a new topic. I'll leave it for the next hour. But it
relates to your interviews with the FBI.
And just so that I'm clear and can be thinking about this,
it's my understanding -- I have seen that you sat down with the
FBI on 12 different occasions, or I have seen 302s that relate to
12 different interviews that you gave between November 22 of 2016
and May 15 of 2017.
My only question for you right now is, did you have
interviews with the FBI regarding these matters after May 15 of
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 129 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
2017.
Mr. Ohr. I believe I did.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Were those with the FBI or were they part of
the special counsel investigation?
Mr. Ohr. The agent I talked with was not part of the special
counsel team.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Okay. Any reason -- well, you're not
the one that produced those. I'll save that question for the
folks that can answer why I haven't seen those 302s.
I think our time has expired.
[Recess.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q The time is 12:44 p.m.
So I'd like to just turn back to the roles you may or may not
have played in the investigations we're talking about, just to be
absolutely clear.
So, first of all, because our joint investigation is
presumably about the FBI's investigation into Secretary Clinton's
private emails and potential disparate treatment with the FBI's
handling of the Trump-Russia collusion investigation, I will ask,
did you have any involvement in the Clinton email investigation?
A No.
Q And to what extent were you ever involved in the
Trump-Russia collusion investigation?
A I was not involved. I simply provided the information
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 130 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
as I've discussed.
Q And were you ever involved in the broader investigation
of Russian attempts to interfere with the U.S. election?
A No.
Q Did your portfolio at the Department of Justice have any
purview over any of these investigations that I've mentioned?
A No.
Q And were there other individuals at DOJ who did in fact
have portfolios of purview over these investigations?
A Yeah.
Q Were there other Department of Justice officials whose
portfolios did in fact have purview over these investigations?
A Yes.
Q So last round I think I got a little confused because, I
think, as you just said, you did not have any involvement with the
Trump-Russia collusion investigation. However, I think there's
some dispute about that. You did talk about how you gave
information and then provided input that ultimately became part of
the work of the investigation.
Can you just like help us understand, clarify exactly what
the difference is? Because there's, I imagine, that in the FBI
and the Department of Justice there's a core investigative team,
that people are considered members on the team, people who are
considered, quote, you know, involved, and then there are many
other current officials in government who nonetheless have
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 131 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
conversations with members of that team. I'm sure some were
substantive and I'm sure some have to do with, you know, the
nature of the underlying investigation or even specific evidence
and facts as part of that investigation.
But can you just sort of outline the boundaries of what
constitutes being involved on the team versus not involved, but
may have, you know, had a conversation or played a role or been
meeting-related?
A So, I mean, I think I've tried to explain what I did in
connection with this investigation. I was not investigating the
case. I wasn't responsible for the investigation. I was not
working as a prosecutor on the case. I didn't make any kind of
decisions or prepare any pleadings or anything like that. I
provided the information that I've discussed.
Q Okay. So did the FBI provide updates to you or keep you
apprised of the progress of the Trump-Russia collusion
investigation?
A No.
Q So you had no substantive role or oversight
responsibilities in the Trump-Russia collusion investigation?
A That's correct. And to be clear, though, the one time I
did I ask them, is there a prosecutor assigned to the case, and
they told me no.
Q Were you involved in any way in the decision to initiate
the counterintelligence operation relating to Russian contacts
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 132 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
with individuals in the Trump campaign?
A No.
Q Were you aware of the FBI's decision to initiate the
Trump-Russia collusion investigation at the time?
A No, I don't think so.
Q And overall you were not involved in the Trump-Russia
collusion investigation?
A Correct.
Q And have you ever been a decisionmaker for matters
pertaining to the FBI's Trump-Russia collusion investigation?
A No.
Q Again, we discussed this a little bit, I guess, a few
rounds ago now, but I believe there was a November 26 meeting in
which you attended with Peter Strzok,
Lisa Page, and some DOJ criminal -- does that sound right -- or a
late 2016 meeting?
A There was a meeting on November 21, I believe my notes
reflect, with Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, and Joe Pientka.
Q Okay. And was that meeting the first time that you had
met Peter Strzok?
A I think I may have met Peter Strzok on one earlier
occasion when we had the meeting with the criminal division
officials.
Q Okay. And can you just remind me when was that?
A I don't recall exactly.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 133 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Was that the meeting in McCabe's office?
A No. I had the first meeting with McCabe in August, and
the meeting with the criminal division officials and Peter Strzok
and Lisa Page, I think that was in -- I think it was -- it may
have been, I don't know, it was in the fall some time, I think,
but prior to November 21.
Q But this other meeting, this prior meeting where you
first met Peter Strzok, that was also in 2016?
A Yes.
Q So, again, I think you've already answered this question
a couple times in broad strokes, but just to be clear, were you
involved in the October 2016 FISA application for surveillance on
Carter Page?
A No.
Q Did you have any role in drafting or reviewing the
Carter Page FISA application?
A No.
Q Were you part of the decisionmaking chain of command for
the Page FISA application?
A No.
Q Were you part of the approval process for the Page FISA
application?
A No.
Q Were you aware of the Page FISA application at the time?
A No.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 134 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Were you involved in any of the subsequent renewals of
the Page FISA application?
A No.
Q Were you involved in any of the FISA
applications -- were you involved in any of the other FISA
applications related to the Trump-Russia collusion investigation?
A No.
Q And were you ever involved with Special Counsel
Mueller's investigation?
A No.
Q And to reiterate, you were never part of the FBI's
Trump-Russia collusion counterintelligence investigation?
A Correct.
Ms. Shen. Okay. Thank you.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q So I just want to help clarify some of the discussion
about your contacts with the FBI, because as it's been presented
in the previous hour and in certain media outlets, it's been
presented as improper or nefarious.
So just to start generally, do you believe your
communications with Mr. Steele were somehow improper?
A No.
Q Can you explain why?
A I received information from Chris Steele which I thought
could be important and I passed that to the FBI. I think that
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 135 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
anybody could do that, and I don't think that's improper.
Q Do you believe you were acting appropriately in deciding
to report Mr. Steele's -- communications with Mr. Steele to the
FBI?
A Yes, I do.
Q And you had said it earlier, because of national
security concerns, right?
A That's right.
Q Do you believe it was improper or inappropriate for the
FBI to accept this information?
A No, I think it was proper for them to accept it.
Q Are you familiar with any Department of Justice protocol
that requires DOJ employees -- any protocol related to DOJ
employees sharing information with law enforcement officials
outside of the scope of their official duties? Is there any
protocol in place?
A I'm not aware of anything like that.
Q Are you aware of any protocols for when Department
employees observe or receive criminal or counterintelligence tips?
A No.
Q So is there like a -- you know, with ordinary citizens,
right, there's a hotline where you can call to report suspected
criminal activity or terrorism or suspected terrorism activity to
the FBI. Does such a process exist for DOJ employees or do you
essentially act like an ordinary citizen in that case?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 136 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A I think we basically act like an ordinary citizen in
that case.
Q So, in effect, you're expected to report that
information in a manner similar to how non-DOJ employees who want
to report tips to law enforcement, specifically FBI, as far as you
can understand?
A As far as I can understand, yeah.
Q Would you characterize this information Mr. Steele was
sharing with you as something similar to a tip or was it a fully
formed report?
A These were leads.
Q Leads?
A Yeah.
Q Okay. And did the information, as far as you could
understand it from what he described to you, was it more
counterintelligence related or more criminal?
A That's part of the problem, is it's both.
Q Okay. And, again, to reiterate, you are not a
counterintelligence official?
A Correct.
Q So counterintelligence information, even if it's mixed
up in a criminal matter, would be outside the scope of your
official duties?
A Correct.
Q So given that you're not a counterintelligence official
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 137 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
and you don't act in that capacity in an official sense, it
made -- do you believe it made sense to report that information
through your normal chain of command or the FBI?
A I believed it was proper to report it to the FBI.
Q Is it -- and I think you've said this now a couple of
times -- but is it fair to say that any communication you had with
Mr. Steele that involved substantive counterintelligence matters
you immediately shared with the FBI?
A I shared -- when I received information from Chris
Steele in the end of July, I reported it to the FBI, I don't know
exactly how often, how quickly, but within a couple weeks, I
think. When I received more information in September, again, I
think I reported it to the FBI, I don't remember if it was
immediately but within a couple weeks. Once I had a regular
contact at the FBI, I think I reported those either the same or
the next day after that.
Q So just to make sure, you're not aware of any policy or
protocol at the Department that you were violating
when having these -- at the time when you had these conversations
with the FBI?
A That's correct.
Q All right. So it was brought up in the previous hour,
and you testified to this, to some extent to this fact, how you
provided information to the FBI but not necessarily to certain
Department of Justice officials. And I want to clarify the
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 138 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
difference between your supervisors who were in the political
track versus the career track.
Are you aware of -- so to be clear, when you said you did not
report it to your supervisors, did you mean the politicals, as in
Deputy Attorney General Yates, or did you mean within the career
track?
A Deputy Attorney General Yates.
Q So that would be on the political track?
A Yes. I believe, just to be clear, I think at that point
as a component head my superiors were all on the political side,
so yes.
Q Gotcha.
Are you aware of any Department of Justice rule that requires
its employees to inform DOJ political leadership when you provide
information to law enforcement that's outside the scope of your
duties, official duties?
A I'm not aware of any such policy.
Q So arguably this would include any leads or tips that
apply to counterintelligence or criminal matters?
A I'm not aware of any policy along those lines.
Q Are you aware of any Department of Justice policy that
would have required you to inform anyone at the Department,
political or career, about your interviews with the FBI?
A No, not that I'm aware of, no.
Q Are you aware -- actually, I may have asked this
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 139 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
already -- but are you aware of any Department of Justice rules
that require you to inform anyone at the Department, political or
career, of your communications with Mr. Steele?
A No.
Q So, again, so it's fair to say that you were not aware
that were you violating any Department of Justice policy --
A Correct.
Q -- at the time?
You stated that Deputy Attorney General Yates was not aware
of your communications with Mr. Steele or your interviews. Was
any other Obama DOJ political appointee aware of your
communications with Mr. Steele?
A I am not aware of any political official knowing of my
communications.
Q Or your interviews with the FBI?
A Right.
Q Do you believe it would have been appropriate to share
what is in effect a counterintelligence criminal tip related to an
FBI investigation with a political appointee?
A No. I mean, I think all I can say is I made the
decision at the time to inform career people and that's what I
did.
Q And before I jump into the next subject, there has been
some focus on, you know, why when Mr. Steele shared this
information, like, why you didn't cross-examine him or why you
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didn't follow through.
Is it safe to -- is it fair to characterize that it's the
FBI's job to investigate and verify the credibility of a source or
leads information and not necessarily you as a private citizen
providing that? Like that is why they are there?
A That's part of their job certainly, yes.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So, again, at the time you did in fact inform some DOJ
criminal division career employees about your communication with
Mr. Steele and your communications with the FBI. Is that correct?
A Yes.
Q However, at the same time you did not inform any of your
superiors who all happened to be political appointees or any other
political appointees. Is that correct?
A Yes.
Q Can you explain why you made the decision to inform
certain career Department employees but not any political
Department employees?
A I wanted the information to be given to the career
employees who would be able to evaluate the information and do any
necessary followup, because it was still source leads information.
Q But aren't there certain Department political employees
who also have substantive portfolios in that area? In the same
vein, wouldn't you think they would be interested to know that
information, too?
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A They might have been interested. I really can't
speculate.
Q But you -- I mean, it appears to me, I don't know if
it's a coincidence, but you drew a line at career employees versus
political, or is that a mischaracterization?
A Right. But I think more -- what I was trying to do was
get it to the officials who were working on this kind of
information.
Q Uh-huh.
A So I didn't just call any career person, I called people
who understood and dealt with these kinds of Russian matters,
Russian organized crime matters.
Q But, again, like the most senior career employee that
was informed, at some level above them was a political appointee.
Did you have any specific thoughts as to why it was important to
inform the career level but not that one political level above it?
A Beyond saying I wanted to keep it in career channels and
not make it political or not have it treated in a political way,
that's all I can say.
Q So was it important to you to keep it in career
channels?
A I thought it was appropriate that career officials would
be the ones dealing with the information.
Q What would be your concern if it did end up in political
channels?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 142 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A You know, all I can say is that the information was, you
know, leads, source information, it's not the kind of information
that higher-ups used to determine policy or make decisions. It's
a very raw end of the case.
And so just like the FBI probably would not report up to the
top of the Department all the leads they were getting from people
out in the outside. I felt this should go to the people who were
going to be looking at it.
Ms. Shen. Okay. Thank you.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q Before I turn it back over to Val, I want to kind of go
through the timeline of events that has occurred since this news
broke of your communications with Mr. Steele and the impact that
it's had at your position at DOJ. I know it was touched upon a
little bit, but I couldn't write my notes fast enough, so I wanted
to make sure I have the exact date, times, names, correct.
When were you removed -- when were you reassigned from the
position of associate deputy attorney general?
A I believe it was early December of 2017.
Q And at that time you were still the head of the
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force?
A That's correct.
Q When were you reassigned from that position?
A End of December, beginning of January of this year.
January of this year.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 143 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q 2018?
A Yes.
Q And you mentioned that the Department provided a couple
of explanations as to why those reassignments occurred. So for
the -- from the early December 2017 reassignment, the reasons they
gave were?
A December 2017, yeah, so end of 2017.
Q Right. I'm sorry.
A Yes.
Q The reasons they gave for that reassignment, the first?
A Two reasons. One was they said I had not given them
sufficiently and timely notice of my conversations with Chris
Steele. And, secondly, that they were planning a reorganization
of the Department where none of the component heads would be
sitting within the Deputy Attorney General's Office.
Q And who are the names of the two individuals who gave
you that explanation.
A Scott Schools and Jim Crowell.
Q How do you spell that?
A C-r-o-w-e-l-l.
Q Was that a meeting? Was that in writing? Was that --
A That was a meeting.
Q Did they provide you anything in writing?
A I think there's a thing you sign acknowledging the
transfer, something like that. But the reasons were not written
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down.
Q Did they cite any DOJ policy with regards to the timely
notice requirement or regulation?
A As I said, I think there's some sort of thing that you
sign whether you accept the transfer immediately or whether you
want 2 weeks or something like that. So there's some kind of
form. But that's what I remember. I don't remember if it's
called a timely --
Q No, no, I mean with regard to their explanation.
A No, they didn't cite anything specific.
Q So they didn't give -- so they weren't able to identify
specific violations of policy or misconduct? They weren't able to
refer back to a specific DOJ policy?
A Right. Right.
Q I'm sorry. Let me --
A They did not cite any reg to me or anything like that.
Q Okay. So that was for the December 2017?
A Right.
Q Now, for January 2018?
A Yes.
Q Who were the individuals involved?
A It was Scott Schools, and I don't remember if someone
else was in the room. There may have been another member of ODAG,
but I'm not sure. And I was told at this time that the Attorney
General or the deputy attorney general did not want me in a
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position where I would be having contact with the White House.
Q Was this a meeting or was this in writing?
A It was a meeting.
Q And was it again a form where you sign acknowledging the
transfer or did they provide anything else?
A Just a form acknowledging the transfer.
Q Did they offer an explanation as why you couldn't have
contact with the White House, why they didn't want you in that
type of position? Did they offer details?
A They did not provide any additional details.
Q Did the DAGs at any point speak with you directly?
A No.
Q Prior to this are you -- sorry.
Ms. Shen. Oh, just in either of these two meetings with
Scott Schools and the other individuals, were there subsequent
communications on this topic after these two meetings?
Mr. Ohr. Nothing substantive. There may have been paperwork
kind of -- I don't remember if there was any other forms to sign
or anything like that, but, no, I don't think so.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q Are you aware of any other -- prior to this
instance -- any complaints about your substantive performance or
the quality of your work prior to December 2017?
A No.
Q Are you aware of the decision either in December 2017 or
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 146 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
January 2018 based on a report by the Office of Professional
Responsibility?
A No.
Q Are you aware of any OPR complaint filed against you?
A No.
Q Are you aware of any -- again, referencing both
December 2017 and January 2018 -- are you aware if the decision
was based upon an opinion provided by the Department's ethics
office?
A No.
Q Are you aware of any appeals process for when someone is
reassigned or demoted, however you would like to refer to it?
A I am not aware of any -- I don't know what the yes or no
on that, but I did not seek to appeal any of those decisions.
Q Did they advise you at the time? Did they say, like,
"Oh, you have this option, do you acknowledge it"?
A They might have. I don't recall.
Q Have you at any point been approached by the
Department's Inspector General'S Office regarding your contacts
with Mr. Steele?
A Yes.
Q If you can, share approximately when that occurred? I
won't pry into the details of it.
A I think it was in July --
Q Of this year?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 147 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A -- of this year.
Q And have you fully cooperated with his request?
A Yes.
Q To the best of your --
A Yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 148 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So just going back to your first meeting with Mr.
Schools and Mr. Crowell, I believe, you said one of the bases or
the two bases was not providing a timely -- sufficiently timely
notice of your communications with Mr. Steele. Is that accurate?
A Yes.
Q And did they provide an explanation of what would have
been a sufficiently timely notice?
A No.
