Posted on 01/08/2018 3:13:37 PM PST by SSS Two
Republican-led House and Senate committees are investigating whether leaders of the Russia counterintelligence investigation had contacts with the news media that resulted in improper leaks, prompted in part by text messages amongst senior FBI officials mentioning specific reporters, news organizations and articles.
In one exchange, FBI counterintelligence agent Peter Strzok and bureau lawyer Lisa Page engaged in a series of texts shortly before Election Day 2016 suggesting they knew in advance about a Wall Street Journal article and would need to feign stumbling onto the story so it could be shared with colleagues.
Article is out, but hidden behind paywall so cant read it, Page texted Strzok on Oct. 24, 2016.
Wsj? Boy that was fast, Strzok texted back, using the initials of the famed financial newspaper. Should I find it and tell the team?
The text messages, which were reviewed by the Hill, show the two FBI agents discussed how they might make it appear they innocently discovered the article, such as through Google News alerts.
I can get it like I do every other article that hits any Google News alerts, seriously, Strzok wrote, adding he didnt want his team hearing about the article from someone else.
Strzok played a key role in the early Russia election meddling probe before he was removed last summer by Special Counsel Robert Mueller for exchanging anti-Donald Trump text messages with Page.
The Justice Department has told Congress that Strzok had engaged in an affair with Page, who served as a lawyer advising FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe.
The Hill reviewed nearly three dozen texts in which the two agents discussed articles, tried to track down information about a specific New York Times reporter or opined about leaked information in stories that they fretted were super specific.
Republican investigators in both the House and Senate say the text messages suggest FBI personnel may have had media contacts but dont necessarily prove it. So they want to learn more about what the two agents were talking about and whether any FBI officials involved in the Russia probe engaged in leaking, sources told The Hill.
President Trump has bitterly complained about leaks in the Russia probe, suggesting it had created a false narrative about his campaign and early administration. And FBI officials have taken the rare step of denouncing a few major stories in the Russia case as inaccurate.
FBI contacts with the media wouldnt necessarily be improper unless they resulted in the release of confidential law enforcement information or classified information, such as the leak last February of an intercept of then-National Security Adviser Mike Flynns contacts with the Russian ambassador.
The Justice Department says it currently has 27 ongoing criminal leak investigations, triple the amount of the prior three years combined.
FBI and Justice Department officials declined to comment about the Strzok-Page texts, noting the Justice Department inspector general is currently investigating the messages and any political bias or other wrongdoing that may have occurred in the Russia case.
Former FBI Director James Comey, on whose watch the Russia case began, has previously testified he did not authorize or engage in leaking while in office, though he admitted arranging a leak after he was fired by President Trump last spring in hopes it would prompt a special prosecutor appointment.
Separately, the House Intelligence Committee says it has obtained information that Muellers current deputy in the Russia probe, respected Justice Department financial fraud prosecutor Andrew Weissman, had contact with the news media last April, shortly before Mueller was named special prosecutor, according to a letter the committee has sent the department.
In a deal with the current FBI Director Chris Wray and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, Justice officials have promised to provide the Intelligence Committee with information on the Weismann contacts later this week.
I understand that your office is researching records related to the details of an April 2017 meeting between DOJ Attorney Andrew Weissman (now the senior attorney for Special Counsel Robert Mueller) and the media, which will also be provided to this Committee by close of business on Thursday, January 11, 2018, Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) wrote in the letter.
Whatever Congress ultimately determines, the Strzok-Page text messages already provided to lawmakers show the two FBI agents were closely monitoring leaks in the news media and had strong opinions about reporters and media personalities.
In one string of text messages just five days before Election Day 2016, Page, the lawyer, alerted Strzok, the counterintelligence agent, to a Washington Post story about a timeline in the controversial Hillary Clinton email investigation.
Page mentions a conversation she had just had with FBI chief of staff James Rybicki and openly expressed concern the information about the FBIs timeline was too specific for comfort in the article.
Sorry, Rybicki called. Time line article in the post (sic) is super specific and not good. Doesnt make sense because I didnt have specific information to give.
A few days earlier Strzok texted Page about another new article, suggesting it was anti-FBI. Yep, the whole tone is anti-Bu. Just a tiny bit from us, he wrote.
Page texted she had seen the article. Makes me feel WAY less bad about throwing him under the bus to the forthcoming CF article, she texted. Congressional investigators are still trying to determine what the CF article reference means and who the agents thought they were trying to throw under the bus.
Republicans want to interview Page to determine if she assisted any forthcoming articles or helped another FBI employee give information to the news media, particularly because she helped advised then-deputy director McCabe.
Likewise, congressional investigators want to question Strzok about what he meant about the tiny bit from us reference.
The two agents also spent extensive time shortly before the 2016 Election trying to track down information including an address and a spouses job about New York Times reporter Matt Apuzzo, who has reported on numerous developments in the Russia case.
