WSJ | What Was Bruce Ohr Doing?
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and Justice Department have
continued to insist they did nothing wrong in their Trump-Russia
investigation. This week should finally bring an end to that claim, given the clear evidence of malfeasance via the use of Bruce Ohr.
Mr. Ohr was until last year associate deputy attorney general.
He began feeding information to the FBI from dossier author
Christopher Steele in late 2016 - after the FBI had terminated Mr.
Steele as a confidential informant for violating the bureau’s rules. He
also collected dirt from Glenn Simpson, cofounder of Fusion GPS, the
opposition-research firm that worked for Hillary Clinton’s campaign and
employed Mr. Steele. Altogether, the FBI pumped Mr. Ohr for information at least a dozen times, debriefs that remain in classified 302 forms.
All the while, Mr. Ohr failed to disclose on financial forms that his
wife, Nellie, worked alongside Mr. Steele in 2016, getting paid by Mr.
Simpson for anti-Trump research. The Justice Department has now turned over Ohr documents to Congress that show how deeply tied up he was with the Clinton crew - with dozens of emails, calls, meetings and notes that describe his interactions and what he collected.
Mr. Ohr’s conduct is itself deeply troubling. He was
acting as a witness (via FBI interviews) in a case being overseen by a
Justice Department in which he held a very senior position. He appears
to have concealed this role from at least some superiors, since Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein testified that he’d been unaware of Mr.
Ohr’s intermediary status.
Lawyers meanwhile note that it is a crime for a federal official to
participate in any government matter in which he has a financial
interest. Fusion’s bank records presumably show Nellie Ohr, and by extension her husband, benefiting from the Trump opposition research that Mr. Ohr continued to pass to the FBI. The Justice Department declined to comment.
But for all Mr. Ohr’s misdeeds, the worse misconduct is by the FBI and Justice Department.
It’s bad enough that the bureau relied on a dossier crafted by a
man in the employ of the rival presidential campaign. Bad enough that it
never informed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of that
dossier’s provenance. And bad enough that the FBI didn’t fire Mr. Steele
as a confidential human source in September 2016 when it should have
been obvious he was leaking FBI details to the press to harm Donald
Trump’s electoral chances. It terminated him only when it was absolutely
forced to, after Mr. Steele gave an on-the-record interview on Oct. 31,
2016.
But now we discover the FBI continued to go to this
discredited informant in its investigation after the firing—by funneling
his information via a Justice Department cutout. The FBI has
an entire manual governing the use of confidential sources, with
elaborate rules on validations, standards and documentation. Mr. Steele
failed these standards. The FBI then evaded its own program to get at his info anyway.
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