McCabe Just Made Life Tough For Comey

Jerry Shugart

Well-known member
Following his termination late Friday night, former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe declared that he was “singled out” after “unrelenting” attacks by President Trump and critics. McCabe’s objections are less than credible, given the virtually unprecedented recommendation of career officials to fire the one-time acting FBI director.

However, McCabe may have rectified his “singled out” status with his long statement criticizing his termination: In the middle of it is a line that could be viewed as incriminating fired FBI director James Comey, not just in leaking sensitive information but also in lying to Congress.

McCabe is accused of misleading investigators about allegedly giving information to a former Wall Street Journal reporter about the investigation of Hillary Clinton and the Clinton family’s charitable foundation. McCabe asserts in his post-firing statement that he not only had authority to “share” that information to the media but did so with the knowledge of “the director.” The FBI director at the time was Comey.

“I chose to share with a reporter through my public affairs officer and a legal counselor,” McCabe stated. “As deputy director, I was one of only a few people who had the authority to do that. It was not a secret, it took place over several days, and others, including the director, were aware of the interaction with the reporter.”

If the “interaction” means leaking the information, then McCabe’s statement would seem to directly contradict statements Comey made in a May 2017 congressional hearing. Asked if he had “ever been an anonymous source in news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation” or whether he had “ever authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation,” Comey replied “never” and “no.”

The Justice Department’s inspector general clearly saw this “interaction” as problematic in seeking answers from McCabe. If the inspector general considered this to be a leak to the media, any approval by Comey would be highly significant. Comey already faces serious questions over his use of a Columbia University Law School professor to leak information to the media following his own termination as director.

In leaving the FBI last year, Comey improperly removed memos about the Russian investigation that he wrote concerning meetings with Trump. Since these memos discussed an ongoing FBI investigation and were written on an FBI computer, the bureau reportedly confirmed they were viewed as official documents subject to review and approval prior to any removal or disclosure.

Comey could have given the memos to the congressional oversight committees. Instead, he removed at least seven memos and gave at least four to his professor-friend to leak to the media. Four of the seven memos that Comey removed are now believed to be classified. Since he reportedly gave four memos to his friend to leak to the media, at least one of the leaked memos was likely classified.

Now, McCabe appears to be suggesting that Comey was consulted before the alleged leak to the media on the Clinton investigation. Many of us had speculated that it seemed unlikely McCabe would take such a step without consulting with Comey. Yet, Comey repeatedly stated that he had never leaked nor caused anyone to leak information to the media.

The timing for Comey could not be worse. He already has started selling tickets, for roughly $100 each, to attend the tour for his forthcoming book, “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership.” If he gave McCabe the green light for his “interaction,” the title could prove embarrassingly ironic.

If this was determined to be a leak with his approval, Comey likely would be labeled not just a leaker but a liar. Worse, his second-in-command just lost his pension after more than 20 years with the bureau, while Comey is about to cash in on a book and publicity tour potentially worth millions.

Comey also will be releasing his book around the same time as the inspector general’s report is expected to be made public. The inspector general reportedly will detail a number of irregularities under Comey’s watch. So the book could look more like a work of fiction if the inspector general finds that the FBI was a mess under Comey’s “leadership.”

McCabe’s termination is likely to only add to Comey’s problems. Four U.S. senators are calling for appointment of a second special counsel to investigate the Justice Department during the Clinton investigation. Moreover, there could be serious questions raised over the indictment of former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn for misleading investigators, which is the same allegation that McCabe faced before his termination. McCabe’s case could still be referred to prosecutors for possible indictment under the same provision used against Flynn.

The McCabe controversy could also make life tougher for special counsel Robert Mueller. While McCabe lashed out at Trump in his statement, he may have just given Trump the long-sought cover to use his pardon power. If McCabe is not charged, Trump could cite that decision as the basis for pardoning Flynn, as a matter of equity and fairness.

More generally, the apparent conduct of both McCabe and Comey have fulfilled the narrative long advanced by Trump of a biased and unprincipled FBI investigation. Given Trump’s ill-advised inclination to fire Mueller in the past, these allegations of leaks and misrepresentations inside the FBI could rekindle Trump’s interest in forcing an end to the investigation that has dogged his administration for a year.

Trump would be unwise to take such action. Instead, McCabe’s firing should reinforce calls for an independent investigation with the maximum level of transparency. The same is true for the Russia investigation of the Trump campaign. This country is deeply divided over the allegations against Trump and his opponents. We will not overcome this chasm until we are satisfied that we have the full factual record from the Clinton and Russia investigations.