Q Did you ask about the basis or what that meant for them
directly at the time?
A I don't believe so.
Ms. Hariharan. Did they offer an example?
Mr. Ohr. No.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So sitting here today do you know what they meant, I
mean what could you have done differently to avoid not
having -- to avoid having provided the insufficiently timely
notice, given that there's no rule or regulation that they cited?
A Right. I don't have a specific understanding, but I
assume if I had told them months before that might have been
different.
Q Are you familiar with any other cases where career civil
servant Department employees have been reassigned on the basis of
not providing timely notice for a communication that is not
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 149 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
contained in a Department policy or regulation?
A I don't, as I sit here, I don't -- I can't think of any
particular examples.
Q So such a basis is not some kind of common
administrative action that you're familiar with?
A I really couldn't say.
Mr. Hariharan. Are you aware of any prior case where a
Department career civil servant has been reassigned without a
written justification?
Mr. Ohr. Again, I don't know.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q During each of these meetings were -- how were those
meetings set up? How did you know to go to these meetings? Did
someone call you to reach out to set up the meeting?
A Yes.
Q Who was that person?
A In the first meeting it was one of the administrative
people in the Office of Deputy Attorney General, I don't remember
who. And the second time it may have been -- I don't recall
exactly. I got some kind of a call asking me to come down. I
don't remember who made the call.
Q And what was the timeframe between the reaching out to
set up the meeting and the actual meeting taking place in both
instances?
A In the first case it was only a few minutes. The second
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case, I was no longer sitting in the Main Justice building. I
don't recall exactly how long it was, but it wouldn't have been
very long.
Q So within the day?
A Probably, yes.
Q And so prior to that reaching out and asking you to come
down -- I'm talking about the first meeting now and asking you to
come down in a few minutes to have the meeting with the ODAG
officials, did you have any prior communication on the topic of
your reassignment?
A No, not on the topic of my reassignment. No.
Q So when you received this communication, did you -- did
the communication from the -- I'm sorry -- the administrative
official indicate what the purpose of the meeting was?
A No.
Q What about in the second meeting when you had a call,
did that call indicate what the purpose of that meeting was?
A I don't recall.
Q So is it fair to say that when you were told that you
were going to be reassigned to this meeting, that it came as a bit
of a surprise to you?
A Yes.
Q Do you recall anything that you said in response during
that meeting -- those meetings?
A Not at the first meeting. At the second meeting I think
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 151 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
I said, okay, but I would need a little time to let the folks at
OCDETF know. So I said, I don't want to do it today.
And one of the options was 2 weeks or something like that.
So I think I said I wanted -- whatever the time period was, a few
days or a couple weeks, I asked for that and they said fine.
Q And so in terms of asking for a few days or a couple
weeks, does that mean asking for time before it becomes effective.
Is that correct?
A Right.
Q So in the first instance then -- I'm sorry, I'm jumping
back and forth -- in the December 2017 meeting about the associate
deputy attorney general title, what was the timeframe between the
meeting and when that reassignment became effective?
A I think that was immediate.
Q Immediate. Okay.
A I didn't ask for any time there.
Q Because there was not as much of a practical day-to-day
difference?
A Correct.
Q Okay. But in your capacity as the director of OCDETF,
what work were you engaged in at the time? Was there a specific
project or --
A Well, mainly, I just wanted to make sure I had a chance
to say goodbye to the folks at OCDETF and the network of
prosecutors and agents around the country.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 152 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q When your reassignment from director of OCDETF took
place, who took over your duties at that point?
A I don't know.
Q So you're not aware of someone that the Department had
talked to to ensure a smooth transition of your duties?
A Well, okay, let me just -- the first time I don't know.
For the second meeting when I left OCDETF, my deputy took over as
the acting director. So at that time there was -- I knew who was
doing it.
Q Were you the one that informed your OCDETF team of your
reassignment or were --
A Yes.
Q Was there any kind of larger Department notice or email
sent out announcing your reassignment?
A I sent an email out to the OCDETF community.
Q But there wasn't a separate email from, like, an HR
Department or the ODAG's office sending out a notice regarding
your reassignment?
A I don't recall anything like that.
Q So, Mr. Ohr, I don't want to put you in -- I'm not
trying to put you in an awkward position. At the same time, I
personally think it's very concerning -- what you've told me
concerns me personally a lot. The way that this was handled, it
doesn't sound typical to me. You know, I work on a committee that
has jurisdiction over Federal civil service employees, Title 5
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 153 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
employees. We have an understanding of what due process
protections, and we take those very seriously.
You know, I'm not actually a subject matter expert on all of
these procedures or the Department's procedures. You know, that
being said, I feel like I have to ask you, do you feel like that
your process with your reassignments was handled in accordance
with all the due process you think --
Mr. Weinsheimer. I'm not sure that this is relevant to your
investigation. I let this go on for a long time. It's a long day
and you've spent a lot of time having very specific questions, and
we're now really getting into specific personnel matters, and I
don't think it's appropriate for him to answer that question.
Ms. Shen. Well, in all fairness, the specific personnel
matters that we're discussing, I think the facts establish, have a
direct causal relationship to the very core of the larger
investigation and many other questions that have been asked and
will be continued to be asked. I don't think I'll be the only one
to discuss this issue. In fact, I was not even the first one to
raise it, it was folks in the other round who did.
So I think this is a pretty natural -- and I can promise you,
since this is going to be the last question, I think it's a pretty
natural ending to the overarching discussion that both I and
people across the aisle have been having.
Mr. Weinsheimer. But you've asked him about his reaction to
a personnel matter. You've gotten all the facts you need in terms
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 154 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
of whatever is the relevance of the personnel matter. What his
opinion of that personnel matter I don't think is relevant.
And he may have certain rights or he may have certain options
in terms of what he wants to do. I don't think his reaction to
what's happened so far is relevant to your investigation.
Ms. Shen. Okay. Well, then can I be permitted to ask a few
factual questions that's related to this topic?
Mr. Weinsheimer. I've allowed to you ask all sorts of
factual questions.
Ms. Shen. Okay. Well, then I will ask -- then I'll ask a
couple more.
So, Mr. Ohr, in light of what you've told us, do you have any
plans to pursue a personnel action in relation to the Department's
handling of your position?
Mr. Weinsheimer. Can I just interrupt for a second?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 155 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[1:19 p.m.]
Mr. Ohr. So I understand what you're asking, but I think all
I can really say, to be honest, is I'm a Department of Justice
employee. I did not seek to appeal any of these actions. I don't
know, I can't say what I'm going to do in the future. But I
didn't seek any kind of appeal.
Ms. Hariharan. Okay. So earlier this month, a columnist for
The Hill reported that you were discussing with Christopher Steele
the possibility of reengaging him with both the FBI and the
Special Counsel's Office, and I know it was brought up in the
previous hour. So we will introduce the article as exhibit 4.
I'll give you a second to quickly review it.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 4
Was marked for identification.]
Mr. Berman. Pages 4 through 7 are not the article, just so
you know.
Ms. Hariharan. Yes. They're attachments within the article.
Mr. Ohr. Okay.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q Can you describe how soon after, again, to the best of
your knowledge, with regards to when Mr. Steele was officially
terminated as a paid confidential human source for the FBI, how
soon after that he was attempting to reengage with the FBI or the
Special Counsel's Office in an official capacity?
A Well, the conversations or the texts that are reported
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 156 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
on in this article all follow the FBI asking me to ask Chris if he
would be willing to meet with them again.
I conveyed that to Chris Steele. He conveyed back to me that
he was interested.
Then there is a period of time, which I think is reflected in
these texts, where the reengagement had not happened and Chris is
asking: What's happening, what's going on? And so I said, I'll
convey this, but that's all I could say.
Q Does it speak to Mr. Steele's credibility as a source or
as a point of access to various source networks for accurate and
potentially credible information that the FBI would consider
reengaging with him as a --
A It's kind of speculation, I think, on my part. I mean,
clearly the FBI was the one that asked to reengage.
Q And, again, we're just trying to clarify sort of why
that may have been the case.
Is it consistent with your understanding that Mr. Steele's
sources were still providing him information relevant to the
question of Russian interference or Russian collusion or just
broader Russian activities in the United States?
A I think --
Q That's part of the reason he was reaching out to you,
part of the reason perhaps the FBI would want to reach out to him?
A At some point, as reflected in some of these texts,
Chris Steele is indicating he has additional information. It's
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 157 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
not clear to me whether that had to do with the, quote, special
counsel's investigation or what, you know, but -- and so I didn't
know specifically, you know, where it would fit in, if anywhere.
He does reference the special counsel, but, again, I don't
know if that has, you know -- if that's right or what, whether he
just conflated the FBI and the special counsel. I don't know.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 5
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q So since you've mentioned it a few times and it's also
linked in within the article itself, we'd like to introduce as
exhibit No. 5 the text messages that are labeled HPSCI
3-23-18-DOJ-27 through DOJ-30, which are law enforcement sensitive
documents that were leaked to the press at a previous date.
These text messages, they're from March 30, 2017, through
November 27, 2017, between you and Mr. Steele. And if you could
turn to page 2, Mr. Steele, writes, quote, "we are frustrated with
how long this reengagement with the Bureau and Mueller is taking.
There are some new perishable operational opportunities we do not
want to miss out on," end quote.
Then again on the third page, for November 18, 2017, he
wrote, quote, "I am presuming you've heard nothing back from your
SC colleagues on the issue you kindly put to them for me. We have
heard nothing from them either. To say this is disappointing
would be an understatement," end quote.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 158 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Would it be fair to say that Mr. Steele was having a
difficult time communicating with both the FBI and the Special
Counsel's Office outside of his communications with you, in your
understanding, in your recollection from these messages?
A He is expressing frustration that he is not in contact
with the FBI and the Special Counsel's Office.
Q Now, I'm not sure how familiar you are with some of the
what I would characterize as conspiracy theories that have floated
around, based on these text messages, and not only your
communications with Mr. Steele but his attempted communications
with the Special Counsel Office or the FBI.
In your opinion, is Mr. Steele's attempt to reengage with the
special counsel or the FBI evidence of a secret conspiracy between
those parties?
A I think the communications speak for themselves. He's
trying to reestablish contact and it's not happening.
Q Do you know if he ended up being successful in
reengaging with the FBI or the Special Counsel's Office?
A At some point during 2017 Chris Steele did speak with
somebody from the FBI, but I don't know who.
Q You wouldn't happen to remember when?
A Not as I sit here, no.
Q And would you even be in a position to know that
information, since you're not involved in the investigation?
A The only reason why I say this is that at some point
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Chris Steele told me that he had met with somebody from the FBI.
Q Do you know why he was -- Mr. Steele was so eager to
reengage with the FBI or the special counsel?
A I only know from the information he gave here that he
thought there were some additional opportunities. We did have a
conversation at some point during this time period where he
provided some information about what kind of opportunity, and I
passed that along to the FBI.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So just to go back to -- I think from these text
messages, you know, it appears that he's trying to engage or
through you maybe try to contact the FBI again. Is that accurate?
As in this was not his first attempted outreach, but that there
had been some level of back-and-forth with the FBI and him
already.
A Well, it's tough to say, because these text messages
cover a period of several months. And at some point during this
time, the FBI did speak with Chris Steele, according to what Chris
Steele reported. And he had obviously had contact with the FBI
back in 2016. So, in that sense, yes, he's trying to get back in
touch with the FBI.
Q So in late 2016, I believe someone represented it to be
around the November timeframe, Mr. Steele's formal status as an
FBI confidential human source was terminated. Subsequently, 6
months later, he's attempting to reengage with the FBI.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 160 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Why do you think the FBI would be -- I'm sorry, let me
rephrase. Do you have any insight as to why Mr. Steele believed
that the FBI would nonetheless be receptive?
A Well, as these notes reflect -- well, maybe they're not
explicit, but as I had mentioned before, at some point, and it
looks like from these notes around May of 2017, the FBI had asked
me to ask Chris if he would meet with them again.
Q When the FBI asked you to ask Mr. Steele to reengage,
did they provide any commentary as to why they were asking you to
do so?
A No.
Q So when the FBI had asked you to engage with Chris
Steele, were they specific as to whether they wanted to establish,
again, a formal relationship as a confidential human source versus
just have some level of contact again?
A I think they said they wanted to talk with him. That's,
I think, all they said.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q There has been a lot of conversation not only in this
interview today but in our previous interviews as part of this
joint investigation with relation to confidential human sources.
Are you familiar with the Department of Justice policy
against revealing information from confidential human sources
during an ongoing criminal investigation?
A I know that the Department attempts to keep confidential
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 161 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
human source information confidential.
Q And why does that policy exist?
A If we reveal this information, it will make people not
want to tell us in the future, and because in an investigation we
may be acting on confidential human source information and
revealing that information prematurely could, you know, damage our
investigative efforts.
Q So could disclosing the identity of a confidential human
source then create a risk to that person or their source networks?
A Yes, of course.
Q And would that in any way -- in your experience, how
would -- how could disclosing the identity of a confidential human
source compromise our national security, the national security
investigations or criminal investigations?
A When a source's name is outed, that could put the source
at risk. It could prevent future attempts by the source to gather
information on behalf of U.S. law enforcement.
There are a lot of ways that could damage ongoing cases, as
well as the broader policy of trying to recruit sources to give
information to law enforcement.
Q If you could turn back to exhibit 5, which was the text
messages. And I'd like to turn your attention to page 3, where on
October 26, 2017, Mr. Steele wrote to you, quote, "Can we have a
word tomorrow, please? Just seen a story in the media about the
Bureau handing over docs to Congress about my work and
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 162 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
relationship with them. Very concerned about this. People's
lives may be endangered," end quote.
So in my understanding of this, Mr. Steele appears to be
concerned that the production of documents to Congress could
potentially endanger the lives of active sources or source
networks. Is that consistent with your understanding?
A Yes.
Q How did you react to Mr. Steele's concerns at that time?
A I think we had a conversation.
Q Did you agree in his assessment that lives could
potentially be at risk, source lives?
A I wanted to hear what he had to say, but, as I've said
before, if sources are identified in public, then there
could -- people's lives could be in danger.
Q In your experience as an organized crime, transnational
crime prosecutor, would you be concerned if Congress began
requesting personal identifying information related to
confidential human sources, their methods, their networks? Would
that be of a concern to you?
A Speaking in general, yes.
Q Do you believe that the Department has legitimate
concerns that providing that information to Congress would, in
turn, place those sources at risk?
Mr. Weinsheimer. Just to be clear, Mr. Ohr can speak on
behalf of himself.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 163 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Ms. Hariharan. Yes, I'm sorry.
In your opinion.
Mr. Ohr. In my opinion, yes.
Ms. Hariharan. Okay.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So given the nature of protecting confidential human
sources or protecting any kind of classified or sensitive
information, you know, I think there's sort of -- in my mind,
there's obviously just straight-up saying details, names,
descriptions, and like that, but there's also, you know,
contextual information that could potentially help someone else
identify a source. And it's often much more difficult to know
what to protect in that example. Would you agree?
A If I understand your question correctly, the identity of
the source could be put at risk in ways other than the straight
revealing of their name or other identifying information, yes.
Q Right. So I think often, you know, there are people who
don't necessarily understand that the information that they're
seeking or might be talking about could be placing or could be an
identifying piece of information, because it may not be obvious on
its face.
But certain things, like dates of meetings or, you know,
number of sources at given points of time, or locations of
meetings, you know, in your experience, is that the kind of thing
that is also protected because, you know, contextually it could
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 164 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
lead to someone piecing together a puzzle and identifying a
source?
A Yes. Almost -- a lot of information relating to
contacts with a source is sensitive, because it could be used to
help identify a source.
Q And so when in an open setting someone is asking for
information about, say, the number of contacts a law enforcement
official has with a source or how many meetings they had with a
source or when they first met the source, would those be examples
of types of information that, in your opinion, should be
protected?
A I think, from the law enforcement point of view, we
would want to be careful about any information about sources being
made public.
Ms. Shen. Okay. Thank you.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q Going back to your time as a line prosecutor, did you
utilize information or confidential human sources in your cases,
understanding that you are not on the investigative side, you're
on the prosecution side?
A Yes.
Q Now, was that information from these sources
consistently accurate or did it vary from source to source?
A Not only from source to source, but different
information from the same source might be more or less credible,
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depending on the circumstance.
Q As part of the process, the investigative side would
have gone through and corroborated, if they could, any of the
information provided by the sources before you even dreamed of
using it?
A Part of the job of an agent is to try to flesh out
source information and corroborate it and use that information as
lead information to generate other information and evidence that
could be useful in an investigation and prosecution.
Q And that happens in almost -- in every case that may or
may not use a confidential source or material provided by them,
correct?
A It's pretty common.
Q So, understanding that, the information provided by Mr.
Steele, at one time an official confidential human source and then
as a lead or conduit for that kind of information, the
investigative side of the shop, i.e., the FBI, would have taken
the time to go through and verify or corroborate what they could
of the information that he -- that you provided via him?
A This is our standard procedure. What they did with it I
don't know.
Q But, generally speaking, that is the standard procedure
for dealing with those types of leads and that type of
information?
A Yes.
