Reluctant witnesses in FISA abuse probe agree to talk to DOJ inspector
general




By  <https://www.foxnews.com/person/h/catherine-herridge> Catherine
Herridge,  <https://www.foxnews.com/person/u/cyd-upson> Cyd Upson  

Sources tell Fox News that Justice Department inspector general is examining
a senior State Department official's contact with Christopher Steele, author
of the anti-Trump dossier; chief intelligence correspondent Catherine
Herridge reports. Report on Russia probe origins delayed as new evidence
prompts deeper review <http://video.foxnews.com/v/6055991561001> 

Key witnesses sought for questioning by Justice Department Inspector General
Michael E. Horowitz early in his investigation into alleged government
surveillance abuse have come forward at the 11th hour, Fox News has learned.


Sources familiar with the matter said at least one witness outside the
Justice Department and FBI started cooperating -- a breakthrough that came
after Attorney General William Barr ordered U.S. Attorney John Durham to
lead a separate investigation into the origins of the bureau’s 2016 Russia
case that laid the foundation for Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe.



Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz looks on as he
testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on "Examining the Inspector
General's First Report on Justice Department and FBI Actions in Advance of
the 2016 Presidential Election" in the Hart Senate Office Building on June
18, 2018, on Capitol Hill. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP/Getty Images) 

While the investigative phase
<https://www.foxnews.com/transcript/inspector-general-horowitz-reportedly-ne
ars-end-of-probe-into-fisa-abuse>
<https://www.foxnews.com/transcript/inspector-general-horowitz-reportedly-ne
ars-end-of-probe-into-fisa-abuse> of the inspector general’s long-running
probe
<https://www.foxnews.com/transcript/inspector-general-horowitz-reportedly-ne
ars-end-of-probe-into-fisa-abuse> is said to be complete, the sources said
recent developments required some witnesses to be reinterviewed. And while
Barr testified that he expected the report into alleged Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) abuse to be ready in May or last month, multiple
sources said the timeline has slipped.

"The wheels of inspector general investigations move very, very slowly,"
former senior DOJ official Tom Dupree told Fox News. 

Dupree, who served as deputy assistant attorney general from 2007 to 2009,
does not have firsthand knowledge of the current IG case but is familiar
with the process. He added, "Like any investigation, you talk to one person,
something that person tells you sends you back … to the first person, so it
can be a very extensive, exhaustive process, because you are constantly
picking up leads, interviewing former sources and navigating complex
questions of classified information." 

Late-breaking information is known to delay such investigations. Horowitz’s
office similarly encountered new evidence late in the process of the IG
review into law enforcement decisions during the 2016 Hillary Clinton email
investigation. In this case, additional FISA information came to light late
in the process – including October 2016 contact (first reported by
<https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/442592-steeles-stunning-pre-fisa-co
nfession-informant-needed-to-air-trump-dirt> The Hill and confirmed by Fox
News) between a senior State Department official and a former British spy
Christopher Steele, who authored the infamous and salacious anti-Trump
dossier.   

The State Department contact with Steele was relayed to a senior FBI
official.  The timeline matters because about two weeks later, the FBI and
DOJ used Steele's unverified research, paid for by the DNC and Clinton
campaign, to secure a surveillance warrant against former Trump campaign
adviser Carter Page. At the very least, it's been argued, Steele's contact
with another government agency should have been a red flag for the FBI
because it may have violated his confidential human source agreement.

Steele was later fired by the FBI over his media contacts before the 2016
presidential election. The Page surveillance warrant is the central issue of
the DOJ IG’s review. 

With the timeline for Horowitz’s report not public, one of the wild cards is
the final review by the FBI and DOJ, which includes classification issues
and could take weeks. 

A spokesman for Horowitz would not comment on the report's status. But
during largely unrelated testimony in November, Horowitz offered some
guidance for the timeline of the FISA abuse probe in response to questions
from GOP Rep. Jim Jordan.   

"What I can say is given the volume of documents we've had and the number of
witnesses it looks like we'll need to interview, we are likely to be in the
same sort of general range of documents and witnesses as the last report,"
Horowitz said, referring to his team's review of the Clinton email case. "It
wouldn't surprise me if we are in that million or so plus range of documents
and a hundred-ish or so interviews. The last review, as you know, took us
about … 16 months or so."

If that same guidance holds, the window for completion would begin this
month, though it remains unclear how much the DOJ/FBI review and the
additional interviews could delay the process. 

EM         -> { Trump for 2020 }

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

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