This is particularly true for the FBI, which will not be able to regain the trust of many Americans without making a clean break from scandal. That means total transparency, which runs against the bureau’s culture. Yet, without greater disclosure, the public will be left wondering if a sense of Comey’s “Higher Loyalty” dangerously blurred the lines between “Truth, Lies, and Leadership.”


They are all going down!
 

Jonahdog

BANNED
Banned
Let's see what they both say. But the Trumpinistas won't care. Their love for their right wing wack-a-doodle knows no bounds. The facts don't matter. Trump lies and boasts about it, he is an adulterer and they ignore their own moral code, his lack of knowledge of economics (other than how to use the bankruptcy code) does not bother them, his 5th grade vocabulary and name-calling makes them feel right at home.

Yep, imagine the screams from Devin Nunes, Mikey Ryan, Mitch McConnell et al. should this garbage have come from the Obama administration.
 

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
Let's see what they both say. But the Trumpinistas won't care. Their love for their right wing wack-a-doodle knows no bounds. The facts don't matter. Trump lies and boasts about it, he is an adulterer and they ignore their own moral code, his lack of knowledge of economics (other than how to use the bankruptcy code) does not bother them, his 5th grade vocabulary and name-calling makes them feel right at home.

Yep, imagine the screams from Devin Nunes, Mikey Ryan, Mitch McConnell et al. should this garbage have come from the Obama administration.

I'm surprised that, you being an Atheist, would be concerned about other peoples behavior? That kind of shocks my system. After all, since you don't believe in a Creator or any kind of judgement, why would bad behavior mean anything to you? Kind of perplexing, huh?
 

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
Following his termination late Friday night, former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe declared that he was “singled out” after “unrelenting” attacks by President Trump and critics. McCabe’s objections are less than credible, given the virtually unprecedented recommendation of career officials to fire the one-time acting FBI director.

However, McCabe may have rectified his “singled out” status with his long statement criticizing his termination: In the middle of it is a line that could be viewed as incriminating fired FBI director James Comey, not just in leaking sensitive information but also in lying to Congress.

McCabe is accused of misleading investigators about allegedly giving information to a former Wall Street Journal reporter about the investigation of Hillary Clinton and the Clinton family’s charitable foundation. McCabe asserts in his post-firing statement that he not only had authority to “share” that information to the media but did so with the knowledge of “the director.” The FBI director at the time was Comey.

“I chose to share with a reporter through my public affairs officer and a legal counselor,” McCabe stated. “As deputy director, I was one of only a few people who had the authority to do that. It was not a secret, it took place over several days, and others, including the director, were aware of the interaction with the reporter.”

If the “interaction” means leaking the information, then McCabe’s statement would seem to directly contradict statements Comey made in a May 2017 congressional hearing. Asked if he had “ever been an anonymous source in news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation” or whether he had “ever authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation,” Comey replied “never” and “no.”

The Justice Department’s inspector general clearly saw this “interaction” as problematic in seeking answers from McCabe. If the inspector general considered this to be a leak to the media, any approval by Comey would be highly significant. Comey already faces serious questions over his use of a Columbia University Law School professor to leak information to the media following his own termination as director.

In leaving the FBI last year, Comey improperly removed memos about the Russian investigation that he wrote concerning meetings with Trump. Since these memos discussed an ongoing FBI investigation and were written on an FBI computer, the bureau reportedly confirmed they were viewed as official documents subject to review and approval prior to any removal or disclosure.

Comey could have given the memos to the congressional oversight committees. Instead, he removed at least seven memos and gave at least four to his professor-friend to leak to the media. Four of the seven memos that Comey removed are now believed to be classified. Since he reportedly gave four memos to his friend to leak to the media, at least one of the leaked memos was likely classified.

Now, McCabe appears to be suggesting that Comey was consulted before the alleged leak to the media on the Clinton investigation. Many of us had speculated that it seemed unlikely McCabe would take such a step without consulting with Comey. Yet, Comey repeatedly stated that he had never leaked nor caused anyone to leak information to the media.

The timing for Comey could not be worse. He already has started selling tickets, for roughly $100 each, to attend the tour for his forthcoming book, “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership.” If he gave McCabe the green light for his “interaction,” the title could prove embarrassingly ironic.

If this was determined to be a leak with his approval, Comey likely would be labeled not just a leaker but a liar. Worse, his second-in-command just lost his pension after more than 20 years with the bureau, while Comey is about to cash in on a book and publicity tour potentially worth millions.

