
A newly-declassified appendix to a years-old Justice Department watchdog report shows that then-FBI Director James Comey was swayed to preemptively announce the end of the bureauâs investigation into Hillary Clinton based on mysterious classified intelligence reports â and that the FBI failed to investigate thumbdrives containing potentially key information about use of an illicit private email server.
The bombshell details were contained within a classified appendix to DOJ inspector general Michael Horowitzâs 2018 report criticizing the politicized conduct of the FBIâs Midyear Exam investigation into Clintonâs mishandling of classified information through the use of a private server while she was Secretary of State. Comey unilaterally announced that no charges would be brought against Clinton in an early July 2016 speech â with the FBI formally launching its Crossfire Hurricane investigation into baseless claims of Trump-Russia collusion later that month.
âThis document shows an extreme lack of effort and due diligence in the FBIâs investigation of former Secretary Clintonâs email usage and mishandling of highly classified information,â Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said on Monday as he released the heretofore classified appendix to the DOJ watchdog report. âUnder Comeyâs leadership, the FBI failed to perform fundamental investigative work and left key pieces of evidence on the cutting room floor. The Comey FBIâs negligent approach and perhaps intentional lack of effort in the Clinton investigation is a stark contrast to its full-throated investigation of the Trump-Russia collusion hoax, which was based on the uncorroborated and now discredited Steele dossier. Comeyâs decision-making process smacks of political infection.â
Grassleyâs press release stated that, in 2016, the FBI had âobtained intelligence reports discussing purported communications betweenâ Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), who was the chairwoman of the Democratic National Convention at the time, and âtwo different individuals who worked for the Soros Open Society Foundations.â
Grassley noted that âthe intelligence reports alleged that the Obama administration took efforts to scuttle the investigation into Clinton and protect her candidacyâ and that the DOJ watchdog annex âshowsâ that Comey, then-FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe, then-FBI special agent Peter Strzok, and others âdid not make serious investigative efforts to determine the veracity, or lack thereof, regarding the intelligence reports.â
The 2018 appendix stated that âthe FBI obtained [REDACTED] reports purporting to discuss efforts to influence the Midyear investigation.âÂ
âThe initial [REDACTED] report suggested that then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch and then-FBI Director James Comey were interfering in the Midyear investigation to help the Democratic and Republican candidates, respectively,â the newly-declassified appendix revealed. âThe second report stated that Lynch had been in contact with a named individual for the presidential campaign of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to provide information about the Midyear investigation.â
Horowitz wrote that âthe FBI determined that these reports were not credible on their faceâ but ânevertheless⊠Comey cited his concern that these reports would be leaked as a factor contributing to his decision not to inform Lynch of his plan to make a unilateral statement announcing the conclusion of the Midyear investigation on July 5, 2016.â
The DOJ watchdogâs largely-unredacted appendix stated that âa [REDACTED] Russian of unknown affiliation were involved in drafting and editing both reports.â The watchdog said that an FBI letterhead memorandum stated that âthe FBI did not view the information in the [REDACTED] reports as credible.â
Horowitz wrote that Comey told the watchdog that âno one believed that the [REDACTED] reports were an attempt at purposeful misinformation by the Russians, but that they also did not credit the underlying information in them.â
Comey, McCabe, and other FBI officials told Horowitz that they had not felt pressured by Lynch.
The DOJ appendix stated that âaccording to Lynch, no one told her that the [REDACTED] reports had factored into Comeyâs decision to issue his July 5 public statement.â
Comey cleared Clinton of criminal wrongdoing for transmitting classified information on an insecure and private email server in his speech on July 5, 2016. Comey claimed in his speech about the Clinton case at the time that âalthough there is evidence of potential violations of the statutes regarding the handling of classified information, our judgment is that no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case.â
Comey gave the speech after then-Attorney General Loretta Lynchâs tarmac meeting with former President Bill Clinton in June 2016.
The public version of Horowitzâs 2018Â report had concluded Comeyâs actions were âextraordinary and insubordinateâ when he announced Clinton wouldnât be charged.
âWe concluded that Comeyâs unilateral announcement was inconsistent with Department policy and violated long-standing Department practice and protocol by, among other things, criticizing Clintonâs uncharged conduct,â the DOJ inspector general concluded in the public version of his 2018 report. âWe also found that Comey usurped the authority of the Attorney General, and inadequately and incompletely described the legal position of Department prosecutors.â
The watchdog said in the newly-declassified appendix that then-deputy attorney general Sally Yates did not recall the saga about these mysterious intelligence reports the same way the FBI did.