We got a list of kids with their parents names. How many Matt Apuzzos (sic) could there be in DC, Page texted. Showed J a picture, he said he thinks he has seen a guy who kinda looks like that, but always really schlubby. I said that sounds like every reporter I have ever seen.
A minute later, Page added another text: Found what I think might be their address, too.
Strzok writes back, Hes TOTALLY schlubby. Dont you remember?
Page responded later by saying she found information on the reporters wife too. Found address looking for her. Lawyer.
Strzok cautions Page against using the work phone to track down information on the reporter. I wouldnt search on your work phone, ,,, no idea what that might trigger, he texted.
Oops. Too late, she responded back.
Apuzzo declined comment when contacted on his cell phone.
The two agents exchanged numerous texts sharing links or information about stories in the Russia case, including one shortly before Election Day in which then-Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) expressed concerns there was evidence Trump associates had contacts with Russian figures.
When the two shared a National Public Radio article on the opening of Trumps new hotel in Washington, the two barely could contain their disdain.
Thats one place I hope I never stay in, Page wrote.
Strzok replied. Agreed. I hope it fails horribly.
Occasionally the two also opined about the media in general. Strzok, for instance, called a New York Post article about agents unhappy with the outcome of the Clinton email case stupid, and referred to Fox anchor Chris Wallace as a turd.
After one of the presidential debates, Strzok also had an observation about then-Fox anchor and current NBC anchor Megyn Kelly. Vaguely satisfying to see Megyn Kelly (who had Botox and looks HORRIBLE) utterly going after Trump, he texted.
They were using ham radios.
It sounds like they were using the reporters’ families as a way to threaten them. Why else would it matter who their spouses and children are? Extortion, anyone?
thanks for the new tag line!
So this is love?
Corrupt to the core.
Sad thing is, if Priestap gets rolled up in this, as the head of the Counter Intelligence Unit, he jeopardizes every case the unit has made. Whether or not, he played any role.
The misdeeds and wrongdoings of all of these people can and will have a far reaching effect, when it all shakes out. Obviously, something that wasn’t thought about because they all thought they’d get away with it, after she won.
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I hope so. And yes, they were convinced they would have a friendly Killery presidency who would hide them and be happy about their criminal acts in her defense.
Interesting that The Hill is making excuses for them and suggesting their acts were not contrary to law.
"FBI contacts with the media wouldnt necessarily be improper unless they resulted in the release of confidential law enforcement information or classified information, such as the leak last February of an intercept of then-national security adviser Michael Flynns contacts with the Russian ambassador to the U.S.
Supplying information to a media organization in support of one candidate over the other, hoping to effect the outcome of that election in the days and weeks prior to is probably illegal, most certainly contrary to policy within the FBI regardless if it is classified information or not. The Hill is suggesting that political activism within the FBI is okay when FBI disciplinary actions i.e. the Ohr demotion would tell us that it clearly is not "okay".
Not sure if it's extortion or simply trying to intimidate a reporter by the FBI? Regardless, it is well past what the FBI should be fiddling with.
And it is quite clear The Hill has a much higher opinion of the renegade prosecutor Weissmann than most others in the nation....
.....Separately, the House Intelligence Committee says it has obtained information that Muellers current deputy in the Russia probe, respected Justice Department financial fraud prosecutor Andrew Weissman, had contact with the news media last April, shortly before Mueller was named special prosecutor, according to a letter the committee has sent the department....
Respected? By who, the thousands of Arthur Anderson employees who lost their jobs because of his prosecutorial misconduct, later overturned 9-0 by the Supreme Court? Oh, but I nearly forgot. We shouldn't be saying anything bad about the politically biased band of misfits hired-on by droopy eyed Mueller.
Too bad I never have anything worthy of hiding.
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Yes, intimidation is more likely.
CF=Clinton Foundation?
Gwjack
“CF = Clinton Foundation”
Good thinking!! Did the CF publish articles? You could be right.
“Stupid?”. Maybe yes; maybe no. I think the word we’re looking for is “arrogant”. They believed they were above it all and never would get caught.
is leaking fake news a crime?
About 2 years ago Obama administration made it legal for the government to work with the media to post fake news. They claimed it was for the purpose to provide misinformation to enemies of the country.
It’s a miracle that Trump is our president.
You'll not get rid of the, they'll go dark. The Democrats have completely infiltrated the US government with political activists (moles) at every level.
Lois Lerner is still snickering at us.
“Improper or ILLEGAL?”
Was there “intent”?
“Improper or ILLEGAL?”
Was there “intent”?
>
There has been a pretty big breakthrough everyday for the past week.
>
It’s only ‘big’ and a ‘break-through’ *IF*/when something is done.
Sleeping Sessions is still sleeping and the Deep State’s a still chugging
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