Comey also will be releasing his book around the same time as the inspector general’s report is expected to be made public. The inspector general reportedly will detail a number of irregularities under Comey’s watch. So the book could look more like a work of fiction if the inspector general finds that the FBI was a mess under Comey’s “leadership.”

McCabe’s termination is likely to only add to Comey’s problems. Four U.S. senators are calling for appointment of a second special counsel to investigate the Justice Department during the Clinton investigation. Moreover, there could be serious questions raised over the indictment of former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn for misleading investigators, which is the same allegation that McCabe faced before his termination. McCabe’s case could still be referred to prosecutors for possible indictment under the same provision used against Flynn.

The McCabe controversy could also make life tougher for special counsel Robert Mueller. While McCabe lashed out at Trump in his statement, he may have just given Trump the long-sought cover to use his pardon power. If McCabe is not charged, Trump could cite that decision as the basis for pardoning Flynn, as a matter of equity and fairness.

More generally, the apparent conduct of both McCabe and Comey have fulfilled the narrative long advanced by Trump of a biased and unprincipled FBI investigation. Given Trump’s ill-advised inclination to fire Mueller in the past, these allegations of leaks and misrepresentations inside the FBI could rekindle Trump’s interest in forcing an end to the investigation that has dogged his administration for a year.

Trump would be unwise to take such action. Instead, McCabe’s firing should reinforce calls for an independent investigation with the maximum level of transparency. The same is true for the Russia investigation of the Trump campaign. This country is deeply divided over the allegations against Trump and his opponents. We will not overcome this chasm until we are satisfied that we have the full factual record from the Clinton and Russia investigations.

This is particularly true for the FBI, which will not be able to regain the trust of many Americans without making a clean break from scandal. That means total transparency, which runs against the bureau’s culture. Yet, without greater disclosure, the public will be left wondering if a sense of Comey’s “Higher Loyalty” dangerously blurred the lines between “Truth, Lies, and Leadership.”


They are all going down!

That little WEASEL, McCabe, is trying his level best to blame Donald Trump for all of his woes. He's not exactly what you'd call a 'Manly, man.'
 

The Barbarian

BANNED
Banned
That little WEASEL, McCabe, is trying his level best to blame Donald Trump for all of his woes.

That's pretty much what Trump has been doing, blaming various American intellegence and law enforcement people. Trump has never been very good at taking personal responsibility for his numerous failures. He always blames someone else.

He's not exactly what you'd call a 'Manly, man.'

Nope. "I have a bone spur! The pain, the pain! You can't draft me!" Like most narcissists, Trump lacks manhood.
 

Jerry Shugart

Well-known member
That's pretty much what Trump has been doing, blaming various American intellegence and law enforcement people. Trump has never been very good at taking personal responsibility for his numerous failures. He always blames someone else.

Why do you change the subject?

Why don't you address the fact that both have been caught lying under oath? I want to see you defend what they did so we can see clearly that the left thinks that the end justifies the means.

I want to see you defend the scumbags who tried their best to overthrow the results of the democractic election of President Trump.
 

The Barbarian

BANNED
Banned
(Jerry complains about people who don't take responsibility for themselves)

Barbarian observes:
That's pretty much what Trump has been doing, blaming various American intelligence and law enforcement people. Trump has never been very good at taking personal responsibility for his numerous failures. He always blames someone else.


Why do you change the subject?

That is the subject, Jerry. Trump lies all the time. So do his spokesmen.

Why don't you address the fact that both have been caught lying under oath?

Not yet. That's why Trump's lawyers are desperately trying to find a way to keep him from testifying.

The other guys? Saying things you don't want to hear, is not "lying under oath."

I want to see you defend what they did so we can see clearly that the left thinks that the end justifies the means.

I don't care whether or not they offended you or not. If they lied under oath, they'll pay for it. Let's see how Trump does, under oath.

I want to see you defend the scumbags who tried their best to overthrow the results of the democractic election of President Trump.

Mueller has already indicted over a dozen of them. Be patient. Even Trump now admits that they tried to rig the election for him. We're just gathering up the perps now.
 

glorydaz

Well-known member
Let's see what they both say. But the Trumpinistas won't care. Their love for their right wing wack-a-doodle knows no bounds. The facts don't matter. Trump lies and boasts about it, he is an adulterer and they ignore their own moral code, his lack of knowledge of economics (other than how to use the bankruptcy code) does not bother them, his 5th grade vocabulary and name-calling makes them feel right at home.

Yep, imagine the screams from Devin Nunes, Mikey Ryan, Mitch McConnell et al. should this garbage have come from the Obama administration.

