Acting FBI director contradicts White House’s claim about Comey’s support within bureau

https://www.yahoo.com/news/acting-f...m-comeys-support-within-bureau-171528015.html

Acting FBI director contradicts White House’s claim about Comey’s support within bureau

Michael Walsh 11 hours ago


The acting director of the FBI said that ousted Director James Comey enjoyed widespread support among the bureau’s rank-and-file members — directly contradicting a White House claim to justify his firing.

When asked about the Trump administration’s assertion that Comey had lost the confidence of FBI staff, Andrew McCabe said, “No, sir, that is not accurate.”

McCabe, who has worked for the FBI for 21 years, has been serving as its acting director since President Trump abruptly fired Comey on Tuesday evening.

During his first public appearance as the FBI’s top official, before the Senate Intelligence Committee midday Thursday, McCabe quickly summarized his long, close working relationship with Comey and said he holds the former director in the “absolute highest regard.” He said working with Comey has been the “greatest privilege and honor” of his professional life.

“I can tell you also that Director Comey enjoyed broad support within the FBI and still does to this day. We are a large organization. We are 36,500 people across this country, across this globe. We have a diversity of opinions about many things,” McCabe said. “But I can confidently tell you that the majority, the vast majority, of FBI employees enjoyed a deep and positive connection to Director Comey.”

White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who has been filling in for press secretary Sean Spicer this week so he can fulfill Navy Reserve duty, made the claim about Comey’s popularity.

Sanders also said the highly publicized investigation into the Russian government’s interference with last year’s presidential election is “probably one of the smallest things” for the FBI right now.

McCabe also challenged this claim and said that Comey’s dismissal will not impede the investigation.

“We consider it to be a highly significant investigation,” McCabe said.
 
No, you are mistaken. Morale was very low in the FBI when Comey gave Hillary a free pass after the rank and file put in so much effort to prove she was actually a spy for a Russin Plutonium factory.
I can write a story like anybody else. Only at least mine kind of makes sense.

Do you even have a brain or are you just a robot cut and paster? Ever tried actually thinking about the crap you post? Or did you just give up because it's so ridiculous only a Trump supporter would be stupid enough to believe it?

They influenced the election by leaking the truth about Hillary. That's the one that keeps cracking me up.
 
No, you are mistaken. Morale was very low in the FBI when Comey gave Hillary a free pass after the rank and file put in so much effort to prove she was actually a spy for a Russin Plutonium factory.
I can write a story like anybody else. Only at least mine kind of makes sense.


Yeah,your opinion is more credible than the acting FBI director with 21 years of service with the Bureau.
 
http://www.politico.com/story/2017/05/10/comey-firing-fbi-trump-238247


FBI agent groups dispute Trump’s rationale for Comey firing

‘His support within the rank and file of the FBI is overwhelming.’

By Josh Meyer

05/10/17 10:57 PM EDT


As the White House scrambled to explain President Donald Trump’s sudden firing of FBI Director James Comey, one of the main reasons given was that the nation’s top law enforcement agent had lost the support of his own rank and file.

At best, that assertion has little basis in reality, according to the two people in the best position to know. More likely, they said, available anecdotal evidence suggests that it’s flat-out wrong.


In interviews with POLITICO, the heads of the two associations representing current and retired FBI agents, analysts and other personnel said Wednesday that by all available measures, Comey enjoys enormous support among the 35,000 people who worked for him, and the many thousands of others who have retired or left the bureau.

“His support within the rank and file of the FBI is overwhelming,” said Thomas O'Connor, a working FBI special agent who is president of the FBI Agents Association.

Comey’s firing “was described to me today by at least three agents as a gut punch to the organization,” said O’Connor, a counterterrorism agent in the FBI’s Washington, D.C., field office. He said neither agents nor the association "saw this coming" and that few thought Comey did anything to deserve such treatment.

On Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump’s “termination” of Comey came after the president learned that the Justice Department and “bipartisan members of Congress” had lost confidence in the FBI director.

“Most importantly, the rank and file of the FBI had lost confidence in their director,” Sanders said. “Accordingly, the president accepted the recommendation of his deputy attorney general to remove James Comey from his position.”

O’Connor disputed Sanders’ characterization: “I believe that that is not the perception of the FBI at all.”

Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe also directly contradicted the White House explanation on Thursday, telling the Senate Intelligence Committee that his fired predecessor had not lost the confidence of rank-and-file agents. “Director Comey enjoyed broad support within the FBI and still does to this day,” McCabe said.