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Q How -- you may have described this a little bit -- but
how valuable -- again, going back to your time as a line
prosecutor -- how valuable were these sources to your ability to
successfully prosecute all manner of organized crime individuals?
A Source information is very important to Federal law
enforcement, particularly in the organized crime and drug areas.
Ms. Hariharan. In that case, I think we're done for our
hour.
Mr. Ohr. Thank you.
Ms. Hariharan. We should take a lunch break. We are off the
record at 1:39. We'll break for lunch.
[Recess.]
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[2:21 p.m.]
Mr. Parmiter. Let's go back on the record. The time is
2:21.
Mr. Jordan.
Mr. Jordan. Thank you.
Mr. Ohr, why did they pick you? That's what I'm trying to
figure out. Why did Fusion and Mr. Steele -- let's just focus on
Mr. Steele. Why did he come to you? If he's, as you said, if
he's already being paid by the FBI, going directly to the FBI,
meeting with the FBI, why did he need to talk to you?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know specifically why he reached out to me.
Mr. Jordan. Tell me when you first met Christopher Steele.
Mr. Ohr. I met him in 2007.
Mr. Jordan. Where at?
Mr. Ohr. At a meeting. At that time he was still working
for the British Government, their intelligence service. And I was
in London for meetings on Russian organized crime.
The FBI office in our Embassy in London set up a meeting with
our British Government counterparts on Russian organized crime.
It took place at Christopher Steele's building, and he was there
and there were other members of different British Government
agencies there.
Mr. Jordan. So our government and their government set up a
meeting, and you both were at that meeting and you met there.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
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Mr. Jordan. Okay. Between '07 and '16 -- so when was your
first meeting with Christopher Steele relative to our subject
today? When was that, '16?
Mr. Ohr. That was July 30 of 2016.
Mr. Jordan. The meeting that's been talked about already?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So July 30, 2016. Between 2007, when you
first met Mr. Steele in Great Britain, and July 30, 2016, did you
meet with Mr. Steele any time between those dates?
Mr. Ohr. I did on occasion. I don't remember exactly how
many times, but a few times.
Mr. Jordan. A few times. Under 10, more than 10?
Mr. Ohr. Probably under 10.
Mr. Jordan. Under 10? Was it also in like a conference-type
setting, or was it some individual meetings?
Mr. Ohr. Some of both. There was at least one time I saw
him in a conference-like setting, and then there were some
meetings where either I or I and an FBI agent met with him.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. The July 30 meeting with Mr. Steele,
prior to that what was your most recent meeting with Mr. Steele on
a different subject prior to the July 30, 2016, meeting?
Mr. Ohr. We had some -- we did not meet earlier that year
that I recall. We had met either the year or 2 before that.
Mr. Jordan. So then 1 or 2 years prior --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
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Mr. Jordan. -- was your most recent meeting before the
subject matter which we're discussing today?
Mr. Ohr. I believe that is correct.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Were you curious why all of a sudden you
hadn't talked to him in, say, 2 years, why he wanted to get
together with you now on this subject matter?
Mr. Ohr. Well, he didn't explain the subject matter ahead of
time. It was -- over our -- over the years he had occasionally
called when he was coming into town. So we agreed to meet for
breakfast.
And when he -- when we met then he provided the information
that I've described earlier. So I think I was in a little bit of
shock at that point.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. When you meet on July 30, was
your -- refresh my memory, we may have went over this -- was your
wife at that meeting as well?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, she was.
Mr. Jordan. She was at that meeting. And did Mr. Steele
know that your wife was working for Fusion?
Mr. Ohr. I'm not sure. Probably, but I don't recall right
now.
Mr. Jordan. And he gives you this information.
What did he give you, actually? Did you just talk?
Mr. Ohr. We just talked.
Mr. Jordan. So no documents were exchanged there, no memory
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stick, nothing, no substantive other than just a conversation?
Mr. Ohr. That is correct.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And was it just the three of you, Mr.
Steele, your wife, and you?
Mr. Ohr. There was an associate of Mr. Steele's there as
well, another gentleman, younger fellow. I didn't catch his name.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So that's the first time I knew that.
Okay. So there was a fourth individual there, but he also -- he
worked for Mr. Steele?
Mr. Ohr. I believe so, yes.
Mr. Jordan. All right.
Who contacted you first? Well, let me back up.
Tell me when you first met Glenn Simpson.
Mr. Ohr. I met Glenn Simpson several years ago. I don't
recall the exact date.
Mr. Jordan. Several years ago meaning? Can you give
me -- 2007, like Mr. Steele, or more recent than that?
Mr. Ohr. It might -- it's several -- I mean, probably -- I
don't know. Definitely more than 5 years before, but I don't
recall.
Mr. Jordan. Five years earlier.
Mr. Ohr. Yes, at least that, maybe 10 years earlier.
Mr. Jordan. I think you said earlier today, sometime this
morning, that you met with Glenn Simpson twice in person. You had
some conversations with him on the phone, it looks like some email
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exchanges. But you met twice in person in 2016. Is that right?
Mr. Ohr. That is my recollection.
Mr. Jordan. Once was August and once was December?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. So August 2016. What was your most recent
meeting prior to that August 2016 meeting with Glenn
Simpson -- before this subject matter on August 2016, what was
your most recent meeting prior to that?
Mr. Ohr. You know, I don't recall. It probably was at least
a few years before.
Mr. Jordan. Just like Mr. Steele, at least a couple years
earlier?
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And tell me about this first meeting with
Mr. Simpson again.
Mr. Ohr. This happened around August 22. I believe, if I
remember from looking at my notes -- I don't have a specific
recollection of the date -- when I had spoken with Chris Steele, I
think he indicated that Glenn might be available to meet. Or
maybe that was in an email. And I don't recall how the August 22
meeting was set up, whether I reached out for Glenn Simpson or
whether he reached out for me.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And what did you discuss exactly, again,
at this meeting?
Mr. Ohr. He provided some additional information. And the
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only reason I'm hesitating is I don't know exactly what he said as
opposed to what Steele said.
Mr. Jordan. Just give me 1 second. I apologize. Additional
information. So was the meeting on August 22 -- so you have the
meeting on July 30 with Christopher Steele --
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. -- and your wife. That's the first time you had
met with him in a couple years.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Twenty-two days later, you're meeting with Glenn
Simpson.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Was your wife at that meeting?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. Was anyone else at that meeting?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe so.
Mr. Jordan. So the two of you. And you said additional
information. So was the 22nd, August 22 meeting with Glenn
Simpson building on information you learned from the July 30
meeting with Christopher Steele?
Mr. Ohr. That was my understanding.
Mr. Jordan. That was your understanding. Were there any
meetings with either Steele or Simpson -- obviously not Simpson,
because you said this was your first one -- any meetings with
Steele or anyone else between the 30th and the 22nd about this
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subject?
Mr. Ohr. Not that I recall.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So those are the first two meetings on
what we've been talking about --
Mr. Ohr. I believe so.
Mr. Jordan. -- with the two principal -- well, with Mr.
Steele and Mr. Simpson. All right.
Go back to the 30th meeting now. I know we're jumping back
and forth. Go back to Steele. What exactly did he convey at the
July 30 meeting?
Mr. Ohr. As I mentioned before, there were three primary
items of information.
Mr. Jordan. Let me just go find those in my notes, because I
remember you saying that. I want to make sure I have it.
You talked about Mr. Page. You talked about the statement he
had made, Donald Trump over a barrel, and a gentleman named
Hauser. Is that right?
Mr. Ohr. That's right.
Mr. Jordan. Those three pieces of information.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. And you -- we'll get to the next meeting in
August when you go, because there was a meeting in between those
when you went to meet Mr. McCabe and Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page,
right?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I believe what happened after that first
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July -- well, first of all, can I step back for a moment, because
I think you may not have been in the room.
In the July 30 meeting, Chris Steele also mentioned something
about the doping -- you know, one of the doping scandals. And he
also mentioned, I believe -- and, again, this is based on my
review of my notes -- that he had provided Mr. Gaeta with two
reports, but that Glenn had all reports. So, okay, so there's
that. Then --
Mr. Jordan. I'm just trying to get the chronology. There's
a July 30 meeting. There's an August 22 meeting. July 30 is with
Mr. Steele and your wife and some associate of Mr. Steele. The
August 22 meeting is just you and Mr. Simpson.
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. In between those two meetings --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- I thought you said you met with Mr. McCabe --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- Ms. Page, and Mr. Strzok.
Mr. Ohr. No. What I met with -- what I did after the July
30 meeting is I reached out for Andy McCabe and asked to meet with
him.
Mr. Jordan. Right.
Mr. Ohr. He said -- you know, there was a certain time we
set up. I went over there to talk with him and Lisa Page was
there. I did not know she was going to be there. I do not
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believe that Peter Strzok was there at that meeting.
Mr. Jordan. But Page and McCabe were. And that meeting took
place sometime between the 30th of July of 2016 and the 22nd of
August 2016.
Mr. Ohr. To the best of my recollection. I don't have a
date for that meeting.
Mr. Jordan. And when did you learn, in these three meetings
in those 22 days, when did you learn that Mr. Steele was being
paid, as you said earlier, paid by the FBI and actually providing
information to them directly?
Mr. Ohr. I had known years prior to that that Chris Steele
had an informant relationship, was a paid informant with the FBI.
Mr. Jordan. So you knew it at the time. When you first met
him on the 30th, you knew he was already --
Mr. Ohr. He already had a relationship.
Mr. Jordan. You knew that?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Did he talk about that at all? Did he
talk about what he was giving to the FBI? Did he talk about his
meetings with the FBI in your July 30 meeting?
Mr. Ohr. The only thing I recall him mentioning is that he
had provided two of his reports to Special Agent Gaeta.
Mr. Jordan. So the same information he gave you, did he tell
you he had given that directly to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know what he told the FBI.
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Mr. Jordan. Okay. After he gave you this information, did
you -- I'm just curious how you're thinking -- did you step back
and say, well, why does he want to talk to me if he's a paid
informant and he can give it directly? Why the go-between? Why
not just like go say, if he told you three sentences and then two
other pieces of information about the doping scandal, whatever,
three other sentences, why didn't he just tell it directly to the
FBI?
Mr. Ohr. He may well have. I don't know what -- you know,
he had a relationship with the FBI at that time. He may well have
provided that information to the FBI. I didn't know.
Mr. Jordan. Why did he need to say it twice, is what I'm
asking.
Mr. Ohr. He and I had spoken from time to time over the
years and --
Mr. Jordan. What I'm trying to figure out is why did they
need you.
Mr. Ohr. I don't -- I don't know what --
Mr. Jordan. I don't see how they -- I mean, if Christopher
Steele is a paid informant of the FBI and he's this source who's
credible, he's been working with the FBI, as you said, for a long
time, you knew he was a paid informant, why did he need to talk to
you --
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. -- to give the same darn information?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 177 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. All right. So the timeline is, again,
the 30th you meet with Steele. Sometime between the 30th and the
22nd of August you meet with McCabe and Page. And then we're to
the meeting on the 22nd with Glenn Simpson.
Tell me -- again, go back. How did you first meet Glenn
Simpson? How did you guys first meet? You said you met Steele at
an organized crime event or some forum in Great Britain. How did
you first meet Simpson, again?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall specifically. It may have been at
some kind of conference or something, but I don't recall
specifically. I knew he was interested in Russian organized
crime, that was the nature of our prior contacts, but I don't
recall the specifics.
Mr. Jordan. When did your wife first meet Glenn Simpson?
And when did your wife first -- when was her employment -- when
did her employment start with Fusion?
Mr. Ohr. I believe she knew Glenn Simpson for several years
as well, because he was interested in Russian organized crime. My
wife was a Russia analyst. And so I think they met.
I recall at least one conference or meeting, I believe it was
at the Department of Justice, not Main Justice but one of our
offices, where different speakers were there to talk about some
aspect of Russian organized crime. And I believe Glenn Simpson
was there and my wife was there. And I don't know if they knew
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each other before then or not. So that's what I remember about
them meeting, was certainly some time ago.
She started, had signed on as an independent contractor with
Fusion GPS I believe in late 2015.
Mr. Jordan. And, again, and I think you've talked about this
earlier, why was she hired?
Mr. Ohr. To do research on Russian -- Russian or
Russia-connected individuals and companies.
Mr. Jordan. And build on that. Research. I mean, that's
pretty broad. Do research on Russia, I mean, that's, you
know -- was she hired specifically for the dossier as well, or was
that one and the same when you say research on Russia?
Mr. Ohr. I believe her initial assignments had nothing to do
with Chris Steele or with the Trump campaign or anything. I think
she was just given other assignments.
Mr. Jordan. When you met with Mr. Steele on July 30, did
he know your wife was working for Fusion?
Mr. Ohr. Again, I'm not sure. I'm guessing -- well, I
shouldn't guess. I'm not sure. He may have.
Mr. Jordan. Did Mr. Steele know that you knew Mr. Simpson,
and did Mr. Simpson know that you knew Mr. Steele?
Mr. Ohr. I believe so, yes.
Mr. Jordan. How about this memory stick on December 12 that
you got from Glenn Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. Sorry, what's the question about that?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 179 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Jordan. The memory stick you got on December 10 of 2016,
what can you tell me about that? Do you know anything that
was -- you got a memory stick on the 10th of December.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Yes. So, as I think I may have mentioned
earlier, Glenn Simpson wanted to meet in early December, whatever
date that was in December.
At that meeting, he provided me with a memory stick and
provided some additional details on information about possible
connections between the Russian Government and the Trump campaign.
And he did not at that time explain specifically what was on the
memory stick, but my guess at the time was that this was the
dossier.
Mr. Jordan. You did handwritten notes. There was a long --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. There's a long one that has a similar date.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. It's the same date.
Mr. Ohr. I believe so, yes.
Mr. Jordan. Is that -- and the very first thing is, Glenn
gave me a memory stick.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. All right. Are you familiar with what I'm
talking about?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, I am.
Mr. Jordan. It looks like three or four pages, maybe five.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 180 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Was that a recap of what you thought was on the memory stick?
Mr. Ohr. No. It was a recap of our conversation.
Mr. Jordan. Is your conversation, though, what you assumed
was on the memory stick or what you were told was on the memory
stick?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I don't think he explicitly told me it was
the dossier, but I think I assumed that. And the additional
information he gave, he didn't indicate whether it was in the
dossier or not.
Mr. Jordan. All right. When you -- did you ever give
information -- or did you ever give anything to -- information or
any document or any memory stick or any type of -- anything
tangible to Mr. Steele or Mr. Simpson in your meetings with them?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. How about when you met with Mr. McCabe and
Ms. Page between these two meetings, did you give them notes that
you had taken? Was there anything in writing you gave to Andy
McCabe and Lisa Page?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe so, no.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Let's move to --
Mr. Issa. Before you go on, he said he thought at the time
it was the dossier. How did he know there was a dossier? When
did he learn of the existence of a dossier?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall exactly when I learned of the
existence of the dossier. I think prior to this meeting I was
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aware there was such a thing. I had not seen it. And I don't
know if I even knew the word "dossier" at the time or just Chris
Steele reports or something. I don't recall whether I, you know,
knew that term.
And I don't recall exactly why, whether -- I don't recall
exactly why I assumed that that was the dossier, but either
prior -- one of the conversations with Chris Steele prior to that
time, I might have, you know, been -- made me expect that Glenn
might give me the dossier. I don't recall exactly.
But at that time, being aware that there was something like
that in existence and then being given a memory stick by Glenn
Simpson, I think that's what I assumed was on there.
Mr. Jordan. You met with Glenn Simpson in person twice. How
many times did you meet with Christopher Steele in person?
Mr. Ohr. I believe just the two times, the July 30 and then
sometime in September.
Mr. Jordan. And each of them gave you -- I think you said
earlier each of them gave you a memory stick?
Mr. Ohr. No. Glenn Simpson gave me a memory stick in
December. The other memory stick we have discussed before this
was at some point, and it may have been in the fall of 2016, my
wife gave me a second memory stick or a first memory stick.
Mr. Jordan. And what did you do with that?
Mr. Ohr. I gave that --
Mr. Jordan. Both you gave to the FBI?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 182 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. The memory stick your wife gave you, when was
that and what was on it?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall exactly when I got that from her,
but my understanding at the time was that that represented her
research into particular Russian figures on behalf of Fusion GPS.
Mr. Jordan. Was it before the election or after the
election?
Mr. Ohr. You know, I'm afraid I can't recall.
Mr. Jordan. Who did you give it to, Mr. Pientka?
Mr. Ohr. I'm sorry?
Mr. Jordan. Did you give it to the guy, your handler, your
agent, Mr. Pientka?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah. I believe I would have given it to
Mr. Pientka, yes.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And you think -- but it was before the
one -- do you think it was different than the memory stick
Mr. Simpson gave you, the contents of it?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. You know that?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. But you think so?
Mr. Ohr. I think so, because I believe the memory stick that
Mr. Simpson gave me was the reports from Chris Steele that are
referred to as the dossier. And the memory stick that my wife
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gave me was her research, through open sources, into the work that
she had done for Fusion GPS.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. But you definitely got the memory stick
from your wife prior to the one that you received in December from
Mr. Simpson.
Mr. Ohr. I'm not sure. I think I said first a moment ago,
but I'm not sure.