Haha....it did come from the Obama administration. That's the point. Obama's Justice Dept. had Hillary in the Oval Office already, and they used the FBI and the CIA and even some Judges on the FISA court to get the job done.

Thankfully, the FBI's own oversight has caught those on the seventh floor and it will all come into the light.

Enjoy the ride, libs....it'll be a real show. :popcorn:
 

glorydaz

Well-known member
(Jerry complains about people who don't take responsibility for themselves)

Barbarian observes:
That's pretty much what Trump has been doing, blaming various American intelligence and law enforcement people. Trump has never been very good at taking personal responsibility for his numerous failures. He always blames someone else.




That is the subject, Jerry. Trump lies all the time. So do his spokesmen.



Not yet. That's why Trump's lawyers are desperately trying to find a way to keep him from testifying.

The other guys? Saying things you don't want to hear, is not "lying under oath."



I don't care whether or not they offended you or not. If they lied under oath, they'll pay for it. Let's see how Trump does, under oath.



Mueller has already indicted over a dozen of them. Be patient. Even Trump now admits that they tried to rig the election for him. We're just gathering up the perps now.

This is a bad case of Denial. Sad. :sigh:
 

The Barbarian

BANNED
Banned
Barbarian observes:
That is the subject, Jerry. Trump lies all the time. So do his spokesmen.

This is a bad case of Denial.

No sane person thinks that Trump isn't a frequent and grandiose liar. Would you like to hear some of those? He lies blatantly about even inconsequential things, and expects his people to lie, also. The "My inauguration was the best-attended,ever!" lie, for example was easily refuted by photos of his vs. Obama's inauguration. Even more pitiful was his vindictive search for the interior department employee who released pictures of his inauguration.

Newly inaugurated President Donald Trump was "directly involved" in the search for the person who, using the official National Park Service account, retweeted side-by-side comparisons of the crowds at Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony and former President Barack Obama's 2009 ceremony, CBS News has confirmed.

The retweet was deleted soon after it was posted and the Twitter accounts of the National Park Service and other U.S. Interior Department agencies were briefly shut down. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told CBS News two days later in an email that the White House neither demanded the retweet be taken down, nor ordered the Interior Department accounts to be suspended.

But emails released by the National Park Service in response to a Freedom of Information Act request reveal that the new president was "concerned" about the retweet.

"Obviously, this has become a very sensitive issue, especially since the President has gotten directly involved and contacted Acting Director Mike Reynolds concerned about one of the images that was retweeted," wrote Tim Cash, Chief of Digital Strategy at the National Park Service in a Jan. 21 email to Shaun Cavanaugh, the agency's Chief Information Security Officer.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-rogue-nps-twitter-account/


It is sad. And the first evidence we got of the sort of vicious, vengeful wretch Trump has become. Sad, indeed.


Yep. And lot of denial. There's more. Would you like to see some more?
 

rexlunae

New member
Of course, the most innocent explanation would be if Comey didn't explicitly authorize McCabe to leak specifically about the Trump or Clinton investigations, but McCabe felt that it was authorized by some more general aspect of his job.
 

The Barbarian

BANNED
Banned
Of course, the most innocent explanation would be if Comey didn't explicitly authorize McCabe to leak specifically about the Trump or Clinton investigations, but McCabe felt that it was authorized by some more general aspect of his job.

Yes, but who's going to tell the conspiracy buffs?
 

jgarden

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Banned
26darcy-perjury-trapjpg-6fff1d90c5c655e1.jpg


McCabe Just Made Life Tough For Comey

Where is the report upon which the decision to fire McCabe was supposedly based - we should all be suspicious as to why this is being withheld!
 

rexlunae

New member
Bob is next on the chopping block.

As Trey Gowdy warned Trump's lawyer, if he has an innocent client, he should act like it. Same goes for the client's behavior. If he's innocent, the Mueller investigation will exonerate him. The fact is, he's obviously not innocent, and he obviously knows it.
 

patrick jane

BANNED
Banned
McCabe Just Made Life Tough For Comey

Where is the report upon which the decision to fire McCabe was supposedly based - we should all be suspicious that this is now being withheld!
They can't tell because it would reveal sources and methods. Sound familiar?
 

The Barbarian

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Banned
Hard to imagine how that could be true. Specifically, which sources or methods are implicated?

Apparently, the IG report includes issues related to Clinton, from which Sessions recused himself. So he's not about to let that show. Considering Trump's ongoing vendetta against Sessions for allowing Mueller to proceed with his investigation, Sessions might be in very hot water, indeed.
 
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