Comey certainly had his detractors among some current and former FBI agents, especially for his decision not to prosecute Hillary Clinton after investigating her use of a private server for work emails as secretary of state, as well as allegations over misconduct at the Clinton Foundation.

Greg Roman, an intelligence analyst in the FBI’s Kansas City field office, said Comey’s handling of the email probe and his public explanations for not filing charges “politicized the FBI, and it shook my confidence in his leadership abilities.”

In an internal FBI employee survey in March 2017 that he provided to POLITICO, Roman wrote, “To say I was and am disappointed in Director Comey is an understatement, and I doubt I am hardly alone [in] saying this. … I hope Director Comey can ‘right the ship,’ and I pray that he can do so.”

But the two associations representing current and former FBI agents have been getting a steady flow of calls, emails and texts since Monday evening, virtually all of them lamenting Comey’s firing and seeking answers as to why.

The FBI Agents Association, which O’Connor said has 13,000 members, issued a statement Tuesday night urging caution in the naming of a new FBI director, given the job’s importance, and praising Comey for his “service, leadership, and support for Special Agents during his tenure.”

“He understood the centrality of the Agent to the Bureau's mission, recognizing that Agents put their lives on the line every day,” the statement said.

But since his firing, and in the months leading up to it, many agents contacted the association to urge it to do more to support Comey, O’Connor said.

“Most agents can’t talk to the press,” he said, but many were growing ever more agitated as Comey withstood withering criticism.

“They overwhelmingly want us to come out even stronger for Director Comey than we have, saying the association should do more,” O’Connor said. “Now they want to know the reason this happened. And what’s going to happen to the FBI now that Comey is gone?”

Newly installed Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein argued that Comey overstepped his bounds in a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions outlining his reasons for why the FBI needed new leadership.

Sanders did as well during the White House news conference.

While agents and other FBI personnel clearly have divergent viewpoints on Comey’s handling of particular investigations, most believed the director always acted in the best interests of the FBI, especially in trying to make sure politics didn’t interfere with the bureau’s investigations, O’Connor said.

“They believe in the guy, they follow his leadership,” he said, “and they knew that when Director Comey told them something, that it was accurate, Constitutional and apolitical.”

Nancy Savage, executive director of the Society of Former Special Agents of the FBI, said many current and retired agents were hopping mad — not only about Comey’s firing, but also over how it was handled, with the FBI director finding out via a TV monitor while delivering a speech to agents in Los Angeles.

“My friends who are on duty have been texting me and they are appalled,” said Savage, a former FBI special agent who retired in 2011 after a long career in the criminal division. “People were upset about losing him, and how he was informed. That’s appalling to our membership. He was a well-respected, well-liked director.”

Current and former agents are especially upset that the Trump administration cited Comey’s handling of the Clinton email probe as a top reason for firing him but didn’t wait for the results of a formal review of his decisions by the Justice Department’s inspector general, Savage said. “It just makes sense to wait for the IG report before doing something like this,” she said.

Savage, who was also the longtime head of the FBI Agents Association, said neither group conducts any kind of scientific survey to measure the popularity of FBI directors. Like O’Connor, she said she was basing her assessment on anecdotal input from the society’s 8,500 retired FBI members and other factors, including events and field visits.

And like O’Connor, she said Comey’s handling of the Clinton and Trump investigations evoked strong feelings among current and former agents, and even some sharp criticism: “Certain disgruntled people are probably talking, and that will always happen in the agency.”

During Savage’s 34 years at the bureau, she worked under 10 directors or acting directors, including William Webster, William Sessions, Louis Freeh and Robert Mueller. Some of them, especially Mueller, “came in at a very difficult time, to a very difficult job and tried to make changes in an organization” that was often resistant to them.

As a result, she said, some of the other directors had a very mixed level of support among the rank and file. “I’ve heard negative things about other directors, but an overwhelmingly positive response on Comey. And that’s not always the norm.”

Savage was among a small group of former agents who met last Friday with Comey at FBI headquarters to discuss some of his strategic initiatives for the bureau. As usual, she said, he was upbeat, and eager to explain his plans for upgrading information technology tools to better equip agents for fighting high-tech and cyber crime.

Wednesday evening, Comey finally commented publicly on his firing the day before. But instead of criticizing Trump’s decision or defending his actions, he sent a note to bureau employees conveying that their affection for him was mutual.

“I have long believed that a President can fire an FBI director for any reason, or for no reason at all. I’m not going to spend time on the decision or the way it was executed,” Comey wrote. “I hope you won’t either. It is done, and I will be fine, although I will miss you and the mission deeply.”
 
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