Mr. Jordan. Did you have discussions with your wife about
this whole subject area?
Mr. Ohr. We had some conversations, sure.
Mr. Jordan. And can you tell me about some of the things
that she may have related to you about this?
Mr. Ohr. Well --
Mr. Berman. Congressman, with the staff earlier we discussed
the fact that Mr. Ohr wants to fully cooperate and answer fully
every question that he can. We're trying to get him to answer all
your questions, at the same time not testify directly to
conversations he had with his wife, which are generally protected
by privilege, although I recognize Congress takes a different view
of privilege. He does want to answer your question.
Mr. Ohr. Okay. What I can tell you, I think, is that my
understanding was when we met with Chris Steele on July 30 that
that was -- the specific information he gave me was not known to
my wife at the time.
After that, I can say that I think I certainly tried to keep
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separate what I was getting from Chris Steele and from Glenn
Simpson from any conversations with my wife.
She was specifically researching particular people. At some
point, I became aware that she was looking at, among other people,
Sergei Millian, which was one of the names that either Chris
Steele or Glenn Simpson had given to me. I know she was
researching these things.
In September of 2016, she ended her -- she stopped being a
contractor with Fusion GPS and she went to work at VeriSign as a
Russia cyber analyst. And at some point, I don't remember when
specifically, she wanted to know or she was, you know, afraid that
the -- was curious whether the FBI would want her -- results of
her research. And she did -- and she provided that to me in the
form -- and I said yes, and then she provided it in a memory
stick.
Mr. Jordan. Shortly after she left the employment of Fusion,
you said?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall when it was.
Mr. Jordan. But you said she left employment at Fusion in
September of 2016.
Mr. Ohr. That I remember. I don't recall when she gave me
the memory stick.
Mr. Jordan. Did you ever give her any information that you
had learned from Mr. Steele or Mr. Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I certainly tried not to. I can't remember every
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conversation we had, but I don't remember giving her any
information.
Mr. Jordan. Was your wife aware of the conversations, the
Skype meetings and the text messages and conversations you were
having with Mr. Steele and Mr. Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I think she knew that I was having some contact
with them, but aside from that one meeting that she was at on July
30, she wasn't --
Mr. Jordan. There is one note in here that says, I think
Glenn sent this to the wrong person, he sent it to me, and she
forwards it to you.
Mr. Ohr. Yes, uh-huh. So that's the -- I mean, yes. So
that time -- so she was aware that Glenn Simpson was reaching out
for me. We have the same email address. So when there's a
message from Glenn Simpson saying, you know, can you bring or
whatever it was, she says, I think this is meant for you, not for
me, or she sends a text to that effect.
Mr. Jordan. Were you aware of the money trail, the fact that
the DNC and the Clinton campaign had paid Perkins Coie, the law
firm who then had paid Fusion, who were then paying Christopher
Steele, were you aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I was aware of that at the time. I
knew they were --
Mr. Jordan. When did you learn about that?
Mr. Ohr. I think in the press.
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Mr. Jordan. Do you know when your wife knew that, that
trail?
Mr. Ohr. She may also have learned it from the press. I'm
not entirely sure. I don't think she -- she was not -- you know,
she didn't go to their office, I think, most days. I think she
was basically researching topics on the internet and providing the
information. So I don't think she had a lot of conversations,
from what I can tell, on the specifics.
Mr. Jordan. Let me go back a second.
Your wife first met Glenn Simpson when?
Mr. Ohr. Several years ago. I don't remember --
Mr. Jordan. The same meeting you were at or different?
Mr. Ohr. Probably -- I don't know. I mean, I've seen Glenn
Simpson at various -- on various occasions over the years, and I
believe my wife has as well.
The one time I remember the three of us being in a room was
this one conference that DOJ had. I think it was NIJ that
had -- you know, or National Institute of Justice maybe.
Mr. Jordan. Several years ago?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah, several years ago. And I don't --
Mr. Jordan. Do you recall -- your wife began working in late
2015-early 2016 timeframe for Fusion. When was the most recent
meeting prior to when she began employment at Fusion that your
wife had with Glenn Simpson? Do you know?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
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Mr. Jordan. Years, months, days before that? What would it
be?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I assume there was some kind of --
Mr. Jordan. Prior to just the initial contact for
employment.
Mr. Ohr. Okay. So my guess is years, but -- well, I
shouldn't guess, so I don't know. But I don't think it was one
close -- close in time.
Mr. Jordan. Similar to what we discussed earlier with you.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. It had been 2 years prior before you -- since
you had most recently talked to Chris Steele before he wants to
meet you on July 30, a couple years prior before Glenn Simpson
wants to meet you on August 22. Same pattern with your wife?
Mr. Ohr. I can't -- because I don't know the years. I'm
guessing it's -- again, I shouldn't guess, but I know it was not
close in time, in terms of weeks or months.
Mr. Jordan. Why do you think they picked your wife? There's
probably lots of Russian experts in the Washington, D.C., area.
Mr. Ohr. You know, I think -- first of all, I don't think
that there are that many people that do Russia research that are
available to do these kinds of contracts. So I think, you know,
they have talked over the years from time to time.
So I don't know why he picked her, but they were certainly
acquainted and knew of each other, you know, knew of each other's
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work at least in general.
Mr. Jordan. Let me go to Peter Strzok. Let me do this, then
I'll go to you, Darrell, then I know John wants to get back in
here too.
Tell me about your relationship with Peter Strzok, how many
interactions you had with him.
Mr. Ohr. I believe I only saw him maybe twice. I don't know
specifically. I did not know him before I was introduced to him.
Mr. Jordan. When was that date?
Mr. Ohr. Well, I don't recall exactly, but I think this was
the -- reconstructing it, I think the first time I may have met
him is with the meeting I had with Lisa Page, Peter Strzok, and
some of the criminal division people. So that would have been in
the fall at some point.
Mr. Jordan. And, again, he was not at the August meeting.
So you're saying the fall of 2016.
Mr. Ohr. I'm pretty sure he was not at the August meeting,
yeah, or the meeting around that time.
Mr. Jordan. Mr. Ohr testified a few weeks back, about 5
weeks ago, that -- Mr. Strzok testified, excuse me, I'm sorry,
that Mr. Ohr gave FBI documents which included material that I
believe originated from Mr. Steele. That's Peter Strzok's
testimony when I was questioning him 5 weeks ago.
What were those documents?
Mr. Ohr. I had -- well -- so what I recall is before I
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met -- certainly in November, when I met with Peter Strzok, Lisa
Page, and Joe Pientka, prior to that meeting, and then prior to my
meeting, I believe, with Joe Pientka on November 22, I had tried
to write up some of my notes of the prior conversations, the ones
in July, August, September.
Mr. Jordan. Okay, so back up. November 22 you meet with
Pientka. Prior to that, you met with Strzok, Page, and McCabe and
Pientka.
Mr. Ohr. No, I'm sorry. I met with Mr. McCabe and Lisa Page
in July. I don't believe I gave them any notes at that time.
Mr. Jordan. I know, you said that earlier. Go to this
November timeframe.
Mr. Ohr. Oh, you mean August. Yeah, I'm saying August. I'm
getting mixed up here.
Then in the fall sometime, it could have been September, but
I don't recall precisely, I met with Lisa Page, Peter Strzok, and
the three people I previously mentioned from the criminal
division. I don't believe I gave them any documents at that time
either.
I remember, though -- and my notes reflect this -- that in
November, before I sat down with Joe Pientka, I had
prepared -- and I had prepared some summaries of the conversations
I had had with Mr. Steele and with Mr. Simpson up to that time,
you know, prior to November. And I had also prepared a -- what I
think I had labeled a partial chronology of my meetings with those
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guys.
So those, I don't recall specifically whether I gave them,
the documents, to Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page and Mr. Pientka on the
21st or to Mr. Pientka on the 22nd, but I may well have. I
certainly prepared the documents with the intention of sharing
that information and offering them the documents if they wanted
it.
Mr. Jordan. I'm sorry, go ahead.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Yes, just to clear up one thing. With
respect to those contacts with folks at the Department of Justice,
like Andrew Weissmann and Bruce Swartz and Ms. Ahmad, and contacts
with Mr. McCabe and Ms. Page in that timeframe, are there, other
than what we've seen in these documents, are there emails or text
messages that would document those contacts? And, if so, how
would I request those?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I don't think -- I don't think I
had -- beyond the notes that you have from me, those I think are
my only -- the only records I'm aware of, of those meetings.
And part of the reason for introducing me to Joe Pientka,
what I was told was so that they would -- you know, I would have a
regular contact and they would kind of take -- keep track of
things.
Mr. Jordan. John makes a good point.
So the documents you handed to Page, Strzok, or Pientka or
whoever around the November 21-22 time period --
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Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- are they different than what we were given?
Mr. Ohr. Those are the notes. That's what you have.
Mr. Jordan. This is what you gave?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Yeah. I believe -- I don't physically
remember, you know, I don't remember physically handing it to
them, but I believe I did give it to them.
Mr. Jordan. These handwritten notes?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And so this is different. The documents
that Mr. Strzok testified to, he was testifying to that versus
the -- well, you wouldn't --
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. I get you. I get you. But you handed him
documents, and then you also handed him the memory stick.
Mr. Ohr. At some point -- whenever I got the memory stick
from my wife and whenever I got the memory stick from Glenn
Simpson, I turned that over to the FBI, probably to Joe Pientka
directly.
Mr. Jordan. How many times did you give documents to the
FBI?
Mr. Ohr. So the two memory sticks and then these documents.
I think those are the only things I remember giving to them
physically.
Mr. Jordan. The handwritten notes that we have --
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Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- and the two memory sticks.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. All right. And it was Mr. Pientka who took
receipt of them and/or Page and Strzok?
Mr. Ohr. It probably would have been Mr. Pientka, but I
don't recall for sure. And, again, I don't specifically recall
giving him the documents.
Mr. Jordan. These notes of yours and the memory sticks, did
you give them to anyone else?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. No one at the Justice Department?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. Any of the people, your peers that you talked
about, I think Ms. Ahmad, Mr. Weissmann, no one else?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I gave them any documents, no.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Did you talk to any of those folks about
this material, your notes you put together?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Your peers, did you talk to them? Did you go to
Mr. Weissmann and say, "You know what, I just want to run some
things by you, I got to go meet with the FBI, here's my notes"?
Did you do that kind of stuff?
Mr. Ohr. No. No, nothing like what you're saying. I think
I conveyed some of the substance of the same conversations to
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Mr. Swartz, Ms. Zainab, and at least on one occasion Mr. Weissmann
would have been present, but I don't recall specifically.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. When did you know that the FBI had an
active counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign
and Russia?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall when I -- exactly when I learned
that. It was sometime later.
Mr. Jordan. "Sometime later" is pretty vague, Mr. Ohr. Give
me an idea.
Mr. Ohr. I can't -- I don't know. At some point
obviously --
Mr. Jordan. 2016?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall. It may have been 2017, but I'm not
sure. And I think I saw it in the press. I'm not sure if that's
the first time. It may have been the first time I heard of it.
I'm not sure.
Mr. Jordan. When did you know -- I think this may have been
asked earlier, but just for my -- when did you know that the
research Mr. Steele was doing that you were passing on to the FBI
was used as part of a FISA application?
Mr. Ohr. I think I read that in the press. So whenever it
was reported in the press.
Mr. Jordan. Did you know the FBI had different versions of
the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. That rings a bell, but I don't recall specifically
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what I heard about that.
Mr. Jordan. It rings a bell. Can you elaborate?
Mr. Ohr. I can't specifically. I mean, I don't recall the
specifics.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. I want to go through some of the
documents and work through those, but I know that the gentleman
from California has some questions. So if that's all right, we'll
go there and then we'll come back and work through these
documents.
Mr. Issa. Thank you. And mine will be brief.
Your wife earned purportedly $44,000 working for Fusion GPS
for about a year. Is that right?
Mr. Ohr. Again, I don't recall the number, but --
Mr. Issa. During that period of time, who else did she work
for?
Mr. Ohr. She had an ongoing contract with something called
Plusis (ph) that does training for law enforcement on, among other
things, cybersecurity. I don't recall if she earned money from
them during the -- late 2015 to September 2016.
Mr. Issa. Do you file a joint return?
Mr. Ohr. Yes. Whatever it would be would be reflected on
our tax return.
Mr. Issa. Do you recall? You make about 212,000, 220,000,
somewhere in that range. Do you recall how much your tax return
was so you'd know how much she made?
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Mr. Ohr. I don't remember the specifics, no.
Mr. Issa. But there was other income besides the 44,000, to
your recollection? Most people do think about how much they earn
per year.
Mr. Ohr. I certainly was paying attention to what I was
earning, but I don't recall --
Mr. Issa. Okay.
Mr. Ohr. I'm sorry, go ahead.
Mr. Issa. I mean, we don't have to dwell on this, but you
filed a joint return. You have no idea how much she made in '15
or '16 from any or all income?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall as I sit here. I know her income
fluctuated when she was an independent contractor.
Mr. Issa. Okay. You said she had a contract. How do you
know it was a contract? Is that routine? Does she have her own
contracts she presents to people?
Mr. Ohr. No. I think it was Fusion's contract.
Mr. Issa. Okay. Now, normally in a contract like Fusion
GPS, one of the first things they have is that the work product
they pay for is their work product and cannot be shared.
Would you be familiar in any way of whether or not she signed
a contract that would have limited her ability to hand you
information, the fruit of their paid-for research?
Mr. Ohr. I don't specifically know what was in her contract.
Mr. Issa. So would it be fair to say that -- let's assume
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that it was in the contract, as it almost always would be with any
company -- that, in fact, she had to gain their permission or even
their request to turn that information over to you?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, you're making an
assumption that I just don't know.
Mr. Issa. Well, since you know that Glenn Simpson,
Christopher Steele, and others really disliked the President and
were motivated to stop him, I'm just asking if this was
proprietary information that belonged to Fusion GPS and it was
being given to you by your wife, but effectively it was being
given to you through your wife by Fusion GPS. That's what it
appeared to be. I just want to see if you knew that or reasonably
would believe that.
Mr. Ohr. I don't think that was the case.
Mr. Issa. So you think she did that on a rogue basis, that
she didn't go to Fusion GPS for permission?
Mr. Ohr. I think it was her giving it to me,
not -- without -- you know, without any sanction or whatever
from -- as far as I know, yes.
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[3:02 p.m.]
Mr. Issa. Okay. And I will conclude, like I said, and it
will be very brief. We have already had a vast amount of publicly
reported information about Peter Strzok and Lisa Page's dislike of
the President -- well-stated dislike. You worked with them. You
presented information to them.
Tell me, did you have any indication that they or anybody
else at the FBI had any dislike for the President -- jokes,
comments, anything that would have you believe anything but the
greatest respect for the President of the United States-elect.
Mr. Ohr. There were no jokes or comments or anything like
that in my presence, that I can recall. They obviously took the
information I gave them seriously, which was certainly not
flattering to the President. But I never heard anything that was
indicating --
Mr. Issa. So, no evidence of glee or Wow, this is great?
Mr. Ohr. No, no.
Mr. Issa. The last question, which closes the loop on
everybody. In your interactions at all times during 2016, 2017,
were you in contact with people at the Department of Justice or
FBI who showed any notable like or dislike for the President and
said so to you in a way in which you recognized that they had a
preference? I know that is broad.
Mr. Ohr. That is pretty broad.
Mr. Issa. How about if we just limit it to people who were,
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in any way, tangentially involved with this investigation and this
activity?
Mr. Ohr. Even that covers a long period of time. I am not
recalling anything like that from the people who I was dealing
with on this matter.
Mr. Issa. So, at this point you never ran into anybody you
saw that had stated preference, one way or the other, or
articulated in any way?
Mr. Ohr. Right. I can't recall anything like that at the
moment as I sit here.
Mr. Issa. Thank you very much.
Mr. Jordan. Earlier you said that you told the FBI that Mr.
Steele, when you were conveying to them where you were getting
this information, Mr. Steele was desperate to stop Trump from
winning. When did you convey that to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think it was after the July 30 meeting,
although I am not entirely sure. It may have been after the
September meeting.
Mr. Jordan. So it was either the August meeting or September
meeting, one of those?
Mr. Ohr. I think that is probably right. I don't recall
exactly.
Mr. Jordan. My colleague wanted me to ask -- Mr.
Biggs -- was your wife fluent in Russian? Can she speak the
language?
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A She can certainly read it well. I think she would say
her speaking is a little rusty.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Another colleague.
When did you first learn your wife was working for Fusion?
When did you know she was working for fusion?
Mr. Ohr. When she began.
Mr. Jordan. When she began?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah.
Mr. Jordan. 2015. When did you first become aware that Rod
Rosenstein knew of your wife's work for Fusion?
Mr. Ohr. I am sorry?
Mr. Jordan. Do you know when Mr. Rosenstein knew of your
wife's work for Fusion, and her work on the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. I believe that was in October of 2017.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And how about the special counsel, when
do you think he knew about you and your wife's work for -- your
wife's work for Fusion and her work on the dossier? Any idea?
