realclearpolitics | The FBI division overseeing the investigation of former President Trump's handling of classified material at his Mar-a-Lago residence is also a focus of Special Counsel John Durham's investigation of the bureau's alleged abuses of power and political bias during its years-long Russiagate probe of Trump.
The FBI's nine-hour, 30-agent raid of the former president's Florida
estate is part of a counterintelligence case run out of Washington – not
Miami, as has been widely reported – according to FBI case documents
and sources with knowledge of the matter. The bureau's
counterintelligence division led the 2016-2017 Russia "collusion"
investigation of Trump, codenamed "Crossfire Hurricane."
Although
the former head of Crossfire Hurricane, Peter Strzok, was fired after
the disclosure of his vitriolic anti-Trump tweets, several members of
his team remain working in the counterintelligence unit, the sources
say, even though they are under active investigation by both Durham and
the bureau's disciplinary arm, the Office of
Professional Responsibility. The FBI declined to respond to questions
about any role they may be taking in the Mar-a-Lago case.
In
addition, a key member of the Crossfire team – Supervisory Intelligence
Analyst Brian Auten – has continued to be involved in politically
sensitive investigations, including the ongoing federal probe of
potentially incriminating content found on the abandoned laptop of
President Biden's son Hunter Biden, according to recent correspondence
between the Senate Judiciary Committee and FBI Director Christopher
Wray. FBI whistleblowers have alleged that Auten tried to falsely
discredit derogatory evidence against Hunter Biden during the 2020
campaign by labeling it Russian "disinformation," an assessment that
caused investigative activity to cease.
Auten has been allowed to work on sensitive cases even though he has been under internal investigation since 2019, when Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz referred him for disciplinary review for his role in vetting a Hillary Clinton campaign-funded dossier used by the FBI to obtain a series of wiretap warrants to spy on former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. Horowitz singled out Auten for cutting a number of corners in the verification process and even allowing information he knew to be incorrect slip into warrant affidavits and mislead the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court.