âShe said that she recalled the FBI informing her that they had picked up intelligence that Lynch was keeping someone on the Clinton campaign informed about the Midyear investigation,â the appendix said. âYates told us that the FBI described the information to her as either âfake intelâ created by Russia [REDACTED] as originating from a source that lacked credibility.â
Horowitz added: âYates said that she did not recall being shown the [REDACTED] reports. Yates said that she recalled that the discussion with the FBI focused on Lynchâs contacts with the Clinton campaign, not on information that Lynch was attempting to influence the Midyear investigation. She said that she would have remembered if someone told her that these reports raised concerns within the FBI that Lynch was biased.â
The DOJ watchdog wrote that âYates told the OIG that she was never made aware that the [REDACTED] reports played a role in Comeyâs decision to issue his July 5 statement.â
The appendix also contained details from Comeyâs claims to the DOJ watchdog.
âComey said that even though he did not believe the information about Lynch in the two [REDACTED] reports, he became concerned that any emails underlying the reports would be publicly released by the Russian government as part of its âactive measuresâ campaign, and that this would call into question the credibility of a declination announcement by Lynch,â the appendix said. âComey said that this concern was a factor in his decision not to inform Lynch about his plan to deliver his public statement on July 5.â
Comey seemingly referenced these intelligence reports during Senate Intelligence Committee testimony in early July 2017. The fired FBI director was asked about the impact of Lynch meeting with Bill Clinton on a tarmac in 2016 and what impact that had on his decision to unilaterally announce that Clinton should not be charged.
âThere were other things that contributed to that,â Comey replied. âOne significant item, I canât â I know the committee has been briefed on. Thereâs been some public accounts of it, which are nonsense, but I understand the committee has been briefed on the classified facts.â
The newly-declassified appendix also showed how the FBI failed to investigate key information related to Clintonâs use of a private email server and her mishandling of classified information.
Grassleyâs press release stated that the appendix to the Horowitz report âshows the FBI obtained thumb drives from a source during the Clinton investigationâ but that Comey, McCabe, Strzok, and others âfailed to perform additional, targeted searches of the drives, even though they contained information relevant to the inquiry.â
The senator said the DOJ watchdog report âillustrates that the FBI failed to thoroughly and completely investigate the Clinton matter as a result, as well as vet the serious national security risks created by Clintonâs careless handling of highly classified information.â
Grassley said that âthe thumb drives contained highly sensitive information exfiltrated from U.S. government agencies, including the Department of State, as well as then-President Barack Obamaâs emails and, potentially, congressional information.â But âthe thumb drives were never reviewed as part of the Clinton investigation, contrary to the recommendation of a draft FBI memorandum,â Grassley said. âThe DOJ OIG report also shows the drives should have been immediately reviewed for foreign intelligence purposes, but were not.â
Horowitz wrote in his newly-public appendix that ânear the end of our review, and after we had conducted nearly all of our interviews, the OIG obtained emails from the FBIâs [REDACTED] system indicating that in late May 2016 FBI OGC lawyers drafted a memorandum requesting access to the thumb drives for purposes of the Midyear investigation.â
âThis draft memorandum stated that a review of the thumb drives was necessary to conduct a âthorough and complete investigationâ and to âassess the national security risksâ associated with former Secretary Clintonâs use of a private server,â the DOJ watchdog wrote. âHowever, the FBI never finalized the memorandum or submitted this request to the public.â
Horowitz added that âfor various reasons, we were unable to re-interview several former FBI officials involved in the Midyear investigation, including Comey and McCabe, regarding discussions about the request to search the thumb drives.â
The public version of the 2018 report by the DOJ watchdog also uncovered evidence that the FBI had delayed following up on information about Clinton emails found on a laptop belonging to disgraced former Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., and that the delay may have come from the FBIâs desire to emphasize the baseless Trump-Russia collusion investigation over the Clinton emails scandal.
In 2016, Strzok had exchanged a host of anti-Trump texts with now-former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was having an affair. Horowitz wrote, âWe did not have confidence that Strzokâs decision to prioritize the Russia investigation over following up on the Midyear-related investigative lead discovered on the Weiner laptop was free from bias.â