Mr. Ohr. First of all, let me just say I don't know what the
special counsel knew at any time. I have not had any conversation
with the special counsel or his staff. What I had said, I think,
to Mr. Rosenstein in October of 2017, was that my wife was working
for Fusion GPS. I am not sure if you were in the room earlier
when I said that the dossier, as I understand it, is the
collection of reports that Chris Steele had prepared for Fusion
GPS. My wife had separately done research on certain Russian
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people and companies or whatever that she had provided to Fusion
GPS. But I don't believe her information is reflected in the
Chris Steele reports. They were two different chunks of
information heading into Fusion GPS.
Mr. Jordan. So your wife didn't work on the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. Not specifically, from what I can tell. She worked
on some of the same people. So, for example, I think I mentioned
earlier, she had worked on Sergie -- done some research on Sergie
Millian. And I think Sergie Millian is mentioned in the dossier,
but I don't think it is her work that made it into the dossier.
Mr. Ratcliffe. If that testimony that you just gave
regarding whether or not your wife worked on the dossier conflicts
with testimony that you previously gave and recorded in the 302
with the FBI, which testimony was given in more recent time?
Which would you think would be more accurate and more closely
aligned to the facts?
Mr. Ohr. I provided information to the FBI. How they
documented it, I didn't know. But I am telling you now is my
understanding of what happened, which is that dossier consisted of
reports prepared by Chris Steele, which is separate from --
Mr. Ratcliffe. Have you reviewed the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. I have taken a look at the dossier, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You testified before that you didn't look at
the information that your wife gave you to the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Correct; I did not look.
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Mr. Ratcliffe. So how do you know, as you are testifying
under oath here, that the information that your wife gave to the
FBI was not part of the dossier?
Mr. Ohr. What I saw of the dossier was in the form of the
kinds of reports that Chris Steele and Orbis prepared. So I
believe from what I can tell -- and I haven't studied it
closely -- that these reports reflected information that Orbis has
collected and then provided to Fusion GPS.
Mr. Ratcliffe. That is your belief.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. But, again, to be clear, you never reviewed
the information that your wife gave to the FBI.
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Did you review the information that your wife
gave to Christopher Steele or Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. Well, your first question was: I didn't review the
information that my wife gave to me and the stick that I gave to
Fusion GPS. I am not aware that my wife ever gave any information
to Chris Steele.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Directly?
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Because she gave information to Fusion GPS?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You don't have any knowledge about whether or
not Glenn Simpson was giving information to Christopher Steele or
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how they were --
Mr. Ohr. I don't have any specific information, but it is
all going to Glenn Simpson.
Mr. Ratcliffe. One more thing I want to clarify. You said
that you had not provided any information to the special counsel
or the special counsel staff.
Mr. Ohr. I, you mean?
Mr. Ratcliffe. Yes.
Mr. Ohr. That is correct.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Was the Andrew Weissman that you mentioned
dealing with earlier in the criminal division the same Andrew
Weissman that is part of the special counsel's investigative team?
Mr. Ohr. I believe he is.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Earlier today, you told us that you had a
meeting with him and gave him information. He was one of the
folks that you were communicating with at the Department of
Justice in the fall of 2016. Is that accurate?
Mr. Ohr. That is accurate. I provided some of the
information I learned from Chris Steele and Glenn Simpson to,
among other people, Andrew Weissman.
Mr. Ratcliffe. To that same Andrew Weissman?
Mr. Ohr. Right. At the time -- I am sorry.
Mr. Ratcliffe. The information you gave him regarding
Christopher Steele, regarding Glenn Simpson, regarding the Steele
dossier, regarding Nellie Ohr, all of that information that you
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related in August you believe 2016, that is knowledge that the
special counsel would have through part of the special counsel's
investigative team, Andrew Weissman, correct?
Mr. Ohr. Right. I mean -- no, just to be clear, the
information -- I don't recall exactly what information Andrew
Weissman got from me.
Mr. Ratcliffe. But you gave him information.
Mr. Ohr. But I gave him some information.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And whatever that information is --
Mr. Ohr. He received it at that time in his capacity as head
of the chief of the fraud section.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Any reason to believe he wouldn't continue to
contain that information when he became part of the special
counsel's team?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I assume the special counsel has
access to what information the FBI collected, which would probably
include everything. But I shouldn't be assuming that. I don't
know.
Mr. Jordan. Has the special counsel talked to you?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. Have they talked to your wife?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. Let's go to -- I think this document was
introduced last round that we got from you, whatever application
this is, these text messages like. Let's go on the first page. I
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am just curious. About halfway down, "1-31-17. Doubtless sad and
crazy day for you and" -- I assume SY is Sally Yates. "Just
wanted to check on the situation, along with Bureau colleagues
with our guy."
Can you tell me who "our guy" is?
Mr. Ohr. I am sorry, where?
Mr. Jordan. The first page.
Mr. Ohr. Are you looking at this document?
Mr. Jordan. Yes.
Mr. Ohr. Okay.
Mr. Jordan. This is what we were given. I want the one
January 31, 2017.
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe that is in this document.
Mr. Jordan. This is different than what you were presented.
We are going to have to make some copies of this.
Can I read this to you or should we go do copies?
Mr. Ohr. Whatever you like, sir.
Mr. Jordan. Can we hold the time while we make copies? Is
that how this work?
Mine starts with 1-25-17 at the top.
Mr. Weinsheimer. I have got that.
Mr. Jordan. So go halfway down, the first. Approximately
halfway down. It looks like, "Bruce, doubtless sad and crazy day
for you regarding" -- and this is the same day that Sally Yates
was fired. Before that it talks about "our guy." Who is our guy?
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Mr. Ohr. I believe our guy in this case refers to the source
that Chris Steele was worried was going to be outed and might
need -- and whose life may be in danger.
Mr. Jordan. The next one below: "You have sympathy and
support. If you end up out, though, I really need another contact
point's number." What does he mean "if you end up out"? What is
he talking about here?
Mr. Ohr. My interpretation of this is that if I were to be
forced out, or leave the Department, he would need another
possible -- he says Bureau, so FBI "contact point who could help
make arrangements for the safety of the source." So that is why I
responded: "Understood. I can certainly give you an FBI contact
if that becomes necessary."
Mr. Jordan. I guess I am confused, because it is not that he
is saying if you end up out -- I am not sure what that all
means -- but if you end up out, I don't need someone at DOJ, I
need someone at the Bureau.
Mr. Ohr. He is worried about the safety of his source. So
when I had learned earlier --
Mr. Jordan. But if you are the key to the safety of the
source and you are at the Department of Justice, why doesn't he
want someone else at the Department of Justice? Why doesn't he
want someone at the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Obviously, if we are worrying if we are somehow
securing the safety of the source, I think that is something that
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the FBI would do.
Mr. Jordan. Sort of underscores the point, why were you in
in the first place? If it is the FBI's responsibility, why has it
been, up to this point, Bruce Ohr's responsibility and the
Department of Justice? But now if you end up out, we want to get
someone in the Bureau to guard the safety of this source.
Mr. Ohr. When Chris Steele had previously told me -- and I
don't remember the exact date, but a few days before this, I
think -- that his source might be outed and in danger, I reported
that to the FBI and basically asked: If something develops
quickly, should I call you? And he said, Yes.
I don't remember exactly what I said to Chris Steele about
that, but our concern at that time was there could be a threat to
the safety of the source.
Mr. Jordan. I get that. I don't understand why it has to
jump from the Department of Justice to FBI. Seems to me if you
are the key and you are in the Department of Justice, you would
continue to work with someone in the Department of Justice, or
shouldn't he have been working with someone in the Department of
Justice in the first place?
Mr. Ohr. I think -- I don't know exactly what was in his
mind, but I do know that if we were going to try to protect a
source, it was going to have to eventually be an FBI agent that
takes those steps.
Mr. Jordan. "I can give you an FBI contact if and when it
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becomes necessary." Was it necessary, and if so, who did you give
him?
Mr. Ohr. It did not.
Mr. Jordan. Let's go to the next page. I am looking at the
entries on 3-18-2017. "Just wondering if you had any news.
Obviously, we are a bit apprehensive, given Comey's scheduled
appearance at Congress on Monday. Hoping that important firewalls
will hold. Many thanks."
And then you respond: "I believe my earlier information is
still accurate."
So tell me what the firewalls mean, and then what your
earlier information was.
Mr. Ohr. My understanding of firewalls, again, had to do
with information that the FBI might have that might identify, or
somehow help to identify Chris Steele's source. And I had --
Mr. Jordan. So we are talking about the same guy that you
were talking about 2 months earlier.
Mr. Ohr. That is my recollection, as I look at this now.
And I had told him earlier that the FBI is very careful about
producing information that could identify a source and lead to the
source being harmed, and that that is still accurate. Because I
had no --
Mr. Jordan. And was it accurate? Was that source revealed?
Mr. Ohr. I am not aware that the source was revealed.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So let's go 2 months then. The next
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page, 2 months forward, 5-15, three-quarters of the way down.
"Having now consulted my wife and business partner about the
question we discussed on Saturday, I am pleased to say yes, we
should go ahead with it. Best, Chris."
Go ahead with what?
Mr. Ohr. The FBI had asked me a few days before, when I
reported to them my latest conversation with Chris Steele, they
had had would he -- next time you talk with him, could you ask him
if he would be willing to meet again.
Mr. Jordan. So this is the re-engagement?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So then the messages just a few days
later get into that subject. They are actually not a few days
later; a month later.
Mr. Ohr. A month later? I am sorry, I don't understand?
Mr. Jordan. Well, hang with it. We are going to read what
you guys wrote back and forth. "Having now consulted with me wife
and business partner about the question we discussed on Saturday,
I am pleased to say yes, we should go ahead with it."
So you have asked him will he re-engage with the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. And he says: "Talked with my wife; I'm in."
You say: "Thanks. We'll let them know and we will follow up."
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. "Thanks again. I chatted with my colleagues and
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can give you an update when you have a minute." What was the
update about? Was it about that subject?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. So that all happens on May 15?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. June 22, "Hi, Bruce. Is there any news on the
re-engagement yet? Anything we can do to help from this end?
Grateful for an update."
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Jordan. How did those re-engagement talks go?
Mr. Ohr. Based on these additional text messages back and
forth, it took some time. I remember that Chris Steele was
anxious why it was taking so long. But at some point, Chris
Steele informed me that they had -- he had, in fact, met with
somebody from the FBI.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So move forward.
"Still frustrated" -- "Bruce, still frustrated. We are
frustrated with how long this re-engagement with Mueller and the
investigation is taking." Talk to me about that last clause,
"Mueller is taking."
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I know the FBI had asked if Chris
Steele was interested in re-engaging. I don't know what role if
any the special counsel team played in that. I think -- so, Chris
Steele was referring to that, but I have no knowledge of whether
there was a re-engagement with Mueller as opposed to --
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 210 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Jordan. Did you pass that along to the FBI, that Mr.
Steele has also mentioned re-engaging or engaging with the special
counsel?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall. I am pretty sure I met with the
FBI to tell them that this is my latest communication with Chris
Steele, because that was my practice. But I don't recall whether
I said Bureau and Mueller or just re-engagement.
Mr. Jordan. Okay.
Mr. Ratcliffe. I want to follow up, Mr. Ohr. On the end of
the last hour that I was here, I asked you about these 302s -- I
have seen 12 of them -- interview dates from November 22, 2016 to
May 15, 2017. I asked you whether there were any sit-down
interviews and corresponding 302s after that date. And I thought
I heard you say yes.
Mr. Ohr. I believe I did, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do you know how many?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know specifically, but each of these
communications that are reflected in the text messages back and
forth, whenever we had a call or anything substantive, I would
have reached out to the FBI and given them the information. I
didn't know what they were writing down or not writing down.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Do you know anything different about those
interviews or about those 302s as to why they wouldn't have been
produced in response to a request by Members of Congress?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know if they did 302s later on. A lot of
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 211 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
these conversations seemed less substantive, but I don't know. I
didn't know about the original 302s either.
Mr. Jordan. Did you continue to meet with the FBI to discuss
your conversations with Mr. Steele all the way up through late
November of 2017?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. Was Chris Steele working? Was he being paid by
Oleg Deripaska? Was he like a lobbyist or a consultant being paid
by Oleg Deripaska?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. The September 22 meeting.
Mr. Ohr. You are now jumping back to --
Mr. Jordan. Jump back to 2016.
Mr. Ohr. Very good.
Mr. Jordan. In your communications from -- Mr. Steele wrote
you an email. He talks about "I am going to be in town in
Washington again on business of mutual interest." Is that
anything different than you told me earlier, or what does that
mean?
Mr. Ohr. No. I think it is more of the same.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. October 18, you get a text, or excuse me,
an email from Mr. Steele: "I have something quite urgent I would
like to discuss with you." October 18, 2016. What was the urgent
matter?
Mr. Ohr. I don't have an independent recollection of this,
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 212 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
but based on the notes, I think it was conveying some more
information about Oleg Derapaska.
Mr. Jordan. Can you tell me what that was?
Mr. Ohr. I think there is an email maybe dated the 19th or
18th that has an attachment, or a little paragraph or something
attached that talks about a dispute between Oleg Derapaska and the
Ukrainian Government. I think that is what he was contacting me
about. But I don't recall beyond that what we discussed.
Mr. Jordan. If a phone call -- with email talking about a
phone call first sent to your wife, but she thinks it is for you
from Mr. Simpson on December 12. Was this a
follow-up call from your December 10 meeting and what did you
discuss on this call?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall. I think he was providing some
additional information on the same topics as our -- when we met.
I am not sure exactly what the dates were, so I don't know if it
was preparatory to the same meeting or a follow-up or what.
Mr. Jordan. I want to ask you one other thing. In one of
these handwritten notes you talk about so much -- it is difficult
to read -- but it says "HRC," looks like "second dossier."
Mr. Berman. Is there a date on that?
Mr. Jordan. It looks like 11-8-2017.
It looks like number three.
Mr. Ohr. Yes. My recollection is that Chris Steele was
telling me that he had read a report or heard somewhere that
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people were talking about a second dossier -- I don't know if it
was about Hillary Rodham Clinton -- or by Hillary, or whatever,
that a second dossier existed, and he was saying there is no
second dossier.
Mr. Jordan. So this is your notes. Can you just read it for
me? "Story in --
Mr. Ohr. Happy to read it.
Mr. Jordan. The one that is highlighted in yellow there.
Mr. Ohr. So I am looking at this piece of paper, 11-8-17,
"Story in news today about Hillary" -- HRC, I assume that is
Hillary Rodham Clinton -- "and second dossier totally" -- I can't
even read my own writing -- "totally" -- think -- "may be
unfounded." I remember him saying that is just not accurate.
Mr. Jordan. A second dossier about Clinton or a second
dossier about Trump-Russia?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know? But since it is second dossier -- I
don't know.
Mr. Jordan. Cathleen Cavilick.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Why is she included in this stuff?
Mr. Ohr. She is an official at the State Department and she
had also, I believe, spoken with Chris Steele at some point. And
whatever I had from her, I gave to the Department as well, because
I thought it related to the same subject matter.
Mr. Jordan. Were there notes about this? Did you take notes
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 214 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
about Cathleen Cavilick that we don't have that you gave to the
FBI?
Mr. Ohr. I don't think so. I would have reported that
conversation to the FBI as well, but I don't believe I have any
separate notes on that.
Mr. Jordan. Anyone else at the State Department that you
talked to about these matters?
Mr. Ohr. No, not that I can recall.
Mr. Jordan. All right. I think we are out of time.
Thank you, Mr. Ohr.
Mr. Ohr. Thank you.
[Recess.]
Ms. Shen. We are back on the record. It is 3:35 p.m. for
the minority round.
EXAMINATION
BY MS. SHEN:
Q Mr. Ohr, last week, The New York Times reported that you
met Mr. Steele in 2007 when he was still with MI6, with the
approval of both the U.S. and U.K. Governments. Is that accurate?
A Yes, I believe so.
Q I am actually going to change tack a little bit here and
just address an issue that has come up in the last round, and
maybe even earlier, which is that we have been reading from -- we
have been referencing and reading certain documents, some of which
have been made public to the press, they are marked Bates stamped
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 215 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
HPSCI, we mentioned -- but as part of the same production there
have also documents that have not been made public. I believe
some of them were the handwritten notes you were looking at
earlier and talked to.
Our understanding is this a document production produced to a
congressional committee that is not the Oversight or Judiciary
Committee from which is doing this investigation has not been
cleared for release to the public. So there is a question of:
How did it come into possession of our Members? It is our
understanding that there is in fact a committee rule that may
prohibit the sharing of a committee document production like that.
In addition to that, we have concerns to state for the record
that such information could, in fact, contain sensitive
information, I think on its face, discussion of confidential human
sources. We are not really in a position to know kind of per
earlier conversation the full implications of just putting this
kind of information out in an unclassified setting in an open
record.
So I want to state for the record that this is something that
we oppose. We do not think it is responsible to be continuing to
reference such information for the variety of reasons that I have
outlined, and we hope that the practice does not continue in this
interview or any subsequent interviews as part of this joint
investigation.
Ms. Hariharan. Also to be clear, HPSCI rules require a full
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 216 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
committee vote before they release documents. They have certain
arrangements with specific committees to produce documents. House
Judiciary is not one of them.
So the documents that we introduced were pulled from public
sourcing that were already leaked to reporters or
whomever, not by us. We do not have access to these materials,
except for what we found online.
Ms. Shen. Thank you.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So I will just reiterate the question real quick from
previously.
So last week, the New York Times reported that you met with
Mr. Steele in 2007, where he was still with MI6, with the approval
of the U.S. and U.K. Governments, is that corrects.
A I believe so.
Q In 2007, Mr. Steele was the head of the Russia desk at
MI6, is that accurate?
A I don't know his specifically title.
Q In your experience, is the United Kingdom considered a
close intelligence partner to the United States?
A I can only speak to what I have seen in the press, and
the answer is yes.
Q So it is your understanding that MI6 would closely
partner with U.S. intelligence agencies?
A Again, I only speak to what I have seen publicly. Yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 217 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q In your opinion, do U.S. intelligence community agencies
tend to value the intelligence from MI6?
A I can't really say that. I don't know.
Q Okay. Generally speaking, does -- do your
counterparts in the United Kingdom, are they considered reliable
and accurate sources of information regarding Russia?
A Again, I can't speak generally. I can only say that
information was provided to me and to the FBI by Chris Steele when
he was with the British Government was considered good
information.
Q So, The New Yorker has reported that information from
Mr. Steele had once helped expose the Kremlin that had rigged the
vote to host the World Cup in 2018 with bribes and swapped votes.
Is that something you have been aware of?
Mr. Weinsheimer. He can't really talk about other
investigations.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q To your knowledge, or just based on public reporting,
are you aware that Mr. Steele played a role or had contacts that
played a role in the Justice Department's investigation of bribes
and kickbacks in the FISA investigation?
Mr. Weinsheimer. He can't talk about other investigations
and the role of sources. I know that you prefaced that question
with public reporting. But to the extent it is public reporting,
it speaks for itself. Given the work that he does, I think it is
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 218 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
too difficult to ask him to parse what he might know relating to
other investigations and sources and methods that relate to other
investigations what might be in the public sphere. So I would
object to that question.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q Okay. Given your personal experiences and interactions
with Mr. Steele, does it surprise you that the FBI would decide to
use him as a confidential human source?
A No.
Q And do you believe that Mr. Steele is capable and would
continue to provide credible, actionable information to the U.S.
law enforcement?
A Yes.
Q So, it has also been widely publicly reported that
Christopher Steele was not a fan of Donald Trump. You, at one
point, noted that Mr. Steele was "desperate that Donald Trump not
get elected and was passionate about him not being President." Is
that accurate?
A Yes. Words to that effect. I don't recall the exact
words.
Q Just based on public reporting as well.
Did Mr. Steele ever explain to you why he held this view?
A I think he was very alarmed by the information that he
had provided to me about contacts between the Russian Government
and the Donald Trump campaign.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 219 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q And why do you think he was so alarmed by this
particular piece of information?
A Well, he described the information to me as -- well, I
think it speaks for itself. I don't know how to characterize it.
It was information I found alarming.
Q So, given Mr. Steele's, what seems very apparent
opposition to Donald Trump, did you ever suspect that Mr. Steele
was simply making up or fabricating his report related to Trump,
his campaign or any Trump associate?
A I did not suspect that.
Q And why is that?
A I had a good track record with Mr. Steele, and his
information has generally been pretty good.
Q And so do you believe that despite -- I think it is fair
to call it a bias of Mr. Steele -- potential bias of Mr. Steele
against Trump -- that Mr. Steele's reports nonetheless could be
taken seriously by U.S. Federal law enforcement officials?
A I mean, I think my read is that his bias, as I reported
to the FBI, was as a result of his reporting, the facts that he
had reported to me.
Q Are you aware of any instances where Mr. Steele
fabricated evidence in his reports or intentionally provided
misleading information?
A No.
Q And we have already spoken somewhat about this, but
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 220 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
overall how would you describe the credibility of Mr. Steele's
information and its potential value to U.S. national security?
A I think I have stated before, his information was
generally pretty good, but we have to be careful about all
information relating to Russia. And so with that caveat.
[Ohr Exhibit No. 6
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So I would like to introduce as exhibit 6 an August 7,
2018, article from The Hill entitled "Opinion: How a senior DOJ
official helped then-researchers on Trump-Russia case." This
article makes reference to your notes, emails, and text messages
that were, again, turned over to Congress but also apparently
given to this reporter.
Are you familiar with this article?
A I have not read this article. I was aware that it came
out.
Q Would you like some time to read it now?
A I will take a quick look.
Okay.
Q So, if you could go down to the article, to the sentence
I think it is the third paragraph from the bottom of the first
page, and it reads, "Steele's FBI relationship had been terminated
about 3 months earlier. The Bureau concluded on November 1, 2016,
that he leaked information to the news media and was 'not suitable
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 221 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
for use' as a confidential source, memos show.
"The FBI specifically instructed Steele that he could no
longer 'operate to obtain any intelligence whatsoever on behalf of
the FBI,' those memos show."
So, in this article it also includes attachments,
including -- well, four documents. One of them is referenced,
this termination memo in that the quotes that I just read to you.
So I am going to introduce the termination memo now as exhibit 7.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 222 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[Ohr Exhibit No. 7
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So if you can go to the part of the termination memo,
which actually appears to be undated, or at least I can't find it,
but it is entitled, "Federal Bureau of Investigation, Source
Closing Communication" and under the note it reads, "The following
are possible reasons which may justify closing for cause:
unauthorized criminal activity, serious control problems,
unreliable and violated instructions." Right underneath that, it
states that the general reason for closing in this case was
"confidentiality revealed."
So this memo appears to list unreliable as a possible reason
for closing. And yet, the reason for closing did not identify as
one of the bases. Is that also your reading of this document?
A I just say I haven't seen this document before. I see
the general reason for closing "confidentiality revealed."
Q Is it a fair interpretation, just based on the face of
this documentation that, at least in the confines of this
document, the FBI's reason for closing was confidentiality
revealed, but not unreliable?
A It would be speculating.
Q Has the FBI ever expressed to you that they believed Mr.
Steele was an unreliable source of information?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 223 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Not that I recall.
Q If you could turn back to the article now and right
where I left off at the very bottom of the page, it reads: "Yet
Steele asked Ohr in the January 31st text exchange if he could
continue to help feed information to the FBI. 'Just wanted to
check you are okay. Still in the situ and able to help locally as
discussed, along with your Bureau colleagues.
"I am still here and able to help as discussed or texted
back. I will let you know if that changes. Steele replied, 'If
you end up out though, I really need another Bureau contact point
number who is briefed. We can't allow our guy to be forced to go
back home. It would be disastrous.' Investigators are trying to
determine who Steele was referring to."
[Ohr Exhibit No. 8
Was marked for identification.]
BY MS. SHEN:
Q Now I am going to introduce as exhibit 8 -- again, this
was accompanied in the article posted online -- but the January 31
text exchange referenced there. I would like to point out that
although in the article the quote ends at "it would be
disastrous," in the text message at 11:12-09 a.m., the text
actually continues. So I will read the entire text, which is:
"Thanks. You have my sympathy and support. If you end up out,
though, I really need another Bureau contact/point number who is
briefed. We can't allow our guy to be forced to go back home. It
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 224 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
would be disastrous all around. The position right now looks
stable. A million thanks."
Mr. Ohr, I do believe we already addressed this, but just to
be absolutely clear, your text exchanges with Mr. Steele on
January 31, what were they about?
A My interpretation is these related to the safety of the
source.
Q So these text exchanges did not have anything to do with
the Trump-Russia collusion investigation at the time?
A No, not directly. Just the safety of the source.
Q So if I could ask you to go back to the article again.
A few paragraphs down on the second page it reads: "There is
something separate I want to discuss with you informally and
separately. It concerns our favorite business tycoon" -- an
apparent reference to Trump. Again, we have covered this, but is
the article accurate in saying that the reference was to Trump?
A No.
Q The next sentence, the article reads: "The overture
came just four days before Steele walked into the FBI office in
Rome with still unproven allegations that Trump had an am improper
relationship with Russia, including possible efforts to hijack the
Presidential election."
Mr. Ohr, did your conversation with Mr. Steele have anything
to do with any meetings or communications he may have had in an
FBI office in Rome a few days later?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 225 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A I don't believe so, no.
Q Okay. Jumping down a little bit. On the same page the
article reads -- again, quoting from these text messages -- I am
sorry, it quotes from the July 30, 2016, email, which we had
previously introduced as exhibit 2, and it reads: "Great to see
you and Nellie this morning, Bruce, Steele wrote shortly after the
breakfast meeting. 'Let's keep in touch on the substantive
issues. Glenn is happy to speak to you on this if it would help.'
"That meeting occurred exactly 1 day before FBI
counterintelligence official Peter Strzok formally opened the
investigation, dubbed Crossfire Hurricane, into whether the Trump
campaign was colluding with Moscow to steal the election."
Once again, to be absolutely clear, was your meeting with
Christopher Steele and your wife Nellie on July 30, 2016, related
in any way to FBI counterintelligence official Peter Strzok
formally opening an investigation named
Crossfire Hurricane?
A I don't believe so.
Q The next paragraph reads: "At the time, the case was
based mostly on an Australian diplomat's tip that Trump campaign
advisor, George Papadopoulos, appeared to know in advance that the
Russians possessed information involving Hillary Clinton before
hacked documents were released on WikiLeaks."
Mr. Ohr, were you involved in any way in an Australian
diplomat's tip that the Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 226 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
appeared to have advance knowledge of Hillary Clinton's hacked
emails?
A No.
Q If you turn to the last page of the article, at the very
top it reads: "By early November 2016, Steele was terminated for
unauthorized media contacts and the FBI was turning to Ohr as a
back channel to Steele."
Mr. Ohr, would you agree with the characterization that the
FBI was turning to you as a "back channel" to Mr. Steele?
A I don't know what the FBI's thinking was specifically.
They just told me that if I received information, that there would
be an agent that I could talk with.
Q Okay. But at no point did the FBI indicate to you that
they were turning to you as an illicit way of obtaining
information from Mr. Steele?
A They never said anything like that.
Q It is 3:56, and I think we will actually just end our
round now.
[Recess.]
Mr. Parmiter. Let's go back on the record. The time is
4:02 p.m.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Mr. Ohr, I just have a couple of things I
want to follow up with you. Earlier today, we established that
Christopher Steele had been terminated as a confidential human
source for violating the FBI's rules about communicating with the
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 227 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
press. Do you remember that?
Mr. Ohr. We talked about Chris Steele's termination, yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. I will represent to you that there is an FBI
document that is not classified, or has been declassified that
relates to that occurring on or about November 1, 2016.
Before that, there is some indication in the record that
Glenn Simpson was a person who was urging Christopher Steele to
share the dossier contents with members of the media. Are you
aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know specifically who he was sharing the
document with, but, yes, I understand that Glenn Simpson was
providing information to whoever would employ him.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So my question is, there is also some
indication that perhaps Glenn Simpson made you aware of the fact
that he was urging Christopher Steele to contact the media about
the dossier contents?
Mr. Ohr. My notes from our December conversation, the
conversation I had from Glenn Simpson, I believe I mentioned that,
yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So you made the FBI aware of that.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. When did you make them aware of that?
Mr. Ohr. I think it was when I heard it. As soon as I heard
it.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And do you know when that was?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 228 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
I am sorry, go ahead.
Mr. Ohr. Sorry; within a day or two of my receiving the
information.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Well, if the news -- Christopher
Steele's efforts to communicate that information to the media
resulted in news stories in October of 2016, would it have been in
that timeframe?
Mr. Ohr. I don't believe I spoke with Glenn Simpson in that
time frame.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay.
Mr. Ohr. I recall meeting Mr. Simpson in December, and I
think --
Mr. Ratcliffe. And in August?
Mr. Ohr. And in August, right. So I remember this coming up
in December and I reflected it in my notes, which I informed the
FBI.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Well, that is all I am really trying
to determine. We know that the FBI knew no later than November 1,
because that is when they essentially fired Christopher Steele. I
am wondering before that they knew, and if you can narrow that
down for me.
Mr. Ohr. Don't have information on that.
Mr. Ratcliffe. I want to make sure that I have -- that I
understand completely your touch points or involvement in this
Trump-Russia investigation as you have related them to us today.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 229 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
So as it pertains to folks outside of the Department of Justice
and the FBI, your involvement included passing evidence from
Nellie Ohr and Glenn Simpson to the FBI, correct?
Mr. Ohr. I mean, as I have said before, I received a memory
stick from Glenn Simpson that I provided to the FBI, and at some
point I also received a memory stick from my wife that I provided
to the FBI.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Right. How is that different from what I
said?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know if that is evidence.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Provided information to the FBI from
Glenn Simpson --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. -- and Nellie Ohr?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You also provided information to the FBI
regarding Christopher Steele as documented in at least 12
sit-downs from November 2016 to May 2017.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. You also communicated with members of the FBI
beginning with a phone call to Andy McCabe, but included Andy
McCabe, Lisa Page, FBI Agents Strzok and Pientka as early as
August of 2016.
Mr. Ohr. We have discussed a series of meetings or
conversations I had with the FBI that included various
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 230 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
combinations of those people, yes, over a period of time.
Mr. Ratcliffe. And with respect to the Department of
Justice, your sharing information there included folks at the
criminal division, to include Swartz, Weissman, and Ahmed.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Anyone else?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 231 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[4:09 p.m.]
Mr. Ohr. I don't think I gave any of the information to
other people.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. So all of those things document
your involvement in the -- what I've called the Trump-Russia
investigation.
Earlier today you told me that you didn't think that you
actually had a role in the investigation. You meant other than
those things that I just related?
Mr. Ohr. I don't see those as playing a role in the
investigation. I provided information and the other things we've
discussed today. I neither investigated nor --
Mr. Ratcliffe. Okay. Well, I think we'll have to agree to
disagree on that, about whether or not that plays a role on the
investigation. But thanks for confirming what your involvement
was. And I appreciate your courtesies to me in terms of answering
questions for the record.
Before I leave, I've asked you a lot of questions today, have
I been fair and courteous to you?
Mr. Ohr. You've certainly been courteous. I don't know,
it's hard for me to make a judgment about fairness. You have been
courteous. Thank you.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Well, thank you. The reason I say that is,
believe it or not, sometimes things get misrepresented to the
media about how our approach was. I have been civil and courteous
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 232 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
and --
Mr. Ohr. Yes, you are.
Mr. Ratcliffe. -- given you time. Have I given you every
opportunity to answer the questions that I've asked you?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, you have.
Mr. Ratcliffe. Is there anything that I haven't given you an
opportunity to say in response to my questions?
Mr. Ohr. I don't have anything to add at this time.
Mr. Ratcliffe. So you have had a chance to fully and
completely and truthfully answer the questions that I've related
to the best of your ability?
Mr. Ohr. To the best of my ability.
Mr. Ratcliffe. All right. Thank you. I appreciate your
time.
Mr. Jordan. Thank you, John.
Mr. Ohr, so Mr. Ratcliffe had earlier talked about the number
of times you've sat down with the FBI to sort of brief them on
your meetings with Mr. Steele, Mr. Simpson. And then there has
been -- I've not seen these, but there has been some 302 made of
those meetings.
And Mr. Ratcliffe indicated that there were four times in
2016, I believe eight times in 2017, and then you said there have
been additional of those type of meetings after -- the last date I
have is May 15 of 2017.
Mr. Ohr. That is my recollection, yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 233 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Jordan. How many of those additional meetings, could you
hazard a guess at how many of those, and when was the last one?
Mr. Ohr. I don't remember how many there were. The last
one, I think, was in November of 2017.
Mr. Jordan. So all the way through November of 2017. And do
you know how many between the time the special counsel was named
in November 2017? Three? Four? Five? Six?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. More than one?
Mr. Ohr. More than one, yes. Beyond that, I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And the first meeting was 11 -- so
roughly a year, 11/22/2016. So November 22, 2016, through
November of 2017?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. More than 12, more than 13, you said, because
there's the 12 we know about, the ones you're telling us about?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. So more than 13 times you sat down with the FBI.
What prompted each meeting?
Mr. Ohr. I would call the FBI to let them know I had spoken
with Chris Steele and did they want to hear about it, and then
they would say come over, and I would go over and talk to some
agents.
Mr. Jordan. What was the catalyst? Was it you telling the
FBI? Was this part of this reengagement? What was the catalyst?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 234 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. As near as I can recall, in each case it was me
calling the FBI agent to say, I've had a conversation with Chris
Steele.
Mr. Jordan. Why did it start in November? Why not sooner?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know. That's when they provided or hooked
me up with Joe Pientka.
Mr. Jordan. November of 2016 --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- they said to you, hey, we're going to put you
together with Mr. Pientka, an FBI agent, and we want you to come
give us a briefing after every encounter, whether a phone call or
meeting or any type of exchange, text message, you have with
Mr. Steele? Is that how it was done?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall the exact words, and I don't think
it was said quite that way, but --
Mr. Jordan. I'm still struggling with who did what.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Did the FBI tell you, "We want you to let us
know every single time you communicate with Mr. Steele so that we
can sit down with you, and we're going to make Mr. Pientka the guy
who sits down with you to get a briefing on that"?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall them saying we want you to call us
every time you have contact with Mr. Steele. I think they
provided Mr. Pientka to me as a point of contact, and it was up to
me to call him. From my point of view, I called him, I think,
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 235 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
every time I had a conversation with Chris Steele.
Mr. Jordan. Did the FBI ask you to call him?
Mr. Ohr. No. I think that one time, that one time.
Mr. Jordan. How did this happen? How did this arrangement
happen? You just decided out of the goodness of your heart,
"Every time I talk to Steele I'm going to call the FBI"?
Mr. Ohr. I thought it was important to just be as complete
as possible in providing the information I had.
Mr. Jordan. So you initiated this?
Mr. Ohr. Well, they had provided Joe Pientka to me initially
as a point of contact.
Mr. Jordan. Based on the meeting clear back in August?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Why didn't these regular meetings then start
until November?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. What may have been the catalyst for that?
Mr. Ohr. I don't -- that would be speculating. Once they
provided Joe Pientka's name to me I made it a practice to contact
him every time I had contact.
Mr. Jordan. They first provided Joe Pientka's name to you in
November?
Mr. Ohr. I think that's right.
Mr. Jordan. So up until then, who was your contact at the
FBI? Andy McCabe?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 236 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. As I think I mentioned, I met with Peter Strzok and
Lisa Page on, you know, at least one occasion probably in the fall
and then on November 21.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. When is the last time you visited
with -- last contact you've had with Mr. Steele?
Mr. Ohr. I believe it's the one in November of 2017.
Mr. Jordan. November of 2017?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. All right. How about Mr. Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. The last contact was probably the contact we had on
January 20 when he was calling to express concern about the safety
of the source.
Mr. Jordan. January 20, 2017?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. Why did you switch from communicating with
Mr. Steele -- well, let me back up. The arrangement you had with
the FBI starting on November 22, 2016, where you would contact
Mr. Pientka after you've touched base with Mr. Steele, after
you've had a conversation with Mr. Steele, did that same
arrangement exist for Mr. Simpson? Did they want the same thing
from Mr. Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah. It wasn't -- again, it wasn't really an
arrangement. Anytime I got information from Mr. Steele or from
Mr. Simpson, I think I called the FBI, at least that's my
recollection.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 237 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Jordan. Okay. What about Mr. Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. I said Mr. Steele or Mr. Simpson.
Mr. Jordan. Either one you would then let the FBI know about
a conversation or discussion you've had?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Any type of contact?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Why did you switch your communication from
emails to the text messages with --
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall. I just think I was responding in
whatever medium Mr. Steele had contacted me on.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Do you know when you switched?
Mr. Ohr. Well, it looks like the first WhatsApp text, looks
like it's in January of 2017.
Mr. Jordan. Do you remember the last email you sent in 2016,
what the timeframe was?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Is there any type of disciplinary action
that you're under at the Department of Justice?
Mr. Ohr. I have been contacted by the Office of Inspector
General and I will be talking with them. But aside from that, no.
And that's not -- yeah, I guess that's not really disciplinary
action. So that's the closest thing I have.
Mr. Jordan. That was my next question, though, was has the
IG in any way reached out to you?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 238 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. And is that an investigation specifically about
you, or is it part of a broader investigation into some other
matter?
Mr. Ohr. I'm not sure.
Mr. Jordan. How about the Office of Professional
Responsibility, have you had any interaction with them?
Mr. Ohr. No.
Mr. Jordan. No. Walk me back through -- because you have
had different titles and I want to make sure I understand this.
So you initially were associate deputy attorney general, and
you also were head of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task
Force. Is that right?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. Both titles?
Mr. Ohr. As of 2014, yes.
Mr. Jordan. And you had both titles through what date? When
did that change?
Mr. Ohr. December of -- early December of 2017.
Mr. Jordan. So early December of 2017 it went from
associate -- or ADAG and organized crime drug enforcement, it went
to what?
Mr. Ohr. Director of Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task
Force.
Mr. Jordan. So you just dropped the first title but kept the
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 239 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
second?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So that one gets dropped early December.
And then so you go from Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task
Force director to a different title, and when does that happen?
Mr. Ohr. Early January.
Mr. Jordan. So January of '18?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. It goes to that. So a month later you change
again. And what's your title now?
Mr. Ohr. Senior counsel, Office of International Affairs.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. So three titles all happen within a
month?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Tell me why those things took place. Why did
you go first from associate deputy attorney general to just the
organized crime?
Mr. Ohr. As I mentioned earlier, in early December I was
told by other members of ODAG -- I was called to a meeting and
told that they were going to make me just the director and take
away the ADAG title.
They gave me two reasons. One was they said I hadn't told
them sufficiently early enough about my contacts with Chris
Steele. And then they said they were, in any event, planning a
reorganization where none of the heads of Department of Justice
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 240 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
components would sit within the Deputy Attorney General's Office.
Mr. Jordan. Hadn't told them sufficiently early enough?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Who?
Mr. Ohr. Told, I guess, the deputy attorney general or
higher -- other officials in the Office of Deputy Attorney
General.
Mr. Jordan. You hadn't told Sally Yates?
Mr. Ohr. I had not.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And if you had told Sally Yates, sounds
like you would have kept that title.
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. But, I mean, that's what they said. They said
the reason you're not going to be ADAG any longer is because you
didn't tell Sally Yates on August 1, after your July 30 meeting
with Christopher Steele, about your relationship with Christopher
Steele.
Mr. Ohr. Yeah. I mean, they gave me the two reasons. And
so I don't know specifically what would have been early enough. I
mean, they said I didn't tell them sufficiently early. They
didn't further explain that.
And then, as they said, they were in any event planning to
reorganize so that nobody who was a component head sat within the
Deputy Attorney General's Office.
Mr. Jordan. Is there anyone else you could have told that
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 241 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
would have satisfied them?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. Matt Axelrod? Did you talk to him about this at
all?
Mr. Ohr. I did not.
Mr. Jordan. Never talked to him at all?
Mr. Ohr. No, not about this, nothing relating to this.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. All right.
So you lose the ADAG title because you had not told your
superiors about your relationship with Mr. Steele and the
information you were getting from him in early December 2017.
Then why in early January -- or in January 2018, why did you lose
the -- why did you go to the other title?
Mr. Ohr. I was told at the time that the Attorney General
and the deputy attorney general didn't want me in a position where
I would be interacting directly with the White House. And the
director of OCDETF does deal with various members of the National
Security Council on organized crime matters, organized crime
policy.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. And no one from OPR has talked to you
throughout any of this process?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. But the inspector general has?
Mr. Ohr. They have asked to interview me, and I will talk
with them.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 242 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Mr. Jordan. But you have not done that interview yet?
Mr. Ohr. Correct.
Mr. Jordan. And you don't know if that specifically, just to
be clear in my mind, if that's specifically about your situation
and your interactions with Mr. Steele and the fact that you did
tell your superiors about that interaction or if it's part of a
broader investigation?
Mr. Ohr. I don't know.
Mr. Jordan. You don't know?
Mr. Ohr. Right.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. I want to go back one last time, make
sure I fully get this.
You made it a point starting in November of '16 to -- any
interaction you had with Mr. Steele or Mr. Simpson to then follow
up with a meeting with folks at the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. Yeah. As much as I can remember, I would do that,
yes.
Mr. Jordan. And that continued until you no longer met with
anyone, until you had stopped meeting with Steele or Simpson --
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. -- in November of 2017?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. So for 1 full year you're meeting with them.
When was the -- do you recall, Mr. Ohr, when you were talking
about reengaging with -- where's my notes -- we just talked about
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 243 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
that the last hour. Here we go. Reengaging with -- helping
Mr. Steele reengage with the FBI.
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. Tell me the timeframe again.
Mr. Ohr. I --
Mr. Jordan. May of '17?
Mr. Ohr. Yes, I believe that that sounds right.
Mr. Jordan. So why do you have to reengage -- why does the
FBI have to reengage if they're getting -- if they've already had,
looks like, 12 meetings with you and you're having conversations
with Mr. Steele? Seems like they've already engaged. There's no
reengagement. It's continued engagement.
Mr. Ohr. What they asked me in May was to ask Chris Steele
if he would be willing to meet with them. So that was the message
I passed on.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. Thank you, Mr. Ohr. I appreciate your
time.
Mr. Ohr. Thank you.
BY MR. PARMITER:
Q Sir, can I follow up briefly on that?
A Absolutely.
Q In the text that Mr. Jordan is referring to, I believe
it's exhibit 5, in several places Mr. Steele refers to -- in this
discussion about reengagement he refers to -- I'm looking
specifically at the, for example, at August 6, 2017.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 244 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A Yes.
Q Should be the second page of that.
A I've got it.
Q And he expresses his frustration.
First of all, he says, "we are frustrated." Do you know who
he's referring to what he says "we"?
A I'm not sure.
Q Okay. "With how long this reengagement with the Bureau
and Mueller is taking."
And then in a couple of places he says -- he uses the word,
and I think you talked about this in the last hour, "SC"?
A Yes.
Q Do you know what he's referring to by SC?
A My interpretation is special counsel.
Q Okay. So he's -- his -- was your interpretation also
then that he wanted to engage with the special counsel?
A Yes, but I'm not sure whether -- I don't know. I mean,
clearly that's what he's asking, but when I passed the question
from the FBI to Chris Steele it was simply whether he would meet
with the FBI. He did not say special counsel.
Q Okay. And when you said things like -- this is the text
immediately preceding the one, "the Bureau and Mueller," July 16,
you said, "I will pass this along to my colleagues."
A Yes.
Q "I will pass this along to my colleagues," in a couple
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 245 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
other places, things like that. Who are you referring to there?
A The FBI agent that I was in contact with.
Q Okay.
BY MR. BAKER:
Q It's been a long day and I want to thank you for your
patience. Our process sometimes out of necessity results in
duplicity, so I appreciate you asking -- or answering some of the
questions more than one time.
I have a couple of random questions, and some of these may
fall into the category of having already been asked, but I just
want to make sure they're on the record.
When you -- rewinding back to 9 o'clock this morning -- when
you refer to OCDETF, you're talking about the Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Force?
A That is correct.
Q Okay. And in your association with OCDETF and you
traveling on behalf of OCDETF and doing things that I believe I
understand OCDETF does, it would not be unusual for you to
interact with other law enforcement officials either around the
country or around the world?
A Correct.
Q And in that capacity, would it be fair to say you -- for
those people in attendance at conferences like that, you would be
the face of the Department of Justice?
A Yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 246 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q And in that capacity it would not be unusual for you to
be identified as a conduit for people to reach out to for resource
information or to pass information to?
A Yes.
Q And that is, as I understand what you've said today,
that's initially how you became associated with Mr. Steele?
A Yes.
Q And did you have occasion to become associated with
other acquaintances like Mr. Steele through your capacity as a
liaison with OCDETF?
A Yes.
Q Did --
A Well, not just OCDETF but throughout my different --
Q Throughout your different capacities --
A Capacities, yes.
Q -- with the Department of Justice.
A Yes.
Q So did other people reach out to you, separate and apart
from Mr. Steele, separate and apart from Russian organized crime,
did others reach out to you with information?
A Yes. Yes. And mostly on Russian organized crime, but,
yes.
Q And you, would it be fair to say, when they reached out
to you, some of the things they would reach out to you for
wouldn't necessarily be things that you in and of yourself could
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 247 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
instantly resolve or dispose of. You farm that information out to
appropriate people?
A Yes.
Q And would that also have included the FBI?
A Yes.
Q Okay. You indicated that you -- I think you indicated
you reached out to Mr. McCabe initially, but you had an
association with him prior to him being the deputy director?
A Correct.
Q So he was at Washington field office and you knew him?
Or how did you know him?
A I knew him at Washington field office, and I also dealt
with him when he was in the New York division of the FBI.
Q Okay. So you reached out to him and then he provided
Lisa Page and Peter Strzok?
A Yes.
Q Okay. How did he come to know that the types of
violations, for lack of a better word, that Mr. Strzok would work,
how did he know that they would be the appropriate people for your
needs? You gave him an indication of the information that you
were getting and then he produced them as opposed to maybe
somebody from the criminal division? How did he come up with
Strzok and Page?
A I don't know how he came up with them. I met with him,
I believe, in August of 2016, and I provided the information to
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 248 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
him that I had received from Chris Steele.
Q So he took the information and decided that it would be
Page and Strzok that would be the appropriate --
A Well, Lisa Page -- he had Lisa Page present at that
initial meeting.
Q Okay.
A And then later on, it's my understanding that he
had -- it got to Peter Strzok.
Q Okay.
A I met subsequently with Peter Strzok.
Q Okay. You had mentioned earlier you had two different,
I believe, special agents or supervisory special agents that were
handlers of Mr. Steele, I think a Special Agent Gaeta and I think
a Pientka?
A No. I know that Chris Steele had conversations with
Mike Gaeta, and then separately I was given Joe Pientka as a point
of contact for me to provide information to starting in
November 2016.
Q Okay. When you would just receive information from
Mr. Steele and notify the FBI, it sounds like from testimony
you've given your transmitting that information to the Bureau was
pretty contemporaneous with you receiving the information. Is
that correct?
A As close as I could make it. Certainly, once I started
talking with Joe Pientka it was usually the same day or next day.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 249 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Who did you deal with before Joe Pientka?
A I dealt with, as I think I've mentioned, Andrew McCabe,
and then Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.
Q So one of those people would be who you -- what was the
mode of communication? Did you pick up the phone? You'd email?
Would there be personal meetings?
A I recall at least one meeting that Peter Strzok and Lisa
Page were present at, along with criminal division officials. I
don't recall other, you know, the other ways.
Q When you started dealing with Mr. Pientka --
A Yes.
Q -- where is he assigned? Where was he assigned during
this time?
A I would meet with him at the FBI headquarters.
Q So you met with him at FBI headquarters?
A Correct.
Q Was he ever assigned to New York, are you aware of?
A I don't know.
Q Okay. Somewhere along the line I was under the
impression that one of the handlers for Mr. Steele was a New York
assigned agent. Are you aware of that at all?
A Mike Gaeta was -- and, again, I don't know his official
status, his handler or not, but Mike Gaeta was from the New York
office.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 250 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
[4:31 p.m.]
BY MR. BAKER:
Q Okay. Was he also ever assigned overseas?
A Yes.
Q And where was he assigned?
A He was assigned to the FBI's legal attache in Rome.
Q And the legal attache is the sort of liaison in the
embassy where agents are assigned?
A Yes.
Q And they coordinate law enforcement efforts on behalf of
the Bureau and others from that post?
A Yes.
Q Okay. Are you familiar with a Daniel Jones, a former
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence staffer?
A I believe that -- but I -- no independent recollection
as I sit here, but I have seen that name in my notes, and it looks
like Chris Steele had mentioned that name to me.
Q Okay. Are you aware that he works for, or is the
founder of a group called Penn Quarter Group?
A No.
Q Okay.
A I did not know the name.
Q So not -- were you aware that he's raised approximately
$50 million from Democratic donors to continue the Fusion GPS
investigation?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 251 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A No.
Q Separate and apart from Mr. Steele, are you aware or
have you ever dealt with the FBI on any other informant issues,
confidential human source issues?
A I've dealt with the FBI on numerous informant issues.
Q Would it be unusual for a source, a CHS, whatever they
call them, would it be unusual for a source to be discontinued for
some reason and then be opened again?
A It can happen.
Q Are you aware of it happening in any instance?
A I think so, but I don't recall specifics, yes.
Q Okay. So it wouldn't be usual if someone's discontinued
for any reason if they resurfaced with information that was of
interest to the FBI. They could be reopened under certain
circumstances -- I don't know what those circumstances are -- but
it's possible?
A Yes, I believe so.
Q Do you know, when you first met Mr. Steele, I think
earlier your testimony was this went way back to maybe 2007?
A That's correct.
Q Do you have any reason to believe he was an FBI source
then?
A I don't believe so.
Q Okay. Do you have any idea when he was opened
approximately as an FBI source?
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 252 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
A I don't recall the specific year, but I think it
followed a meeting or -- I don't recall a specific year. I know
that I was at a -- present at a meeting with Chris Steele and with
Mike Gaeta at some point some years ago.
Q Okay. So he might have been opened as a source prior to
you relaying any information to the FBI that you're getting from
Mr. Steele?
A It's possible. I don't know.
Q Okay. It was widely reported in the media that you were
the number four official at the Department of Justice. I think by
your reaction, I know where this will go, but I want to put it on
the record. You occupied the title, associate deputy
assistant -- or associate deputy attorney general?
A That's right. I was one of the associate deputy
attorneys general.
Q And how many of them are there?
A There are more than five, somewhere between five and 10,
I believe.
Q Is there any slots succession plan or continuity of
operation plans, that if the attorney general and certain numbers
of people below him are unable to do their jobs, that you would be
the fourth person to take over the Department of Justice?
A No.
Q Okay. So there were multiple ADAGs and you were one of
the multiple ADAGs, but you were never the fourth in charge at the
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 253 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Department of Justice?
A That is correct.
Q Okay. You're a member of the Senior Executive Service?
A Yes, I am.
Q Is it true as a member of the Senior Executive Service,
you can be moved within your organization for any reason or for no
reason at all, based on where you're needed?
A I don't know the specifics, but certainly my attitude
has always been that if the Department wants me in a -- to do a
particular job, I will do that job.
Q Your, what's become known as the Ohr 302s, were they all
done at FBI headquarters, or were any done --
A I did not participate in the creation of the 302s so I
don't know how they wrote them up or how they did it.
Q But when you were present for the information that they
documented in the 302s, was that FBI headquarters as far as you
know or --
A Some of them were at FBI headquarters, and later on, it
was at the Washington field office of the FBI.
Q And who at the Washington field office conducted an
interview?
A I cannot remember the names.
Q But it wasn't Pientka?
A Right.
Q So it was somebody, another agent, or agents, at the
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 254 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
FBI's Washington field office?
A My recollection is at least on two occasions I was
handed onto a new agent.
Q Okay.
BY MR. PARMITER:
Q Sir, again, just to reiterate, we really appreciate, you
know, the time that you've spent here today, and hopefully we just
have a few more questions before our colleagues take the chair.
So just very briefly, to follow up on my colleague's
questions about the ADAGs in ODAG.
A Yes.
Q So which at the time during your communications with
Mr. Steele in 2016 and 2017 -- well, first, let me ask you this:
I believe you said earlier that, you know, when you were ADAG you
supervised -- you kind of wore two hats being the head of OCDETF.
What other components of the Department did you directly
supervise?
A That was the only one I directly supervised.
Q Okay. Who was directly supervising NSD or the FBI at
that time?
A Well, the ADAGs don't directly supervise the components.
There were other ADAGs whose responsibilities included talking to
NSD, criminal division, and so forth.
Q So how does it break -- is it broken down by component,
or is it broken down by the particular subject matter like
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 255 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
counterintelligence?
A It varies, I guess, would be the best way to say. And
it can change also. So --
Q Okay. So when you were talking to Mr. Steele in 2016
and 2017, that sort of -- that period, who was the person, the
ADAG who was in charge of the counterintelligence portion of the
Department?
A Well, Tash Gauhar, in the Office of Deputy Attorney
General, worked on national security matters, but I don't know if
she was specifically in charge of counterintelligence or anything
like that.
Q Did you ever speak to her about any of this --
A I did not.
Q -- material?
Okay. Why didn't you do that?
A I wanted to keep it at the lowest level and, you know,
give the information to FBI and whoever I was going to be able to
evaluate it, decide what to do with it.
Q Okay. So it would be fair to say you just wanted to
keep yourself as sort of a conduit rather than, you know --
A Correct.
Q -- create something within ODAG about this?
A That's right.
Q Regarding Fusion GPS --
A Yes.
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 256 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q -- I think you said earlier that you became aware, or
Mrs. Ohr became aware that her research was intended to be about
Russia and, you know, about the potential ties between the
campaign and Russia. Is that correct?
A Yes. At some point, yes.
Q Okay. Are you aware of any efforts by Fusion GPS to
conduct sort of research about other politicians?
A No.
Q I'm --
A I mean, I know Fusion GPS did research on different
topics, so I don't specifically know of research on other
politicians.
Q Okay. For example, anyone who may have been in this
room today --
A No.
Q -- or -- okay.
A Not aware of anything like that.
Q Senator Grassley?
A No, not --
Q Devin Nunes?
A No, not that I'm aware of, no.
Q Okay. Bob Goodlatte?
A No. Again, not aware of any Fusion GPS research on
other Senators, Congressmen, other officials.
Q Okay. Just briefly because we touched on this, you've
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 257 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
mentioned Lisa Page a few times today. You met with her and Peter
Strzok --
A Yes.
Q -- and Andy McCabe?
A Yes.
Q And I believe you said you'd known Lisa Page from when
she was a trial attorney in OCRS. Is that correct?
A That is correct.
Q Okay. Did she work directly for you?
A Yes. I was the chief of OCRS, so she was one of my
employees. We had deputy chiefs in OCRS, and she would have
reported directly to one of the deputy chiefs.
Q Okay. And through that deputy chief to you?
A Yes.
Q Okay. How long did she work for you? Do you recall?
A I don't recall.
Q Okay. After she left did you -- did you maintain
communications with her after she left?
A No.
Q Did Mrs. Ohr know Ms. Page?
A She will -- -- my recollection is she would have met
Ms. Page at some point, because once a year, when I was chief of
OCRS I would have a -- invite the whole section over to our house.
So I recall, on one occasion, Lisa Page being there, and so they
would have -- I don't know if they spoke or whatever, but they
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 258 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
would have been in the same room.
Q Okay. Apart from the meeting that you had at the FBI, I
believe it was at the FBI, with Deputy Director McCabe and
Ms. Page and Mr. Strzok, did you have any other conversations with
Lisa Page about anything the FBI was looking into related to
Russia?
A No. But just, again, as I had mentioned earlier in my
initial meeting was with Mr. McCabe and with Lisa Page. I don't
believe Peter Strzok was there. And later when I met with Mr.
Strzok and Lisa Page, I don't believe Andy McCabe was there. So,
no, I can't -- I don't remember conversations on any other topics.
Q Did you ever discuss Mr. Steele with Ms. Page?
A I assume so, since I was telling them about what I was
hearing from Chris Steele.
Q Apart from that meeting, I mean?
A We might have. I don't recall.
Q Okay. Do you recall her reaction specifically to
the -- to what was conveyed in the meeting?
A I don't recall specifically. I think everybody was
alarmed and took it seriously, but I don't recall any specific
things she said or reaction.
Mr. Jordan. Bobby, can I ask something?
Mr. Parmiter. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jordan. Mr. Ohr, I'm sorry I'm back in here. When did
you learn that Mr. Steele had been -- his relationship with the
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FBI had been stopped, he'd been fired by the FBI?
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall specifically.
Mr. Jordan. Give me an approximate?
Mr. Ohr. I mean, you've told me that they terminated him in
the beginning of November. But beyond that, I don't recall.
Mr. Jordan. Did -- how did you learn that? Did you
learn -- did someone from the FBI tell you -- I mean, you're
meeting with the FBI at least 13 times over a year's timeframe,
and because they've asked you to meet with Mr. Pientka after every
time you touch base with Steele and/or Simpson.
In one of those meetings -- did you learn in one of those
meetings that he had been terminated? And it seems to me that's
something you're going to -- by the way, the guy you're talking to
and giving us information on at least once a month -- looks like a
lot more often than that frankly, because you met 12 times in
about 6 months -- oh, by the way, we fired him.
Mr. Ohr. I don't recall how I learned that he was terminated
as a source, so that's the thing. But, again, and the FBI
provided Joe Pientka to me as a point of contact. If I recall
correctly, they did not instruct me to call him every time I had a
contact from Chris Steele.
Mr. Jordan. But you did that?
Mr. Ohr. That was my -- that was me, yes.
Mr. Jordan. So it's fair to say what -- every time you met
with -- that corresponds to some meeting just prior to that with
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Christopher Steele?
Mr. Ohr. Yes.
Mr. Jordan. The dates we have from the FBI when you've sat
down with them correspond to at or about that time you had had a
meeting with Christopher Steele and/or Simpson?
Mr. Ohr. And from November onward, all the contacts with
Chris Steele were by telephone, so I didn't have meetings.
Mr. Jordan. Right.
Mr. Ohr. And I had one meeting with Glenn Simpson in
December that we've discussed. And I recall one call with Glenn
Simpson in January.
Mr. Jordan. Okay. All right. Thanks.
BY MR. BAKER:
Q Just briefly. This issue of being told untimely notice
of conversations with Chris Steele, is that -- as you understand
it, was that relating back to the very first time you started
talking to Steele, or was this in relation -- the untimely part,
is this in relation to public reporting now starting to happen?
A So what I was also told was that reports, press reports
were about to run talking about my relationship with Chris Steele.
So that's my -- but when they say untimely reporting, I think it's
basically these press reports are about to run. We didn't have
all the information.
Mr. Baker. Okay. Thank you.
BY MR. PARMITER:
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Q One last question, sir.
A Just for you.
Q Can you tell me what sort of -- email servers is the
wrong word -- email -- like, apps and email services you used to
communicate with Mr. Steele and Mr. Simpson?
A I used WhatsApp, which is I think what that reflects.
We had some Skype calls. I don't remember if there were any Skype
texts or anything like that. I couldn't -- I don't think I could
find anything. And then we had some telephone calls.
Q Okay. And regarding email, I mean did you email
Mr. Simpson or Mr. Steele using --
A Yeah. There were some emails that I produced relating
to my work email, and there was at least that one communication
from Glenn Simpson on our home email.
Q Okay. And what was the -- why use Skype?
A I think there was -- I remember Chris Steele saying
sometime earlier, maybe years earlier, that he liked using Skype.
Q Okay. But that list right there you think you could
confidently say you used to communicate with both of them?
A No. With Chris Steele, Skype, WhatsApp, some emails.
With Glenn Simpson, I don't think there was ever any Skype or
WhatsApp, just some emails, and then, of course, meeting in
person.
Q Okay. And forgive me if you've already answered this,
did you first meet Mr. Simpson before or after the election, if
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you recall?
A I've known -- met Mr. Simpson on various occasions over
the years, you know, so --
Mr. Parmiter. Okay. I think that's all we have.
Mr. Ohr. All right.
Mr. Parmiter. Thank you.
Ms. Hariharan. All right. We are back on the record for the
minority. It is 4:50 p.m., and hopefully we can do this really
quickly.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q So there has been a significant amount of attention
placed on not just you and your professional contacts, and your
wife and her professional contacts, but your family in general.
There has been a significant number of attacks in the public, and
I cannot imagine what that is like, and I'm very sorry you have to
deal with that. So if you will bear with us, we're going to go
through some of the allegations that have been made in these
public attacks just to get them out of the way.
So President Trump has been quoted as saying, quote: They
should be looking at Bruce Ohr and his wife Nellie for dealing
with -- by the way, indirectly -- Russians," end quote. For the
record, have you or Mrs. Ohr engaged in a conspiracy to interfere
in the U.S. election process with Russian individuals or entities?
A No.
Q Do you know what the President is getting at when he
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 263 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
accuses you and your wife of, quote, "dealing with -- by the way,
indirectly -- Russians," end quote?
A No.
Q I know you have previously discussed your wife's
background and the type of work she was doing for Fusion GPS, and
I'm not going to force you to repeat that. The understanding is
she was doing open source research translating Russian language
materials because of her background.
To the best of your knowledge, was she reviewing any type of
classified or highly sensitive materials or was --
A No.
Q Okay. So in general, if Mrs. Ohr was working on a
sensitive project, would she -- for one of her clients. As I
understand, she had multiple clients, correct --
A She was --
Q -- over a period of --
A She was working for Fusion GPS during part of the period
we have been discussing.
Q Right. When she works on sensitive projects, does she
discuss those details with you?
A Generally, no.
Q And on the flip side, have you discussed details of your
cases with her?
A No.
Q At any time prior to the 2016 election, did she ask you
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to provide your professional opinion about any research concerning
Donald Trump?
A I don't recall anything like that, no.
Q Or the Russian entities -- or, excuse me, Russian
individuals or companies she was researching?
A She didn't ask me for my professional opinion.
Q Okay. Do you have any reason to believe that prior to
the 2016 election, your wife had any knowledge of the FBI's
broader Russian investigation, or the FBI's Russian collusion
investigation?
A No.
Q Do you have any reason to believe that Mrs. Ohr sought
or reviewed any FISA applications related to the Russian
investigation?
A No, she did not.
Q And to your knowledge, beyond the open source research
that she was conducting, was Mrs. Ohr involved in meeting with
sources to gather information?
A She was not.
BY MS. SHEN:
Q So, Mr. Ohr, within the past few weeks, President Trump
has put you in name -- has named you in his Tweets about nine
times to my count, and I will have the fortunate pleasure of
reading you a couple of those now and asking you some questions.
So on August 17, 2018, Donald Trump tweeted, quote: "FOX
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 265 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
News has learned that Bruce Ohr wrote Christopher Steele following
the firing of James Comey stating that he was afraid the
anti-Trump Russia probe will be exposed, Charles Payne on FOX
Business. How much more does Mueller have to see? They have
blinders on. Rigged."
So, Mr. Ohr, did you write Christopher Steele following the
firing of James Comey because you were, quote, "afraid the
anti-Trump Russia probe will be exposed"?
A No.
Q Okay. So your writing to Christopher Steele following
the firing of James Comey had nothing to do with the Trump/Russia
probe. Is that accurate? To the Steele -- I'm sorry.
So your communications with Christopher Steele after the
firing of James Comey was not due to any concern that either you
or Mr. Steele would be exposed as some -- as part of some kind of
conspiracy. Is that correct?
A I don't think so, if I understand your question.
Q Okay.
BY MS. HARIHARAN:
Q Do you recall if that conversation was a discussion
about sources and concerns for their safety?
A I think -- I don't know if that's -- that's what I was
trying to remember, but our conversations were about the concern
for the source's safety.
BY MS. SHEN:
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 266 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Q Okay. Also in August 17, 2018, President Trump tweeted,
quote: Bruce Ohr of DOJ is in legal jeopardy. It's astonishing
that he's still employed. Bruce and Nellie Ohr's bank account is
getting fatter and fatter because of dossier that they are both
peddling. He doesn't disclose it under Fed regs. Using your
Federal office for personal, dot, dot, dot, dot, dot.
It continues to a second tweet on the same day: Using your
Federal office for personal financial gain is a Federal gratuity
statute violation, bribery statute violation, honest services
violation, all major crimes, dot, dot, dot, because the DOJ is run
by blank Jeff Sessions. So when does Mueller do what must be
done? Probably never, @FOXNews.
Okay. Mr. Ohr, are you in some kind of legal jeopardy that
you're aware of?
A Not that I'm aware of.
Q Okay. And is it true that your, or your wife's bank
account is getting fatter and fatter because of the Trump dossier?
A I don't believe so.
Q Okay. So did you or your wife make any money as a
result of the Trump dossier?
A I don't believe so.
Q Okay. So -- well, in reference to Trump dossier, when
it says he didn't disclose under Federal regs, you and your wife
didn't actually make any money off the Trump dossier, therefore,
there would be no reason to disclose such a thing under Federal
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 267 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
regs, if that's --
A Yes, correct.
Q So you were also being accused of, quote, using your
office for personal financial gain. Mr. Ohr, have you used your
Federal office for any personal financial gain?
A No.
Q Okay. And have you committed any major crimes?
A No.
Q Okay. Thank you.
Ms. Hariharan. So I think we'll just end with, we are very
grateful that you've taken the time to be here with us. We cannot
possibly imagine what this experience must have -- what the past
year must have been like. And for that, we are very sorry.
And if there is anything you would like to share with us,
because most folks don't get the opportunity to address,
especially these kind of -- the public attacks that have occurred
via social media and other outlets, if there's anything you would
like to say, the floor is yours.
Mr. Ohr. I don't think I have anything to add. As I said
before, I'm happy, privileged to work for the Department of
Justice, and I continue to pursue that mission.
Mr. Berman. All right. Then I believe we are done and under
10 minutes. We're off the record at 4:57. Thank you so much.
[Whereupon, at 4:57 p.m., the interview was concluded.]
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE 268 COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Certificate of Deponent/Interviewee
I have read the foregoing ____ pages, which contain the correct
transcript of the answers made by me to the questions therein
recorded.
_____________________________
Witness Name
_____________________________
Date
COMMITTEE SENSITIVE
Better to link it.
Here’s a more manageable FR thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3733061/posts
Thanks. I posted in that “more manageble” thread too, giving a direct link to the pdf.
In the past, some posters here have remarked that viewing pdf is difficult for them, and they prefer plain text rendering. I had a couple free moments and that thought was in my head.
I am totally indifferent on the fate of this thread, it can be deep sixed and I’d probably never notice.
For a higher-upper at the DOJ , Mr Ohr has the memory retention of person with brain damage.
I understand. If you find the REDACTED VERSI0N, people want to compare redacted against unredacted.
I have found some redacted things but can’t seem to find the redacted testimony.
A link would have been a cleaner approach.
I don’t think a redacted version was ever offered to the public. All I see is news reports that refer to the testimony being in conflict with e.g., Schiff representations.
“The Justice Department returned the Ohr transcript to the committee this week with redactions. But Collins said he was releasing a copy without those edits because the changes sought by the department did not relate to classified information or sensitive personal data.” <- typical DOJ stonewalling for face saving purposes.
There is another big pile of documents (redacted) provided to JW under FOIA. None of this is the House Committee deposition transcript.
http://www.judicialwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/JW-v-DOJ-Ohr-Steele-Fusion-GPS-00490.pdf
from what I skimmed off Ohr’s testimony, it seems names of some of the “usual suspects” keep circling back around?
common denominators include:
chris steele.....
nel ohr.......
glen simpson.....
bruce ohr......
today’s posting on ohr’s testimony adds: Oleg Deripaska....
correct me if I’m wrong, but didn’t mueller..... and no name (david kramer....)have their own deals going with Deripaska???
You could have posted all that in as the first “response” post.
I do like to see the article posted right there so I don’t have to click, but War and Peace?
The battery in my mouse died scrolling to get to the bottom.
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